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Contributors ⢠Ken Conca is Associate Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland, where he also directs the Harrison Program on the Future Global Agenda. He is the author of Manufacturing Insecurity: The Rise and Fall of Brazilâs Military-Industrial Complex (1997); the editor of Green Planet Blues: Environmental Politics from Stockholm to Kyoto (1998) and co-editor, with Ronnie D. Lipschutz, of The State and Social Power in Global Environmental Politics (1993). ⢠Ronnie D. Lipschutz is Associate Professor of Politics and Associate Director of the Center for Global, International and Regional Studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He is author of Global Civil Society and Global Environmental Governance (1996) and After Authority: War, Peace, and Global Politics in the 21st Century (2000). ⢠Marybeth Long Martello is a post-doctoral fellow at Harvard Universityâs Kennedy School of Government. She has a background in engineering and science and technology studies, and is co-editor, with Sheila Jasanoff, of a book addressing local knowledge and environment-development politics. ⢠Michael F. Maniates is Associate Professor of Political Science and Environmental Science at Allegheny College. He also co-directs the Meadville Community Energy Project, a student-centered program fostering regional energy efªciency and sustainability, and administers the International Project on Teaching Global Environmental Politics, an electronic network of college and university professors exploring solutions to global environmental ills. His work on the nature and future of undergraduate environmental studies programs recently appeared in Bioscience, and he is editor of the forthcoming volume Empowering Knowledge: A Primer for Students and Teachers of Global Environmental Politics. ⢠Thomas Princen is Associate Professor of Natural Resources and Environmental Policy in the School of Natural Resources and Environment at the University of Michigan (USA), where he also co-directs the Workshop on Consumption and Environment. He is co-author, with Matthias Finger, of Environmental NGOs in World Politics: Linking the Local and the Global (1994) and author of Intermediaries in International Conºict (1992). ⢠Martin Weber is currently ªnishing his PhD at Southampton University. He has worked on trade/environment issues in the context of NAFTA (with Caroline Thomas), and on normative theory in International Political Theory. iii
Global Environmental Politics – MIT Press
Published: Aug 1, 2001
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