Dear Colleagues,

This is a message for those of you who are members of the International
Studies Association Environmental Studies Section:

The Nominations Committee of the ISA ESS invites you to vote for ESS
officers. Please do NOT reply to the Gep-ed list; please send all emails to
[email protected] or [email protected].

All ESS members are welcome to vote electronically or in person. If you
will be in attendance at the annual ESS business meeting, you may vote in
person during the 2015 ISA Convention in New Orleans (the ESS business
meeting will be held on Friday, February 20, 12:30-1:30pm in the River room
of Hilton New Orleans Riverside).

If you will not be able to attend the section meeting in New Orleans,
please send your votes via email to [email protected] by
Monday, February 16, 6:00 pm EST, at the latest. The committee will
tabulate email votes and bring them to the business meeting to be counted
together with in-person ballots.

If you choose to vote electronically, the ballot is copied below in this
email, and also attached as a Word document.

Please vote, and please vote only once!

Some offices have more than one opening, as noted on the ballot. Please
vote for as many candidates as there are vacancies. If you have any
questions, feel free to contact the committee at
[email protected], or Kate Neville at [email protected].


Thank you for your continued support of the Environmental Studies Section,

With best wishes,
the ESS Nominations Committee



*****
*ESS 2015 Ballot*

The positions for election are: Chair, Vice-Chair, Executive Committee (3
openings), Nominations Committee (2 openings), Sprout Committee (4
openings), and GEP liaison (1 opening).

The candidates for each position/committee are listed, along with a brief
biography for each.

Please indicate your choices with an "X" beside the candidate's name, or
write down the candidate names of your choices for each.


*Chair (2-year term)*
*1 vacancy, 2 candidates:*

*(1) Susan Park*
Susan Park is an Associate Professor in International Relations at the
University of Sydney. Her research focuses on how state and non-state
actors use processes of formal and informal influence to make international
organizations, particularly the Multilateral Development Banks, greener and
more accountable. Her most recent article on this is published in Pacific
Review. Her book T*he World Bank Group and Environmentalists: Changing
International Organisation Identities *was published by Manchester
University Press (2010). She co-edited a volume titled *Owning Development:
Creating Global Policy Norms in the IMF and the World Bank*, with Cambridge
University Press in 2010. Susan is currently co-investigator of a long-term
research project and network on Accountability in Global Environmental
Governance with Dr Teresa Kramarz (University of Toronto).

*(2) Wil Burns*
I currently serve as the Co-Executive Director of the Forum for Climate
Engineering Assessment and previously directed the Energy Policy & Climate
program at Johns Hopkins University. My research agenda in our field
focuses on climate change law and policy issues. I am also (through June
2015) the President of the Association of Environmental Studies and
Sciences (AESS), and a member of the ESS Sprout Committee (through 2015). I
am interested in serving on the Executive Committee of the ESS because I
hope to help expand its outreach and education missions in the same manner
that I have with AESS and other organizations. Among the ideas that I have
are creation of a podcasting series highlighting the scholarship of our
members, an initiative to increase collaboration with other environmental
service organizations, and an effort to increase participation by
undergraduate students in our section’s activities.


*Vice Chair (2-year term)*
*1 vacancy, 1 candidate:*

*(1) Fariborz Zelli*
Fariborz Zelli is Associate Professor at the Department of Political
Science at Lund University. Prior to joining Lund University in 2012, he
worked at the German Development Institute and the Tyndall Centre for
Climate Change Research. Since 2011, he has served in the executive and
Sprout Award committees of the ISA’s Environmental Studies Section of the
International Studies Association. He is also a board member of the Global
Environmental Change Section of the German Political Science Association
(DVPW). His publications include a special issue of Global Environmental
Politics on institutional fragmentation (2013, as guest editor) and *Global
Climate Governance Beyond 2012 *(2010, Cambridge University Press).


*Executive Committee (6 members, rolling 2-year terms)*
*3 vacancies, 3 candidates*

*(1) Juliann Emmons Allison*
Juliann Emmons Allison is Associate Professor of Gender & Sexuality Studies
and Public Policy at the University of California, Riverside. Her research
and teaching interests emphasize political economy, environmental politics
and policy, and community-based social change, especially as it relates to
the gendered dimensions environmental sustainability and conflict
resolution. Her research has been funded by the National Science
Foundation, the California Energy Commission, the California Department of
Transportation, the Energy Foundation and the Haynes Foundation. Recent
work appears in *Collaborative Anthropologies, Global Environmental
Politics, International Feminist Journal of Politics, International
Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law, and Economics*, and the *Journal
of the Motherhood Initiative.*

*(2) Shannon Orr*
Shannon Orr, Ph.D. I am an Associate Professor of political science and
graduate coordinator at Bowling Green State University (Bowling Green, OH
USA).  Academically I have published extensively in areas of climate
change, national parks, stakeholder collaboration and research methodology
(survey design).  I have participated in two UNFCCC COPs (Delhi and
Copenhagen), as well as Rio+20 in 2012.  In 2014 I published a book on
environmental policymaking and stakeholder collaboration with CRC Press
(Taylor Francis Group).  I am currently writing a second book on invasive
species.  I am also in the early stages of developing a new initiative
called Capacity Building for Sustainable Development (CB4SD) to provide
capacity building tools to international NGOs. Professionally, one of the
issues I am most concerned about is mentoring for junior scholars (graduate
students, tenure track and non-tenure track faculty; as well as those
considering careers outside of academia). On a personal note I am
originally from Canada; and I enjoy curling, running, and counting down the
days until the snow melts and the weather warms up.

*(3) Samuel Barkin*
Samuel Barkin is Professor of Global Governance in the McCormack Graduate
School of Policy and Global Studies at the University of Massachusetts
Boston.  His work on global environmental politics focuses on environment
and international organizations, trade and environment, and the politics of
international fisheries governance.  His books include *Saving Global
Fisheries:  Reducing Fishing Capacity to Promote Sustainability*
(co-authored with Elizabeth R. DeSombre) and *Anarchy and the Environment:
The International Relations of Common Pool Resources* (co-edited with
George Shambaugh).  He has been a member of ESS since forever, and has
served in the past in many capacities, including Executive Committee
member, and chair of both the nominating and Sprout Award committees.  He
is also immediate past President of ISA-Northeast.


*Nominations Committee (4 members, rolling 2-year terms)*

*2 vacancies, 2 candidates*

*(1) Teresa Kramarz*
Teresa Kramarz is the Director of Munk One, a program for first year
undergraduate students at the Munk School of Global Affairs in the
University of Toronto, and Deputy Director of the Master of Global
Affairs.  An expert on international organizations and global governance,
with emphasis on global environmental politics, her work has examined the
impact of the World Bank’s public-private partnerships on democracy,
innovation, and financially sustainable conservation governance, the
legitimacy of the World Bank as a global knowledge actor, and the
local/global relationship in the provision of global public goods in Latin
America. She is currently co-director of the international research network
“Accountability in Global Environmental Governance.”  She has current and
upcoming publications with *Review of Policy Research, Global Environmental
Politics*, Springer, Oxford University Press, and the Institute on
Globalization and the Human Condition. Dr. Kramarz has extensive experience
in her field having worked on project development, implementation and
evaluation for almost ten years with the World Bank, the United Nations
Development Programme, the Food and Agricultural Organization, and the
Canadian International Development Agency.

*(2) Tabitha Benney*
Tabitha Benney, PhD (University of California, Santa Barbara 2013):  Dr.
Benney is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and
affiliated faculty in the Environmental and Sustainability Studies Program
and the Center on Global Change and Sustainability at the University of
Utah.  In Fall 2014, she also began her tenure as the Editor of the
Hinckley Journal of Politics.  Prior to joining the department, Prof.
Benney was a Junior Program Officer in the Policy and Global Affairs
Division of the US National Academy of Sciences. Prof. Benney teaches in
the fields of International Relations, International Political Economy, and
Energy and Environmental Politics.  Her work has been published in *The
Review of International Political Economy, The World Financial Review*
and *Wiley
Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change*.  Her new book entitled,* Making
Environmental Markets Work:  The Varieties of Capitalism in Emerging
Economies* was published by Routledge Press in December 2014.



*Sprout Committee (5 members, rolling 2-year terms)*

*3 (or 4*) vacancies, 4 candidates*

*Note: Fariborz Zelli is one of the continuing Sprout Committee members. He
is running uncontested for Vice-Chair. If he is confirmed as Vice-Chair, he
will step down from Sprout, so there will be 4 vacancies on the Committee.
Please select your top three choices for candidates for Sprout with an X.
Please indicate if you are in support of the fourth candidate joining the
Committee (if Fariborz steps down) with a “4” beside his/her name.

*(1) Josh Gellers*
Josh Gellers, PhD, LEED Green Associate, is an Assistant Professor in the
Department of Political Science and Public Administration at the University
of North Florida and Honorary Fellow at the Southasia Institute of Advanced
Studies in Nepal. His research focuses on environmental law and policy in
general, and environmental rights in particular. Josh’s work has appeared
in *International Environmental Agreements, Journal of Environmental Law
and Litigation, Journal of Human Rights and the Environment*
(forthcoming), *Review
of Policy Research*, and *Sustainability Science*. He received the 2013
Graduate Student Paper Award from the Environmental Studies Section of ISA.
Josh runs Enviro Rights Map (www.envirorightsmap.org), a free Google
maps-based website which catalogs constitutional environmental rights
throughout the world. He holds a B.A. in Political Science from the
University of Florida, an M.A. in Climate and Society from Columbia
University, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science from UC Irvine.

*(2) Raul Pacheco-Vega*
Raul Pacheco-Vega is an Assistant Professor in the Public Administration
Division of the Centre for Economic Research and Teaching, CIDE (Centro de
Investigacion y Docencia Economicas, CIDE, AC) based out of CIDE Region
Centro in Aguascalientes, Mexico. His research is interdisciplinary, with a
specialization in comparative public policy, global sanitation and water
governance, and is Associate Editor of the *Journal of Environmental
Sciences and Studies* and has served on the Executive Committee of ISA-ESS
from 2013 to 2015. Raul also sits on the editorial boards of *Global
Environmental Politics, Water International, Journal of Environmental
Sciences and Studies* and *URBANA: Urban Affairs and Policy Research*.

*(3) Rachel Tiller *
Dr. Tiller holds a PhD in Political Science from the Norwegian University
of Science and Technology (NTNU) on regime analysis in the North East
Atlantic under future scenarios of a changing resource base. She currently
works at the research institute SINTEF, where her work centers on marine
and coastal interdisciplinary research at all levels of analysis, from
local stakeholders to international regimes. Her expertise is in
governance, policy mitigation and stakeholder adaptation, stakeholder
driven future scenario building and qualitative based/quantitative output
methodologies of Systems Thinking and Bayesian Belief Networks. Her
background also includes valuable experience working in international and
inter-disciplinary project consortiums, both national and international, on
a variety of topics related to anthropogenic and climatic changes to the
marine environment that has an influence on stakeholders. She is a
Fulbright Scholar and a recipient of the Leiv Eirksson Mobility Fund for
2011-2012 for an inter-disciplinary project in Southern California on
building management scenarios about the effects of offshore aquaculture on
stakeholders in the area. She is furthermore Operational Leader for the EU
project OCEAN-CERTAIN, Coordinator of the Gemini Center for Sustainable
Fisheries, GeminiFish and finally, the webmaster for the ESS website.

*(4) Fengshi Wu*
Fengshi Wu (BA from Peking University, PhD from University of Maryland),
Associate Professor, is specialized in social forces in global politics and
governance, environmental politics, and political transition in China. She
is a leading expert on China’s environmental politics and social activism.
Before joining Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang
Technological University, in Singapore, she taught at the Chinese
University of Hong Kong (2005-2013) and was visiting fellow at the
Harvard-Yenching Institute (2008-09). She was among the inaugural class of
graduate fellows of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences
(2004). Her recent publications include “Environmental Activism and Protest
in East Asia” (in Graeme Lang and Paul Harris ed. *Routledge Handbook of
Environment and Society in Asia,* 2014), “Sino-American Environmental
Relations: The Potential of Trans-Societal Linkages” (*Issues and Studies*.
Vol. 49/3, 2013), “Environmental Activism in Provincial China: Comparative
Evidence from Guangdong and Guangxi” (*Journal of Environmental Policy and
Planning*, Vol. 15/1, 2012: 89-108), “Graduated Control and Beyond: The
Evolving Governance over Social Organizations in China” (*China
Perspectives*, Vol. 2012/3: 9-17), “Strategic State Engagement in
Transnational Activism: AIDS Prevention in China” (*Journal of Contemporary
China,* Vol. 20, 2011; 621-637), “Environmental Politics in China: An Issue
Area in Review” (*Journal of Chinese Political Science*, Vol. 14, No. 4,
2009: 383-406), “Global Regime Formation or Complex Institution Building?
The Principled Content of International River Agreements.” (*International
Studies Quarterly*, Vol. 50, No. 2, 2006: 263-285).


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

*(1) Mark Axelrod*
Mark Axelrod is Associate Professor in Michigan State University’s James
Madison College (public affairs) and Department of Fisheries & Wildlife. He
holds a PhD in Political Science from Duke University, and a JD from
Stanford University. Mark studies cross-issue and multi-level linkages in
environmental governance. Recent and ongoing research addresses Indian
marine fishing responses to trade liberalization and mobile phone
introduction, and the EC-Chile swordfish dispute in WTO and UNCLOS forums.
Recent scholarship is published in *Global Environmental Politics, European
Journal of International Relations,* and *Conservation & Society*. Mark has
also developed case study materials for courses in International
Environmental Law/Policy, Democracy and Environment, Public International
Law, and International Political Economy. He also co-facilitated a workshop
on conservation options for Malawian government, industry and NGO
participants. Mark is a member of the UN/IDLO program “Legal Preparedness
for Achieving the Aichi Biodiversity Targets”, and the United Planet Faith
& Science Initiative.

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Attachment: ESS 2015 Ballot_Feb 5 2015.docx
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