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| 2008 Environmental Justice Conference—The Bert G. Kerstetter '66 Ethics and the Environment Lecture Series | ||||||
| Dale Jamieson | Back to ABOUT THE SPEAKERS | |||||
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Director of Environmental Studies at New York University, where he is also Professor of Environmental Studies and Philosophy, and Affiliated Professor of Law. He is also Affiliated Scientist in the Institute for the Study of Society and Environment at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, as well as an Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at Sunshine Coast University in Australia. Formerly he was Henry R. Luce Professor in Human Dimensions of Global Change at Carleton College, and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Colorado, Boulder, where he was the only faculty member to have won both the Dean's award for research in the social sciences and the Chancellor's award for research in the humanities. He is also past president of the International Society for Environmental Ethics. Dr. Jamieson is the author of Ethics and the Environment: An Introduction (Cambridge, 2008), and Morality's Progress: Essays on Humans, Other Animals, and the Rest of Nature (Oxford, 2002). He is also the editor or co-editor of seven books, most recently A Companion to Environmental Philosophy (Blackwell, 2001), and Singer and his Critics (Blackwell, 1999), named by Choice as one of the outstanding academic books of 1999. He has published more than eighty articles and book chapters, and is also the co-author of a major report to the US Environmental Protection Agency, Cultural Barriers to Behavioral Change: General Recommendations and Resources for State Pollution Prevention Programs. He is on the editorial advisory boards of several journals including Environmental Values; Environmental Ethics; Science, Technology, and Human Values; Science and Engineering Ethics; Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science; The Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics; and the Journal of Applied Philosophy. His research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the US Environmental Protection Agency, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Office of Global Programs in the National Atmospheric and Aeronautics Administration. He is currently writing a book on the moral and political challenges of climate change, a topic on which he has worked since the 1980s. Website |
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| © 2008 Princeton Environmental Institute, Princeton University |