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  • Notes on Contributors

Bryan Bannon is currently a visiting assistant professor at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. He welcomes all comments, dialogues, and criticisms. E-mail: bryanbannon@gmail.com

Lori Gruen is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Wesleyan University. She has published on topics in ecofeminist ethics and epistemology, environmental justice, and feminist analyses of human relations to non-human animals. She is currently writing two books: one on Ethics and Animals, and another exploring the complex philosophical issues raised by our relations to captive chimpanzees. E-mail: lgruen@wesleyan.edu

Ronnie Hawkins is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Central Florida in Orlando, where she teaches environmental philosophy, bioethics, philosophy of science, and existentialism. She is hoping we can get past confabulation and recover our ecological rationality in time to protect as much as we can of what Val Plumwood held so dear. E-mail: liveoak@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Al-Yasha Ilhaam is an associate professor of philosophy at Spelman College. Her research includes feminist bioethics, literary aesthetics and ecophilosophical approaches to Africana studies. E-mail: philoyash@yahoo.com

Lisa Kretz completed both her Bachelor of Arts in Honors Philosophy and Visual Arts and Bachelor of Education at the University of Western Ontario. She received her Master of Arts in Philosophy with a focus on Environmental Aesthetics and Ethics from the University of Alberta. Lisa was awarded her doctorate from Dalhousie University, and her doctoral research was at the intersection of Ecological Selfhood and Ethics. She [End Page 163] currently divides her time between teaching philosophy, not-for-profit environmental work, and painting. E-mail: lkretz@dal.ca

Chaone Mallory is Assistant Professor of Environmental Philosophy at Villanova University, where she teaches courses in environmental ethics, green political theory, ecofeminism, and environmental justice. Contributing to an emerging discourse of ecofeminist political philosophy, her research effects an engagement between the fields of environmental philosophy, liberatory theory, and radical political thought. She has published articles on ecofeminism and radical activism, and is especially interested in questions of representation and subjectivity for the more-than-human world. E-mail: chaone.mallory@villanova.edu

Donna M. Reeves received her PhD in philosophy at the University of Colorado at Boulder in 2008. She has taught philosophy at several universities including the University of Colorado at Boulder and at Denver, and Metropolitan State University. She also taught at Brandon University in Manitoba, Canada and at Teikyo Loretto Heights a Japanese University in Denver. Donna comingles her philosophical pursuits with freelancing as a medical technical writer. Summers find her camping and exploring early indigenous sites of the southwest happily out of the range of Google's watchful eye. E-mail: dreeves888@gmail.com

Piers H.G. Stephens is an assistant professor in the Philosophy Department at the University of Georgia, specializing in environmental philosophy, and reviews editor of the journal Organization and Environment. He attained his PhD at the University of Manchester, England and has co-edited three books: Perspectives on the Environment 2 (Avebury, 1995), Environmental Futures (Macmillan, 1999), and Contemporary Environmental Politics (Routledge, 2006). He has contributed to journals including Environmental Ethics, Environmental Values, and Environmental Politics. E-mail: piers@uga.edu

Noël Sturgeon is Professor of Women's Studies and Graduate Faculty in American Studies at Washington State University. She is the author of Ecofeminist Natures: Race, Gender, Feminist Theory and Political Action (Routledge 1997); Environmentalism in Popular Culture: Gender, Race, Sexuality and the Politics of the Natural (University of Arizona 2009); and numerous articles on environmentalist, antimilitarist, and feminist movements and theories. E-mail: sturgeon@wsu.edu [End Page 164]

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