Sarah Ephrida Tione | Agricultural Policy | Research Excellence Award

Dr. Sarah Ephrida Tione | Agricultural Policy | Research Excellence Award

Lecturer | Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources | Malawi

Sarah Ephrida Tione is a researcher specializing in Development and Agricultural Economics, with a strong focus on land markets, land tenure and property rights, agricultural markets, and agri-food policy. Her research examines how land governance, rental markets, and climate-related shocks influence food security, household welfare, and adoption of climate-smart agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa. She has held key research and policy-oriented roles, including postdoctoral research appointments linked to international collaborative projects and senior economist responsibilities within the public agricultural policy sector. Her work bridges empirical economic analysis and policy relevance, contributing evidence on land market participation, contract structures, and behavioral responses to risk and incentives. Through peer-reviewed publications in leading international journals, she has advanced understanding of land-use dynamics and development outcomes. Her impact vision centers on generating rigorous, policy-relevant insights that support equitable land governance, resilient agricultural systems, and informed decision-making for sustainable development at national and global levels.

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Featured Publications

Sherif Ramzy | Food safety | Global Food Systems Innovator Award 

Prof. Dr. Sherif Ramzy | Food safety | Global Food Systems Innovator Award 

Professor | National Research Centre | Egypt

Dr. Sherif Ramzy Mohamed is a Professor of Food Toxicology and Contaminants at the National Research Centre (NRC), Egypt, where he has served since 2018 following earlier roles as Assistant Professor (2013) and researcher. He holds a Ph.D. in Food Science and Technology (2008), preceded by an M.Sc. (2002) and B.Sc. (1997) in the same specialization. His research centers on food toxicology, mycotoxins, food contaminants, rapid detection techniques, biodegradation mechanisms, and non-traditional strategies for food safety risk mitigation. Emerging interests include smartphone-integrated diagnostic systems, microbial enzymatic degradation of toxins, fungal genomics, and sustainable biocontrol technologies. Over his career at NRC and through joint Egyptian-Chinese scientific collaborations, he has led major projects on the early warning, monitoring, and prevention of mycotoxins in grain supply chains, securing international research partnerships and grants. Among his key contributions are the development of manganese dioxide nanoribbon-based sensors for aflatoxin B1 detection, smartphone-controlled infrared spectrometry for fumonisin identification, genome-based interventions to reduce toxin biosynthesis, and innovative biological mechanisms for toxin degradation. He has also co-developed methods for eliminating fungal contaminants via autophagy control and pioneered research on bacterial strains capable of degrading zearalenone and other estrogenic toxins. His work has resulted in multiple patents, including a 2023 international patent on enzymatic biodegradation of zearalenone and earlier patents on rice straw applications and antiviral botanical extracts. He has published more than 60 peer-reviewed papers in Q1 and Scopus-indexed journals and vetted more than 150 manuscripts. His roles extend to editorial boards of international journals such as Annals of Food and Nutrition Research, Nutrition and Food Toxicology, Universal Journal of Food Science and Technology, and Journal of Food Technology and Food Chemistry. He is a fellow of the Board of Quality Standards (BU-FBQS) and an active member of professional bodies including the Egyptian Society of Natural Toxins, Asia Society of Researchers, and the International Society of Substance Use Professionals. His honors include multiple research productivity awards from the NRC and the Khayria Naguib Prize (2015). Through his scientific advisory work, conference participation, and supervision of postgraduate theses, he has shaped food safety research in Egypt and internationally. His long-term vision is to reduce the economic and health burden of foodborne contaminants by developing rapid, affordable detection tools, eco-safe biodegradation technologies, and evidence-based policies that enhance global food security, public health protection, and industrial innovation. He has 1007 citations from 33 publications, with an h-index of 15.

Profiles:  Google Scholar | Scopus | ORCID

Featured Publications 

1. Abdel-Wahhab, M. A., Hassan, N. S., El-Kady, A. A., Mohamed, Y. A., El-Nekeety, A. A., Sherif, R. M., Sharaf, H. A., & Mannaa, F. A. (2010). Red ginseng extract protects against aflatoxin B1 and fumonisins-induced hepatic pre-cancerous lesions in rats. Food and Chemical Toxicology, 48(3), 733–742.

2. Cai, X., Liang, M., Ma, F., Zhang, Z., Tang, X., Jiang, J., Guo, C., Ramzy Mohamed, S., Abdel Goda, A., Dawood, D. H., Yu, L., & Li, P. (2022). Nanozyme-strip based on MnOâ‚‚ nanosheets as a catalytic label for multi-scale detection of aflatoxin B1 with an ultrabroad working range. Food Chemistry, 377, 131965. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.131965

3. Yu, C., Liu, X., Zhang, X., Zhang, M., Gu, Y., Ali, Q., Mohamed, M. S. R., Xu, J., Shi, J., Gao, X., et al. (2021). Mycosubtilin produced by Bacillus subtilis ATCC6633 inhibits growth and mycotoxin biosynthesis of Fusarium graminearum and Fusarium verticillioides. Toxins, 13(11), 791. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins13110791

4. Shena, G., Kanga, X., Sua, J., Qiua, J., Liu, X., Xu, J., Shi, J., & Mohamed, S. R. (2022). Rapid detection of fumonisin B1 and B2 in ground corn samples using smartphone-controlled portable near-infrared spectrometry and chemometrics. Food Chemistry, 384, 132487. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2022.132487

5. Hu, J., Wang, G., Hou, M., Du, S., Han, J., Yu, Y., Gao, H., He, D., Shi, J., Lee, Y.-W., Mohamed, S. R., Dawood, D. H., Hong, Q., Liu, X., & Xu, J. (2023). New hydrolase from Aeromicrobium sp. HA for the biodegradation of zearalenone: Identification, mechanism, and application. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 71(5), 2411–2420. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.2c06410

Xiufeng Xing | Agri Policy | Best Scholar Award

Dr. Xiufeng Xing | Agri Policy | Best Scholar Award

Master's Supervisor | Qingdao University of Technology | China

Dr. Xiufeng Xing currently serves as a faculty member at Qingdao University of Technology, China, specializing in population, resources, and environmental economics with an additional academic interest in higher education studies. She holds advanced degrees in economics and has developed a strong interdisciplinary foundation that enables her to bridge socio-economic analysis with sustainable development policy. Her research primarily explores inclusive growth, environmental responsibility, and the economics of education, while her emerging interests focus on global energy market fluctuations and the socio-economic impacts of crises such as pandemics and geopolitical conflicts. Over the course of her academic career, Dr. Xing has published more than 40 peer-reviewed research papers addressing pressing issues such as the evaluation of shared prosperity in developing regions, the effects of COVID-19 and the Ukraine conflict on global oil and natural gas prices, and comparative analyses of hybrid versus traditional teaching models in higher education settings. Complementing her journal contributions, she is also the author of four scholarly books—Inclusive Growth, Corporate Environmental Responsibility, The Marketization of Urban Water Industry, and The Marketization of Domestic Service—which collectively reflect her commitment to equitable economic policy and sustainable industrial practice. Alongside her research, she has taken on key teaching responsibilities, delivering courses in environmental economics, macroeconomics, and microeconomics, where she is recognized for integrating real-world case studies into economic theory instruction. Dr. Xing has contributed to strategic policy discussions through her evidence-based evaluations of water industry reform, corporate accountability frameworks, and social service market mechanisms. She has been acknowledged through competitive research grants and institutional commendations for her leadership in advancing sustainability-focused economic analytics. Beyond authorship, she actively serves as a peer reviewer for academic journals in the domains of development economics and environmental policy and maintains membership in several professional economic and educational societies, where she contributes to collaborative research initiatives and scholarly evaluation panels. Her growing influence in the academic sphere is reflected in her role in shaping curricula and advising on macroeconomic planning within institutional and regional contexts. Driven by a vision to promote equitable prosperity through data-driven policymaking, Dr. Xiufeng Xing strives to advance frameworks that balance economic growth with social inclusion and ecological responsibility. Her work not only informs scholarly dialogue but also supports governments, industries, and educational institutions in making informed decisions that align long-term economic resilience with public welfare.

Profile: ORCID

Featured Publications 

1. Xing, X., & Wang, Y. (2025). The evaluation of shared prosperity: A case from China. Sustainability, 17(2), 621. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17020621

2. Xing, X., Cong, Y., Wang, Y., & Wang, X. (2023). The impact of COVID-19 and war in Ukraine on energy prices of oil and natural gas. Sustainability, 15(19), 14208. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151914208

3. Xing, X., & Saghaian, S. (2022). Learning outcomes of a hybrid online virtual classroom and in-person traditional classroom during the COVID-19 pandemic. Sustainability, 14(9), 5263. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095263

4. Xing, X. (2020). Spillovers of urban road infrastructure investment and operation: A case study using synthetic control methods. Business, Management and Economics Research, 6(10), 100–110.*

5. Xing, X. (2019, June). Does university class size matter? Evidence from course micro data. In Proceedings of the Education and Economics Conference 2019.