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  • Notes on Contributors

Marion Hourdequin is an Associate Professor of Philosophy and director of the Environmental Program at Colorado College. Her areas of specialization include environmental philosophy, ethics, comparative philosophy, and the philosophy of biology. She is currently completing a textbook in environmental ethics, to be published by Bloomsbury Press. In collaboration with geographer David Havlick, she is working on an edited volume on ecological restoration in complex landscapes, including former military lands. Email: marion.hourdequin@coloradocollege.edu

Donald G. Richards is Professor of Economics at Indiana State University in Terre Haute, Indiana. His major current research project is to develop a “practical philosophy” that can guide public policy on such matters as environmental protection, employment, income distribution, poverty alleviation, and economic security. He seeks to encourage a reconsideration of the ethical-normative foundations of conventional economic thought, taking as inspiration the wisdom of ancient philosophy. Email: Donald.Richards@indstate.edu

Lars Samuelsson is Assistant Professor of philosophy at Umeå University, Sweden. His current research interests are in environmental ethics and value theory. His work has been published in Environmental Ethics, Environmental Values, and Utilitas. Email: lars.samuelsson@umu.se

Sally J. Scholz is a Professor of Philosophy at Villanova University. Her research is in social and political philosophy and feminist theory. Her publications include the books On de Beauvoir (2000), On Rousseau (2001), Political Solidarity (2008) and Feminism: A Beginner’s Guide (2010). She co-edited Peacemaking and The Contradictions of Freedom. Scholz is a former editor of the APA Newsletter on Feminism and Philosophy and [End Page 135] recently guest edited a “Crossing Borders” special issue of Hypatia on feminist issues in globalization. E-mail: Sally.scholz@villanova.edu

James Schwartz recently earned his PhD in Philosophy from Wayne State University. His primary areas of research are philosophy of mathematics and the metaphysics of modality. He also maintains interests in environmental ethics and the ethics of space exploration, and has a keen interest in the overlap of these two subjects. Email: james.schwartz@wayne.edu

Kristie Dotson is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Michigan State University. Her research is in epistemology, feminist philosophy (particularly Black feminism and feminist epistemology), and critical philosophy of race. She edited with Robert Bernasconi a series of books entitled Race, Hybridity, and Miscegenation. Her most recent publications appear in journals such as Hypatia, Frontiers, Comparative Philosophy and Social Epistemology. E-mail: dotsonk@msu.edu

Kyle Whyte is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Michigan State University. He writes on environmental justice, the philosophy of technology and American Indian philosophy. His most recent research addresses moral and political issues concerning climate change impacts on Indigenous peoples. His most recent publications appear in journals such as Ethics, Policy & Environment, Synthese, Human Ecology, and American Journal of Bioethics. E-mail: kwhyte@msu.edu [End Page 136]

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