James Agbodzakey

Dr. James Agbodzakey is a professor of public leadership/administration and the director of the Urban SERCH Institute at the University of North Texas (UNT) at Dallas. He has worked extensively for governments and private and nonprofit entities in Africa, U.S., and the Caribbean on various projects and programs. He has championed efforts in the areas of public health, management, public affairs, economics, and sustainable development through his work with numerous prestigious institutions such as the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund, and Florida Atlantic University. His public management and health services research using the collaborative governance framework has helped shape policies and strategies as a conduit to promoting the health and general well-being of target populations at the local and regional levels across the U.S. He recently served on the American Society for Public Administration’s Executive Committee and its National Council, and was the president of the Conference of Minority Public Administrators (COMPA).

Dr. Agbodzakey has participated in over 80 academic conferences, has made over 70 academic presentations, and has at least 50 peer-reviewed academic publications to his credit. Recently, as a section editor, he facilitated the publication of 200 authors in Springer’s Global Encyclopedia of Public Administration, Public Policy, and Governance. He currently serves on three editorial boards and four governance boards. His extensive experiences related to scholarship, curriculum development, accreditation, program building, the nonprofit sector, and community engagement have seen him excel as a specialist and consultant. He was a delegate for the AIDS conferences held in Washington D.C., Melbourne, Durban, Amsterdam, Montreal, and Munich. He was also a delegate for the tenth IAS Conference on HIV Science in Mexico City.

Dr. Agbodzakey has received outstanding faculty awards from the University of the Bahamas and UNT Dallas. He has won Florida Atlantic University’s National Association of Graduate-Professional Students Award and the Gwendolyn Bullock-Smith Public Service Award from COMPA. He is also the first Black faculty to be promoted to the rank of full professor at UNT Dallas.

Dr. Agbodzakey is committed to working with various stakeholders to help address the complex contemporary challenges in the area of public benefits related to inclusive excellence.

Abhishek Bhati

Dr. Abhishek Bhati is an associate professor of political science and director of the Asian Studies Program at Bowling Green State University, Ohio. He holds a PhD in public administration from the University of Nebraska, Omaha, and an MA from Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai. His research focuses on nonprofit and civil society organizations. Specifically, Dr. Bhati examines how nonprofit and civil society organizations mobilize resources to advance their mission and support public good. He was awarded the Wilson C. “Bill” Fundraising Research Award in 2021 and was a social impact strategy doctoral fellow at the School of Social Policy & Practice, University of Pennsylvania.

Dr. Bhati’s work has appeared in top nonprofit and public administration journals such as Public Administration Review and Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly. In 2022, his work received the best paper award from Voluntas: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations. Beyond his academic responsibilities, he serves on the Planning Commission of the city of Bowling Green.

Dr. Bhati’s Fulbright-Nehru research project is focusing on understanding how nonprofit and civil society organizations (CSOs) are using generative AI tools to advance their mission; it is also studying the potential pitfalls or challenges to the use of this emerging technology. The study is using a mixed-method research design by conducting an online survey and interviews with CSOs and other stakeholders in India. This research aims to benefit CSOs and policymakers by helping them understand the impact of “disruptive technologies” on the global civil society sector.