Dear all,

Just a reminder that we are collecting advance votes for Environmental Studies Section positions. See details below. Email votes should be sent to [email protected] by tomorrow, Friday, March 30 at 6:00 pm Eastern time. Please vote electronically only if you will not be at the ESS business meeting next week.

Thanks very much and see many of you soon in San Diego,
Mark

-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        [gep-ed] ISA ESS ELECTIONS 2012
Date:   Sat, 17 Mar 2012 07:50:49 +0000
From:   Heike Schroeder <[email protected]>
Reply-To:       [email protected]
To:     [email protected] <[email protected]>



ISA ESS ELECTIONS 2012

The Nominations Committee of the Environmental Studies Section (ESS) requests 
that ESS members to vote on the list of positions below.

You may vote during the ESS business meeting at the 2012 ISA Convention in San 
Diego. If you will NOT be at the section meeting, please send your votes (as 
many as vacancies are available for each committee) via email 
[email protected]  by Friday, March 30 at 6:00 pm EST, the latest. 
Mark Axelrod will be collecting votes and will take them to San Diego.

Heike (on behalf of the Nominations Committee)


---
Executive Committee (6 member, rolling 2-year terms): 3 vacancies

Candidates:

(1) Sherrie Baver

Professor Sherrie Baver received her Ph.D. from Columbia University.  She 
teaches at the City College of New York, where she has served as the Director 
of the CCNY Latin American and Caribbean Studies Program. She has written The 
Political Economy of Colonialism: The State and Industrialization in Puerto 
Rico (Praeger, 1993) and co-edited Latinos in New York: Communities in 
Transition (Notre Dame University Press, 1996). In 2006, she co-edited with 
Barbara D. Lynch), Beyond Sun and Sand: Caribbean Environmentalisms (Rutgers 
University Press). Her present research focuses on environmental 
justice/environmental democracy in Latin America, focusing especially on Mexico 
and Chile.  Professor Baver has received various CUNY awards and two Fulbrights 
to Latin America.

(2) Fariborz Zelli

Dr. Fariborz Zelli is an assistant professor at the Department of Political 
Science at Lund University, Sweden. He is also a research fellow of the Global 
Governance Project, and an associate fellow of the German Development Institute 
where he served from 2009 to early 2012. From 2006 to 2008, Fariborz was a 
senior research associate at the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, 
UK. Prior to that, he served as a research assistant at the Center for 
International Relations in Tübingen. Fariborz received the Ph.D. thesis award 
of the University of Tübingen and the award for outstanding university teaching 
of the state of Baden-Württemberg. He is a board member of the environment 
working group of the German Political Studies Association (DVPW), and a member 
of the environment working group of the British International Studies 
Association (BISA). His publications include Global Climate Governance Beyond 
2012 (Cambridge University Press, 2010 (co-editor).

(3) Pia Kohler

Pia M. Kohler, Assistant Professor of Environmental Policy, Environmental 
Studies Program, Williams College. Pia's main research interest is on the 
interface of science and politics in the context of global environmental 
negotiations. She also specializes in international treaties dealing with 
chemicals and hazardous wastes, including the ongoing negotiations for a global 
legally-binding instrument on mercury. Pia previously taught in the Political 
Science Department at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, has been a 
writer/editor for the Earth Negotiations Bulletin since 2002, and earned her 
PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Department of Urban 
Studies and Planning.

(4) Erika Weinthal

Erika Weinthal is Associate Professor of Environmental Policy and Associate 
Dean for International Programs at the Nicholas School of the Environment at 
Duke University. Her research focuses on environmental and natural resources 
policy in the former Soviet Union and Middle East. Her book -- State Making and 
Environmental Cooperation: Linking Domestic Politics and International Politics 
in Central Asia (MIT Press 2002) -- was awarded the 2003 Chadwick Alger Prize 
and the 2003 Lynton Keith Caldwell Prize. She co-authored -- Oil is not a 
Curse: Ownership Structure and Institutions in Soviet Successor States 
(Cambridge University Press 2010) and is co-editing a volume on water and 
post-conflict peacebuilding. Dr. Weinthal is a co-director of the Borderwork(s) 
Lab in the Franklin Humanities Institute and serves on the Faculty Advisory 
Committee for the Duke Human Rights Center. She served on the ESS Nominations 
Committee (2008-2010) and since 2011 is an Associate Editor at Global Enviro
nmental Politics.

(5) Sara Hughes

Sara Hughes is a postdoctoral fellow at the National Center for Atmospheric 
Research. Her work focuses on environmental politics and institutions, 
particularly the consequences of their interaction at multiple scales for urban 
sustainability outcomes. Her current work evaluates whether and how the 
construction and location of authority determine the level of justice in urban 
climate change governance. This work focuses on climate change governance in 
Mexico City and Delhi. Sara received her PhD from the Bren School of 
Environmental Science and Management at the University of California, Santa 
Barbara where she evaluated the dynamics of policy change in urban water 
management in California and Australia. She also received M.Sc. and B.Sc. 
degrees from Michigan State University.

(6) Simon Nicholson

Simon Nicholson is Assistant Professor of International Relations in American 
University’s School of International Service. He also serves there as Associate 
Director of the innovative Global Scholars program—an accelerated international 
studies degree program for high-achieving undergraduates. In addition, Simon is 
a non-resident senior fellow at the Center for Latin American Strategic Studies 
in Bogota, Colombia. Simon’s recent work focuses on global food politics and 
the politics of emerging technologies. He was the lead organizer, with Paul 
Wapner, Sikina Jinnah, and Kate Goodwin, of last year’s pre-ISA workshop, “GEP 
on a New Earth.”


Nomination Committee (4 members, rolling 2-year terms): 2 vacancies

Candidates:

(1) Sikina Jinnah

Sikina Jinnah is an Assistant Professor of International Relations at American 
University. Her research focuses on the changing dynamics of power and 
influence in global environmental politics. Her most recent projects examined 
the role of international bureaucracies in managing the politics of overlapping 
international regimes in the areas of biodiversity, climate change and 
international trade. Her recent work has been published in Global Environmental 
Politics, Berkeley Journal of International Law Publicist, Environmental 
Research Letters, and Science.

(2) Nikki Detraz

Nicole Detraz is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University 
of Memphis. Her research centers on the intersections between the environment, 
security, and gender. Her work has recently appeared in Security Studies, 
International Studies Perspectives, and Global Environmental Politics. She has 
a forthcoming book on International Security and Gender with Polity Press.

(3) Frank Alcock

Frank Alcock is an Associate Professor of Political Science at New College of 
Florida where he teaches courses on world politics, international law, climate 
change, marine policy and sustainable development.  He is the former Director 
of the Environmental Studies program at New College as well as the former 
Director of a Marine Policy Institute at Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota.  
He is currently on leave from New College working as a Senior Fellow with the 
Collins Center for Public Policy and serving as a political analyst with ABC 
News in Sarasota and CBS News in Tampa.  Frank holds a Ph.D. in Political 
Science from Duke University, a M.A. in International Affairs from George 
Washington University and a B.A. in Economics from Binghamton University.


Sprout Award Committee (5 members, rolling 2-year terms): 2 vacancies

Candidates:

(1) Paul Harris

Paul Harris is Chair Professor of Global and Environmental Studies at the Hong Kong 
Institute of Education. His research on global environmental politics has been 
published widely in scholarly journals. He is author of International Equity and 
Global Environmental Politics, World Ethics and Climate Change and Environmental 
Policy and Sustainable Development in China. He is editor of 12 books that have 
included chapters by many ESS members. Paul’s forthcoming books include What’s Wrong 
with Climate Politics (and How to Fix It) and the Routledge Handbook of Global 
Environmental Politics, which will include many contributions from ESS members. Paul 
has served the ESS continuously since the 1990s, including as a member of the Sprout, 
Nominations and Executive Committees. If elected to the Sprout Committee, he will 
encourage its members to consider and reward books that approach international 
environmental studies from the full range of perspectives employed by ESS members. 
Website:www.ied.edu.hk/links/paul.g.harris  
<http://www.ied.edu.hk/links/paul.g.harris>

(2) Heike Schroeder

Heike Schroeder is a senior lecturer in climate change and international 
development at the School of International Development, University of East Anglia. 
Her areas of research include forest governance, cities and climate change and 
non-state actors and international climate cooperation. She is also a coordinator 
of the Governance&  Behaviour Theme in the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change 
Research and a member of the Scientific Steering Committee of the long-term 
international research project on Earth System Governance under the auspices of the 
International Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change (IHDP). 
Previous positions include James Martin senior fellow and Tyndall fellow at the 
Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford and post-doctoral researcher 
and executive officer of the Institutional Dimensions of Global Environmental 
Change (IDGEC) project at the Bren School, University of California, Santa Barbara.

(3) Henrik Selin

Henrik Selin is Associate Professor in the Department of International Relations at 
Boston University. He conducts research and teaches classes on global and regional 
politics and policy making on environment and sustainable development. His book Global 
Governance of Hazardous Chemicals: Challenges of Multilevel Management (MIT Press, 
2010) was a Sprout Award runner-up in 2011. He is the co-editor of Changing Climates in 
North American Politics: Institutions, Policymaking and Multilevel Governance (MIT 
Press in 2009, with Stacy VanDeveer) and Transatlantic Environment and Energy Politics: 
Comparative and International Perspectives (Ashgate in 2009, with Miranda Schreurs and 
Stacy VanDeveer). In addition, he is the author and co-author of more than forty peer 
reviewed journal articles and book chapters, as well as numerous reports, reviews and 
commentaries. He is also Editor for Environment&  Planning C: Government&  
Policy as well as the book review editor for Review of Poli
cy Research, which is affiliated the American Political Science Association’s 
Science, Technology and Environmental Politics (STEP) section.

(4) Lars Gulbrandsen

Lars H. Gulbrandsen is Senior Research Fellow and Director of the research 
program on Global Governance and Sustainable Development at the Fridtjof Nansen 
Institute in Norway, where he has been employed since 2000. Gulbrandsen holds a 
PhD in political science from the University of Oslo and an MSc from London 
School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). He was a Visiting Scholar in 
2007 at the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. His research 
interests are in the area of global environmental politics, with a particular 
focus on forest politics, climate change politics, eco-certification, corporate 
social responsibility, and international regimes. He is the author of 
Transnational Environmental Governance: The Emergence and Effects of the 
Certification of Forests and Fisheries (Edward Elgar 2010) and more than 20 
peer-reviewed articles in international journals. He serves regularly as 
reviewer for a number of international journals and joins the editorial board 
of Gl
obal Environmental Politics for a five year term, covering the issues to be 
published from 2013 to 2017.


Representative to the Global Environmental Politics editorial board (1 member, 
3-year term): 1 vacancy

Candidates:

(1) Bjorn-Ola Linner

Björn-Ola Linnér is professor in Water and Environmental Studies and at the 
Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research at Linköping University and a 
visiting fellow at the Institute for Science, Innovation and Society (InSIS) at 
the University of Oxford. His research focuses on international policy-making 
on environment and development. His recent publications analyse integration of 
policies on climate change, sustainable development and low-carbon energy 
technologies as well as transnational governance and utopian/dystopian thought 
in environmental science and policy. He is also author of The Return of 
Malthus: Environmentalism and Postwar Population–Resource Crises. He was member 
of the Swedish delegation at the Adaptation and Approval of the fourth 
Assessment Report of IPCC. He is currently leading a research program on 
non-state actors in the new landscape of international climate cooperation and 
is also one of the co-leaders of the Centre for Excellence for Nordic Strategic
  Adaptation Research (NORD-STAR).

(2) Joerg Balsiger

Jörg Balsiger is Senior Researcher at the Department of Geography and 
Environment of the University of Geneva, and Senior Researcher and Lecturer at 
the Institute for Environmental Decisions of the Swiss Federal Institute of 
Technology Zurich. He was previously a Max Weber Fellow at the European 
University Institute, received a PhD degree from the University of California 
at Berkeley and a Master's Degree from Georgetown University's School of 
Foreign Service, and worked for several years in international development as 
an expert on forest policy and administration, capacity building, and donor 
coordination. Dr. Balsiger is the author of Uphill Struggles: The Politics of 
Sustainable Mountain Development in Switzerland and California; co-editor, with 
Stacy VanDeveer, of a forthcoming special issue on regional environmental 
governance in Global Environmental Politics; co-editor, with Bernard 
Debarbieux, of Regional Environmental Governance: Interdisciplinary 
Perspectives, Theoretical
Issues, Comparative Designs; and has published several articles on 
international, regional, and local environmental governance.

(3) Katja Biedenkopf

Katja is a postdoctoral research fellow at the research group 'The 
Transformative Power of Europe' at the Free University Berlin, Germany. Her 
research centers on EU external governance in various fields of environmental 
policy such as electronic waste, chemicals and climate change. Her dissertation 
investigated the external effects of EU electronic waste policy on the United 
States. Currently, she works on a project that analyses emissions trading 
systems in North America. In August 2012, Katja will take up a position of 
Assistant Professor at the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

(4) Elizabeth Havice

Elizabeth Havice is an assistant professor of international development and 
globalization at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill in the Geography 
Department. Her research interests are at the intersection of international 
political economy, development studies and environmental studies with a focus 
on how regulatory interventions and political economy circumstances (e.g. 
competition, market access, inter-state, state-firm and firm-firm relations) 
influence the environment and socio-economies in resource based-industries. Her 
work emphasizes the multiple dimensions of resources access and investigates 
how various forms of regulation moderate connections between human and natural 
systems. She has spent a considerable amount of time researching these dynamics 
as they apply in the global tuna industry. She holds a PhD in from the 
University of California-Berkeley in Environmental Science, Policy and 
Management and has published in Global Environmental Politics, Islands Studies 
Jour
nal, Journal of Agrarian Change and Marine Policy.


Dr. Heike Schroeder
Senior Lecturer in Climate Change and International Development
School of International Development
University of East Anglia
Norwich, NR4 7TJ
Tel. 01603 591036
Email:[email protected]
Profile:http://www.uea.ac.uk/dev/schroeder

Senior Visiting Research Associate
Environmental Change Institute
University of Oxford
Profile:http://www.eci.ox.ac.uk/people/schroederheike.php

--
Mark Axelrod
Assistant Professor
Michigan State University
James Madison College and
   Dept. of Fisheries&  Wildlife
http://www.fw.msu.edu/~axelrod3/

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