In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • The Contributors

Eri Saikawa is an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Studies at Emory University. She is interested in the science and the policy aspects of environmental problems, such as air pollution and climate change. She can be reached at eri.saikawa@emory.edu.

Daniel Yew Mao Lim is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Government at Harvard University. He has worked for the World Bank and the Prime Minister’s Office, Singapore. He is currently researching the determinants and consequences of foreign aid. He can be reached at danielyewmaolim@fas.harvard.edu.

James Raymond Vreeland is an associate professor in the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University, where he also holds a joint appointment in the Department of Government. He is currently writing a book on the political economy of the United Nations Security Council. He can be reached at james.raymond.vreeland@gmail.com.

Kimberly J. Morgan is an associate professor of political science and international affairs at George Washington University. She is the author of Working Mothers and the Welfare State (2006), coauthor, with Andrea Louise Campbell, of The Delegated Welfare State (2011), and coeditor, with Christopher Howard and Daniel Béland, of the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of the U.S. Welfare State. She has also written numerous articles on the politics of social provision in Western Europe and the United States. She can be reached at kjmorgan@gwu.edu.

Rahsaan Maxwell is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. His research focuses on the politics of immigrant, ethnic, racial, and religious minorities, particularly in Western Europe. He recently published Ethnic Minority Migrants in Britain and France: Integration Trade-Offs (2012) and coedited, with Terri Givens, Immigrant Politics: Race and Representation in Western Europe (2012). He can be reached at rahsaan@polsci.umass.edu.

Joshua Eastin will be joining the faculty of Portland State University in fall 2013 as an assistant professor of environmental politics and policy. His research concerns environmental politics and security and economic development issues. His dissertation addresses the effects of environmental disasters on the incidence and duration of violent civil conflict. His is the coauthor, with Ka Zeng, of Greening China (2011). He can be reached at jeastin@u.washington.edu.

Aseem Prakash is a professor of political science and the Walker Family Professor for the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Washington, Seattle. He is the founding general editor of the Cambridge University Press Series on Business and Public Policy and the coeditor of Journal of Policy Analysis and Management. He is the author of Greening the Firm: The Politics of Corporate Environmentalism (2000) and the coauthor of The Voluntary Environmentalists: Green Clubs, ISO 14001, and Voluntary Environmental Regulations (2006). His recent coedited books include Advocacy Organizations and Collective Action (2010), Voluntary Regulations of NGOs and Nonprofits: An Accountability Club Framework (2010), and Voluntary Programs: A Club Theory Perspective (2009). He can be reached at aseem@u.washington.edu. [End Page i]

...

pdf

Share