List of Kiravian academics
P.G.W. Gelema
Main article: P. G. W. Gelema
Field: Urcean history, constitutional theory, and politics
Hivernius B.R.R. Freon
Field: Economic history
Subjects: Ice trade in Kiravia
Notable works: An Iceberg with a Navy: The Rise of Kiravian Global Power 20900-21100
Affiliations: Coscivian Culture University
Isimi Kunama
Field: Linguistics
Subjects: Varshani language
Affiliation: University of West Æonara; Institute of Cronan Studies
A notable Kiravian of Kulukusi ethnicity.
Séarlus Cálcasúr
Field: Geopolitics, Security studies Subjects: the Ænglish Menace. Affiliation: [Some think-tank in Kartika]
Eironym Ithkuimaldrin
Field: Linguistics
Subjects: Sociolinguistics, Sarolastan languages, Creoles and Template:Postcreolisation
Affiliation: Ignatian University (North Æonara)
E.D.S. Nígatelluv
Field: Religious studies
Subjects: Abrigalasts
Affiliation: Deréssuv University, Serikorda
R.A. Pimagrumav
Field: Historical linguistics
Subjects: Lost Kiravic Coscivian dialects
Affiliation: Founding Fathers' University, Kartika
R.A. "The Rugged Man" Pimagrumav is a Kiravian linguist specialising in dialectology and historical linguistics. His main area of research is the changes undergone by dialects of Kiravic Coscivian during the rule of the Kiravian Union, as well as documentation of dialects and local speech patterns that went extinct during this period or earlier in the 20th century AD. A native of Váuadra and speaker of the unremarkable Lékaśran dialect, Pimagrumav was originally an audio archivist working for the Corcoran Institution. His interest in historical dialectology came from assisting linguists who accessed the Corcoran's phonogram library as part of their research, and he went on to complete formal studies in linguistics at Founding Fathers' University, where he is now a distinguished fellow. Pimagrumav's research relies heavily on archival evidence, and he has expressed some skepticism about the utility of computational methods in reconstructing lost dialects.
Despite the breadth of his work, Pimagrumav is mainly known (among the three dozen people who give a damn) for his role in the debate over whether the city of Kartika was ever home to a distinctive Kiravic dialect (it is widely accepted that it has not had a local dialect or accent since the Kirosocialist era). Pimagrumav is a leading proponent of the theory that a Kartikan dialect once existed but was destroyed during the Kirosocialist redevelopment of the city, offering phonographic and documentary evidence, as well as anecdotal accounts from purported rememberers. Other writers on the subject find Pimagrumav's offerings unconvincing as evidence of a proper dialect.
M. Hasuarin Talév
Field: Marxism
Notable works: Kirosocialism - Why? (211XQ)
Sydonan.
Avvakuv Texavyrin
Field: Theology, Economic ethics
School: Neo-Scotism, Distributism
Notable works:
Fallow Field and Virgin Lands: Cultivation as a Moral Imperative (211XL), Kiravian Homestead Hebdomadary (Editor, 211XP-present)
Texavyrin is a notable distributist writer, proponent of the Settlement Movement, and magazine editor.
E.H. Tomcollins
Field: Levantine political and economic history
Notable works: Witte: The Man, the Legend (211XR)
Xinarþrus S.P.R. Tórmalin
Marxist philosopher, Chief ideologist of the Kirosocialist Party from 211XX to 211XZ.
Notable works: On the Germans and Their Lies (211XY)
Mévar I.L.R. Ríladorian
Field: Political biography
Specialty: Kiravian security establishment figures
Notable works: Ivoŕ Arolian: A Complete Biography
N.V. Salkatorin
Field: Mathematics
Specialty: Number theory
Notable works: Additive Methods for Testing the Infinitude of Primes (211XA)
Salkatorin was fired from the Argévia State University after that institution's charter was revoked by the state legislature. The basis for his dismissal was a report by the State Universities Audit Board, generated as part of a wider investigation into financial mismanagement at ASU, alleging that Salkatorin and his team had consumed over forty megawatt-hours of electricity and fried two supercomputers in their quest to discover the "biggest number ever". Salkatorin has disputed this characterisation of his research and defended his methodology, but admits that the two supercomputer crashes occurred on his watch. He now works as a substitute mathematics teacher for the County Faronin School District.
V.E. Sanikoren
Field: Economics
Specialty: Development economics, Economic geography
Notable contribution: Three Kiravs Model
Perkolatur M.V.P. Sêlandarian
Field: Mathematics
Affiliations: Rivūlet Community College
Notable works: Mysteries of Island Colony №7 Revealed Vols. I-VII
A professor of mathematics at Rivulet Community College in Kensonia State, Sêlandarian is better known for his seven-volume book advancing the theory that Island Colony №7, a mysterious island occasionally referenced in government records, is either a small atoll, reef, or islet; an offshore platform; or possibly an artificial island somewhere in the vicinity of the International Date Line. Sêlandarian proposes a number of possible purposes that an installation at such longitude with a unique time offset could offer the Kiravian government, such as the manipulation of legal deadlines and digital timestamps.
Pavnuthius Sōrtava
Field: Religious studies
Specialty: Kiravian Sectarians
Affiliations: Xaverian University, Catholic Inner Mission
S.P. Vérannív
Field: History, International relations
Specialty: Civilisations in comparison, Geopolitics, Cultural dimensions of globalisation
Affiliations: Kartika Ignatian University, Imperial Academy, Vertex Institute
Notable works: Civilisational Identity-formation in Extra-Occidental Christian Societies; Defensive Nationalism and the Coscivian National Congress
Vaśa Alôxin
Field: Anthropology, Deep History
Specialty: Ancient Kiravian religion
Affiliations: Coscivian Culture University
Notable works: Fennic Freshwater Worship and the Revival of Ocean Spirituality in the Preclassic
Vaśa Alôxin is a woman professor of deep history at the Coscivian Culture University. She is best known for advancing a theory to explain the revival of Ocean spirituality in pre-classical Kiravia between the Moon-Ocean schism and the rise of the rave state, which relied upon practices of Ocean spirituality suppressed among most Kiravian communities since the Schism. Alôxin credits cross-Kilikas cultural exchange with the Fenni, whose religion focused on reverance for freshwater and bodies of freshwater, for providing an impetus for the revival of latent water-centred spirituality among the Coscivians and proto-Coscivians.