Wallace ("Wally") Swan is a Contributing Faculty Member at Walden University, Minneapolis, USA, teaching the "Language of Leadership" and Sustainability courses in the MPA program. His background includes teaching public policy, administrative ethics, public, private and non-profit finance, leadership, global transformational theory, and organization theory at Western International University, University of St. Thomas, Metropolitan State University, Nova Southeastern University, Hamline University, and University of Electronic Science and Technology of China. He held city-wide elected office at the Minneapolis Board of Estimate and Taxation (as the first openly gay city-wide elected official). He currently serves as President of the Center for Homicide Research board. Swan is the Immediate Past Chair of the LGBT Advocacy Action Section of the American Society for Public Administration, and is included in the 2021-2022 Marquis "Who’s Who in America." He received the ASPA LGBT Advocacy Section Best Book Award for the book COVID-19, the LGBTQIA+ Community, and Public Policy (Routledge, 2023).
Christopher R. Surfus served as a Faculty Specialist I of Public Administration at Western Michigan University’s School of Public Affairs and Administration in the 2022-23 academic year. Previously in the 2021-22 academic year, Surfus was a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the University of New Hampshire’s Institute on Disability in the NIDILRR federally funded Advanced Rehabilitation and Research Training (ARRT) program, where he researched the intersection of disability and LGBTIQ+ populations. Surfus holds a Ph.D. in Public Administration, an MBA, an MPA, a Graduate Certificate in Nonprofit Leadership, and a BSBA. He has 15 years of experience in nonprofit leadership, including as the Founding President of The Surfus Foundation, the Past Chairperson of the ASPA LGBT Advocacy Alliance, and the Past President of ASPA MICAP, in addition to serving in consultative capacities for a number of nonprofit organizations in West Michigan and advising local governments on diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Dallas S. Drake is a Senior Researcher at the Center for Homicide Research in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where his focus on homicide is viewed from a public health perspective. During this work he has assisted law enforcement and families with reviews of active and cold case homicides. He is a member of the Wisconsin Homicide Investigators’ Cold Case Review Team. His published works include two book chapters on LGBTQ+ populations and the COVID-19 pandemic, and chapters in several academic books on LGBTQ+ homicide. He also published a groundbreaking research report about the rare phenomenon of necrophilia in an international volume. Drake was the 2013 recipient of the Carolyn Rebecca Block Award, for an "Outstanding Contribution to Homicide or Lethal Violence Research by a Practitioner." Before coming to homicide research, he worked as a professional firefighter for 22 years where he routinely responded to calls as an Emergency Medical Technician, assisting paramedics where he firsthand viewed the realities of America’s healthcare system. During the AIDS pandemic, Drake was a public AIDS 101 trainer for the American Red Cross.