Mark Wickham
Senior Lecturer
Department of Business and Economics
University of Tasmania
Australia
Biography
Before joining the University of Tasmania, Mark worked as a manager (both at the store and State office level) for Coles supermarkets, and as a marketer with Cadbury Schweppes. In 1996, he began his undergraduate degree In Marketing and Human Resource Management in the Faculty of Commerce. During his undergraduate degree, but the most outstanding Human resource Student by the Australian Human Resource Institute. In 2000, Mark was awarded a first class honours degree or his research into CEO compensation performance in Australia. In 2004, he was awarded his Ph.D. qualification, which focused on the regional government in the development of an internationally competitive industrial cluster. Post Ph.D., his research interests include: the strategic management of non-traditional organisational forms (e.g. social enterprises, not-for-profit organisations, temporary organisational forms, the arts and cultural marketing context etc.); the role that sustainability plays in the sin-industry context, and; marketing strategy generally.
Research Interest
Mark's research aligns to the University's theme of Community, Place & Change.
Publications
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Waterkeyn JG, Wickham ME, Davern KM, Cooke BM, Coppel RL, Reeder JC, Culvenor JG, Waller RF, Cowman AF. Targeted mutagenesis of Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 3 (PfEMP3) disrupts cytoadherence of malariaâ€infected red blood cells. The EMBO journal. 2000 Jun 15;19(12):2813-23.
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Wickham ME, Rug M, Ralph SA, Klonis N, McFadden GI, Tilley L, Cowman AF. Trafficking and assembly of the cytoadherence complex in Plasmodium falciparumâ€infected human erythrocytes. The EMBO journal. 2001 Oct 15;20(20):5636-49.
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Crabb BS, Cooke BM, Reeder JC, Waller RF, Caruana SR, Davern KM, Wickham ME, Brown GV, Coppel RL, Cowman AF. Targeted gene disruption shows that knobs enable malaria-infected red cells to cytoadhere under physiological shear stress. Cell. 1997 Apr 18;89(2):287-96.
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Lupp C, Robertson ML, Wickham ME, Sekirov I, Champion OL, Gaynor EC, Finlay BB. Host-mediated inflammation disrupts the intestinal microbiota and promotes the overgrowth of Enterobacteriaceae. Cell host & microbe. 2007 Aug 16;2(2):119-29.