Eleni Myrivili (Greek: Ελένη Μυριβήλη) is the United Nations Human Settlements Programme's Chief Heat Officer (CHO),[1] the City of Athens Chief Resilience Officer,[2] a member of the European Union Mission Board for Adaptation to Climate Change Mission,[3] a Nonresident Senior Fellow at the Adrienne Arsht – Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center at the Atlantic Council,[4] a tenured assistant professor at the Department of Cultural Technology & Communications at the University of the Aegean,[5] and a former Loeb Fellow at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.[6]
Myrivili received her Ph.D. from Columbia University's Department of Anthropology in 2004.[7]
^"First-ever Global Chief Heat Officer Announced at World Urban Forum" (PDF) (Press release). Katowice, Poland: UN-Habitat and Arsht-Rock Resilience Center. 27 June 2022.
^"Η Αθήνα αναλαμβάνει πρωτοβουλία για την αντιμετώπιση των πολύ υψηλών θερμοκρασιών λόγω κλιματικής αλλαγής" (Press release). Δήμος Αθηναίων. 23 July 2021.
^"Mission Board Chairs and Members" (PDF). European Commission. September 2022.
^"Eleni Myrivili". Atlantic Council. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
^"Eleni Myrivili CV" (PDF). Τμήμα Πολιτισμικής Τεχνολογίας και Επικοινωνίας - Πανεπιστήμιο Αιγαίου.
^"Eleni Myrivili". The LOEB Fellowship. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
^"Eleni Myrivili (PhD Anthropology, 2004) appointed as 'Chief Heat Officer' for Athens, Greece". Department of Anthropology. Retrieved 26 May 2023.
EleniMyrivili (Greek: Ελένη Μυριβήλη) is the United Nations Human Settlements Programme's Chief Heat Officer (CHO), the City of Athens Chief Resilience...
Council's Adrienne Arsht-Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center. EleniMyrivili is the current United Nations Human Settlements Programme's chief heat...
end. On 28 June 1920 he married Eleni Dimitriou. They had three children. From April 1923 to January 1924, Myrivilis published, in serialised form, the...
Anthropology; currently a research affiliate at the University of Oxford EleniMyrivili, assistant professor at the Department of Cultural Technology & Communications...
introduced modernist trends in Greek literature. It included writers Stratis Myrivilis, Elias Venezis, Yiorgos Theotokas, and M. Karagatsis, and poets Giorgos...