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Ethics & the Environment 12.1 (2007) 105-106

Notes on Contributors

Ruth Abbey is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame. She is the author of Nietzsche's Middle Period, Philosophy Now: Charles Taylor and editor of Contemporary Philosophy in Focus: Charles Taylor. She has also published numerous articles and chapters in books. Her current research and teaching interests focus on contemporary political theory, with special reference to liberalism. E-mail: rabbey1@nd.edu

Cathryn Bailey is Professor of Philosophy at Minnesota State University where her work focuses on feminist theory, especially ethics and epistemology. E-mail: cathryn.bailey@mnsu.edu

Barbara Jane Davy holds a Ph.D. in religion from Concordia University, Montreal. She has taught courses on religion and ecology at Concordia University and Carleton University, and is past-president of the Environmental Studies Association of Canada. She is the author of Introduction to Pagan Studies, and has published in the areas of nature religion, ritual studies, and environmental ethics, as well as the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas. E-mail: barbdavy@simpatico.ca

John Hadley is Lecturer in Communication Ethics in the School of Communication and a research fellow at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics (CAPPE) at Charles Sturt University. E-mail: jhadley@csu.edu.au

Eric Katz is Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Science, Technology, and Society Program at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. He is the author of Nature as Subject: Human Obligation and Natural Community (1997), and editor of Death by Design: Science, Technology, and [End Page 105] Engineering in Nazi Germany (2006). He has co-edited (with Andrew Light and David Rothenberg) the collection Beneath the Surface: Critical Essays in the Philosophy of Deep Ecology (2000), and (with Andrew Light and William Thompson) the textbook Controlling Technology (2nd edition, 2003). E-mail: katze@njit.edu

Joseph Tanke is a Teaching Fellow in the Department of Philosophy at Boston College. He works in the area of continental philosophy, with special emphasis on the work of Michel Foucault and French post-structuralism. He specializes in problems related to the philosophy of art and the environment. E-mail: tankejo@bc.edu

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