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  • Notes on Contributors

Jerome Bump, Prof. of English at the University of Texas at Austin, is the author of Gerard Manley Hopkins (1982) and many articles and chapters. He has been teaching Victorian and environmental literature since 1970, and animal studies for the last five years. E-mail: bump@utexas.edu; Website: http://www.dwrl.utexas.edu/~bump/

Justin Donhauser is an Ecosystem Restoration through Interdisciplinary Exchange (ERIE-IGERT) Ph.D. Fellow at the University at Buffalo, and teaches Philosophy of Science, Ethics, Sustainability, and Meaning of Life courses at Buffalo State College. He specializes in Philosophy of Science and Applied Environmental Philosophy. His current work concentrates on science/policy interface issues stemming from confusions about the conceptual foundations of ecology. E-mail: jcd8@buffalo.edu

Yogi Hale Hendlin is an environmental philosopher working at the intersection of political and epistemological questions lecturing under the auspices of the Chair of Environmental Ethics and Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy at Kiel University, Germany. Current domains of research include animal and plant ethics, biosemiotics, colonial and postcolonial environmental history, environmental justice, and environmental commons. E-mail: hendlin@philsem.uni-kiel.de

Fabien Medvecky is a lecturer at the Centre for Science Communication at the University of Otago, New Zealand. His current research is on the science/society interface, focusing largely on the role values (especially ethical and economic values) play in this interaction. Fabien has a background in philosophy of science and environmental economics and has published on science ethics, justice in science communication, and environmental economics amongst others. E-mail: fabien.medvecky@otago.ac.nz [End Page 125]

Massimo Pigliucci is a biologist and philosopher at the City University of New York. His main interests are in the philosophy of science and pseudoscience. He is the editor-in-chief of Scientia Salon, and his latest book (co-edited with Maarten Boudry) is Philosophy of Pseudoscience: Reconsidering the Demarcation Problem (Chicago Press). E-mail: massimo@platofootnote.org [End Page 126]

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