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Global Environmental Politics 5.4 (2005) iii



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Contributors

Peter Andrée teaches in the Environmental and Resource Studies and International Development Studies Programs at Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada. He is currently working on a book that examines the negotiation of the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety to the Convention on Biological Diversity. He can be reached at peterandree@trentu.ca.
Elizabeth R. DeSombre (edesombr@wellesley.edu) is Frost Associate Professor of Environmental Studies and Associate Professor of Political Science at Wellesley College. Her first book, Domestic Sources of International Environmental Policy: Industry, Environmentalists, and U.S. Power (2000), won the 2001 Chadwick F. Alger Prize for the best book published in 2000 in the area of international organization, and the 2001 Lynton Caldwell Award for the best book published on environmental policy. Her second book, The Global Environment and World Politics (2002), is being revised for a new edition. She is also completing a project about international environmental, safety, and labor standards on ships, and writing a book on global environmental institutions.
Radoslav S. Dimitrov is Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of Western Ontario, and analyst at global environmental meetings for the Earth Negotiations Bulletin. He is author of Science and International Environmental Policy: Regimes and Nonregimes in Global Governance (2005) and has published articles on global policy regimes, coral reef management and forest negotiations in International Studies Quarterly, The Journal of Environment and Development, and The International Journal of Global Environmental Issues.
Susan Park is a lecturer in the School of International and Political Studies at Deakin University in Melbourne, Australia. She is currently completing a book on how transnational advocacy networks socialize the World Bank Group. Her areas of interest are constructivism, international organizations and environmental politics.
Alasdair Young is a senior lecturer in international politics at the University of Glasgow. His teaching and research focus on the interaction between trade and regulatory policies and politics, with particular reference to the European Union and World Trade Organisation. He has written widely on the single European market programme and on the EU's foreign economic policy. His publications include: Extending European Cooperation: The European Union and the 'New' International Trade Agenda (2002) and (with Helen Wallace) Regulatory Politics in the Enlarging European Union (2000).


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