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  • Contributors

Zuhre Aksoy is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science and International Relations, Bogazici University, Istanbul. Her research focuses on international environmental politics, political economy of development, and North-South relations. Her publications include “Biodiversity and Biotechnology in the Agriculture Sector” in Environmentalism in Turkey: Between Democracy and Development? edited by F. Adaman and M. Arsel (Ashgate 2005); “Global Justice: From Theory to Development Action” in Journal of International Development (2009) with Theo Papaiannaou and Helen Yanacopulos; and “Legal-Institutional Framework and Agrobiodiversity Conservation in Turkey,” in Rethinking Structural Reform in Turkish Agriculture: Beyond the World Bank’s Strategies, edited by B. Karap?nar et al (Nova Publishers 2010).

Katarina Buhr holds a PhD in business administration from Uppsala University and is affiliated with the Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research, Linköping University, and the Swedish Environmental Research Institute. She studies the organization and governance of international climate change policy, and perceptions of carbon capture and storage. She has published recently in Global Environmental Change, Organization Studies, and Environmental Policy and Governance.

Hélène Ducros received a J.D. from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, where she focused on international and comparative law, as well as the interconnection of the law with disciplines in social sciences and the humanities. She is currently a PhD candidate in human geography at UNC and a lecturer in international studies at North Carolina State University. Her research addresses place-based development, identity, and economics in the rural areas of industrialized countries. She is particularly interested in local actors and community-centered processes involved in the interpretation, management, and promotion of local and regional heritage landscapes.

Jennifer Hadden is an assistant professor in the Department of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland. Her research concerns civil society participation in climate governance and the politics of sustainable development. She was the 2012 co-recipient of the American Political Science Association’s Walsh Award for the best dissertation in the field of science, technology, and environmental politics. Her current book project is titled Networks in Contention: Global Civil Society and the Divisive Politics of Climate Change. Her research has been support by the Fulbright Foundation, the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center, and the Cornell University Center for a Sustainable Future. [End Page iii]

Jarrod Hayes is an assistant professor of international relations in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs at the Georgia Institute of Technology. In 2009, he received his PhD from the University of Southern California in politics and international relations. Currently his research focuses on the role of identity in the construction of security within democracies. His work appears in the European Journal of International Affairs, Global Environmental Politics, International Organization, International Studies Quarterly, and Security Studies. In 2013, Cambridge University Press published his first book, Constructing National Security: US Relations with India and China.

Janelle Knox-Hayes is an assistant professor of environmental policy in the School of Public Policy at the Georgia Institute of Technology. In 2009 she received her PhD from the University of Oxford in economic geography. Her research currently focuses on energy security and environmental finance. Her work has appeared in the Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Journal of Economic Geography, and Global Environmental Change. She has a book entitled The Culture of Markets: The Political Economy of Climate Change under contract with Oxford University Press.

Mattias Hjerpe is associate professor at the Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research, as well as associate professor of water and environmental studies at Linköping University. His principal research areas are leadership and nonstate actors’ roles in transnational climate change governance and local responses to global climate and economic change. He has published recently in Climatic Change, Environmental Politics, and Climate Policy.

Ian D. Lloyd is a fellow of the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, in the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of International Climate Change Policy and Technology. Previously, he was a congressional science fellow sponsored by the American Association for the Advancement of Sciences and the American Geophysical Union, working in the office of Senator Jeff Merkley [D-OR]. He received a PhD from...

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