http://news.ucsc.edu/2017/04/jinnah-carnegie.html

Sikina Jinnah named a 2017 Andrew Carnegie Fellow

April 26, 2017

By Jennifer McNulty <[email protected]>
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Associate Professor of Politics Sikina Jinnah specializes in global
environmental politics and international institutions. She will study the
contentious subject of international regulation of climate geoengineering.
(Photo by Carolyn Lagattuta.)

Sikina Jinnah, associate professor of politics, was awarded a 2017 Andrew
Carnegie Fellowship, one of the most prestigious awards available to
scholars in the social sciences and humanities.

Jinnah is one of 35 winners selected from a field of nearly 200 nominees
who were put forward by their home institutions. Jinnah's project was
submitted by Chancellor George Blumenthal, who described Jinnah as
"arguably one of the most qualified scholars to take on a study of the
contentious topic of international regulation of climate geo-engineering."

Andrew Carnegie Fellows receive support that allows them to focus on
research and writing projects that address pressing issues. Jinnah was
awarded $200,000 to fund her proposal, "Global Governance of Climate
(Geo)Engineering," which will address the political challenges surrounding
governance of emerging technologies designed to address climate change.
Recipients were announced in a full-page ad in the New York Times today
(April 26).

Jinnah specializes in global environmental politics and international
institutions. She is the author of *Post-Treaty Politics: Secretariat
Influence in Global Environmental Governance*(MIT Press), which received
the 2016 Harold and Margaret Sprout Award from the International Studies
Association for the best book in international environmental affairs. She
is also co-editor of *New Earth Politics: Essays from the Anthropocene* (MIT
Press 2017).

As part of her fellowship, Jinnah will focus on global governance for the
suite of emerging technologies known as climate engineering, or simply
geoengineering. Climate engineering has long been a taboo topic in climate
science and policy circles, with many arguing it would distract attention
away from greenhouse gas mitigation and adaptation strategies. Recently,
however, the idea has gained traction in global politics—in, for example,
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change references to negative emission
technologies, and the Paris Agreement’s call for a net negative carbon
economy by mid-century.

Jinnah argues that governance remains insufficient to manage the
substantial uncertainties surrounding the efficacy and possible broader
social impacts of these technologies. Without advocating for the actual use
of climate engineering, Jinnah argues that near-term governance is needed
to enable society to make informed determinations about any future use—or
rejection—of climate engineering technologies for addressing climate change.

Fellowship recipients were announced by the philanthropic foundation
Carnegie Corporation of New York, which is dedicated to advancing knowledge
and understanding. Nominations were reviewed by one or more of 33 anonymous
evaluators; final selections were made by a 16-member committee of
distinguished scholars that includes 10 current or former university
presidents.

"The Andrew Carnegie Fellows Program is designed to support scholarship
that brings fresh perspectives from the social sciences and humanities to
the social, political, and economic problems facing the United States and
the world today," said Vartan Gregorian, president of Carnegie Corporation
of New York.

Jinnah joined the UC Santa Cruz faculty in July 2016. She came to the
campus from American University's School of International Service. She
earned her Ph.D. in environmental science, policy, and management from UC
Berkeley and was a postdoctoral fellow at Brown University’s Watson
Institute for International Studies.

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