Curriculum Vitae

Humboldt State University, Politics, Faculty Member
JOHN M. MEYER (September 2016) 707.826.4497 Department of Politics john.meyer@humboldt.edu Humboldt State University users.humboldt.edu/john.m.meyer One Harpst Street humboldt.academia.edu/JohnMeyer Arcata, California 95521 _______________________________________________________________ EDUCATION Ph.D., Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1997. M.A., Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1991. B.A., Political Science, The Colorado College, 1984. ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS Professor, Department of Politics, Humboldt State University, 2008 – present. Affiliated Faculty Member: Environment & Community; Environmental Studies. Chair, Department of Politics, 2006 – 2011; 2016 – present. Associate Professor, Humboldt State University, 2003 – 2008. Founding Coordinator, Graduate Program in Environment and Community, 2000 – 2004. Assistant Professor, Humboldt State University, 1998 – 2003. Visiting Lecturer, Politics, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, Academic Year 1997. Visiting Lecturer, Political Science, Northwestern University, Fall 1995. Lecturer and Teaching Assistant, Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1991-1994. RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS (Externally Funded) Carson Fellow, Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität and the Deutsches Museum, Munich, Germany, 2012-2013. Harrison McCain Foundation Visiting Professor, Department of Politics, Acadia University, Nova Scotia, Canada, 2012. Member, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, 2004-2005. BOOKS (Single Author) Engaging the Everyday: Environmental Social Criticism and the Resonance Dilemma. The MIT Press, 2015. Reviewed (so far) in: Choice, Contemporary Political Theory, Contemporary Sociology, Environmental Values, New Political Science, Perspectives on Politics (Critical Dialogue). Political Nature: Environmentalism and the Interpretation of Western Thought. The MIT Press, 2001. “Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2002” and a “Great Work in Environmental Political Thought,” WPSA, 2012. Reviewed in: Alternatives, American Political Science Review, Australian Journal of Political Science, Contemporary Political Theory, The Ecologist, Electronic Green Journal, Environment, Environmental History, Environmental Politics, Global Environmental Politics, Journal of Applied Philosophy, Journal of Politics, Journal of Political Ecology, Organization and Environment, Political Science, Philosophy and Geography, Philosophy in Review. BOOKS (Edited) The Greening of Everyday Life: Challenging Practices, Imagining Possibilities. With Jens M. Kersten. Oxford University Press, 2016. Lead editor and chapter author. Co-authored introductory chapter. Chapter authors from anthropology, communication, cultural studies, history, law, philosophy, political science and political theory, public health, sociology, and urban studies. John M. Meyer, Curriculum Vitae, page 2 of 10 Oxford Handbook of Environmental Political Theory. With Teena Gabrielson, Cheryl Hall, and David Schlosberg. Oxford University Press, 2016. Our editorial team commissioned internationally prominent authors, edited 41 chapters, and coauthored the introduction. The handbook is both the first standard reference and an exploration of future directions for the field. Reviewed (so far) in: LSE Review of Books. The Environmental Politics of Sacrifice. With Michael Maniates. The MIT Press, 2010. Lead chapter author. Co-authored introductory and concluding chapters; section introductions. Interdisciplinary contributions from political theory, environmental studies, international relations, communications, religious studies. Reviewed in: Choice, Canadian Journal of Political Science, Environmental Ethics, Environmental Politics, Global Environmental Politics, Organization and Environment, Perspectives on Politics, Hot Topic, Worldwatch Institute: Transforming Cultures. American Indians and U.S. Politics. Foreword by David Wilkins. Praeger, 2002. Editor. Wrote general and section introductions, selected contributions, and organized material. Reviewed in Choice. JOURNAL ARTICLES “We Have Never Been Liberal: The Environmentalist Turn to Liberalism and the Possibilities for Social Criticism,” Environmental Politics, Vol. 20, No. 3, May 2011. “The Concept of Private Property and the Limits of the Environmental Imagination,” Political Theory, Vol. 37, No. 1, February 2009. “Populism, Paternalism, and the State of Environmentalism in the U.S.” Environmental Politics, Vol. 17, No. 2, April 2008. [Reprinted in: David Schlosberg and Elizabeth Bomberg, eds., Environmentalism in the United States: Changing Patterns of Activism and Advocacy. Routledge, 2008.] “Nature, Property, and Democracy in the Debate over Genetically Modified Organisms.” Occasional Papers, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, January 2006. “Rights to Life? On Nature, Property and Biotechnology.” Journal of Political Philosophy, Vol. 8, No. 2, June 2000. [Reprinted in: Susan J. Armstrong and Richard G. Botzler, eds., Environmental Ethics: Divergence and Convergence, third edition. McGraw-Hill, 2003.] “Interpreting Nature and Politics in the History of Western Thought: The Environmentalist Challenge.” Environmental Politics, Vol. 8, No. 2, Summer 1999. “Property, Environmentalism, and the Lockean Myth in America: The Challenge of Regulatory Takings.” Special Issue: “Humans and the Environment,” Proteus: A Journal of Ideas, Vol. 15, No.2, Fall 1998. “Gifford Pinchot, John Muir, and the Boundaries of Politics in American Thought.” Polity, Vol. 30, No. 2, Winter 1997. BOOK CHAPTERS “Environmental Political Theory,” in The Companion to Environmental Studies, edited by Noel Castree, Mike Hulme, and James Proctor, Routledge, forthcoming 2017. John M. Meyer, Curriculum Vitae, page 3 of 10 “Environmentalism and Everyday Life.” With Jens M. Kersten. In The Greening of Everyday Life: Challenging Practices, Imagining Possibilities, edited by John M. Meyer and Jens M. Kersten. Oxford University Press, 2016. “Automobility and Freedom.” In The Greening of Everyday Life: Challenging Practices, Imagining Possibilities, edited by John M. Meyer and Jens M. Kersten. Oxford University Press, 2016. “Denialism versus the Resonance Dilemma in the U.S.” In America After Nature: Democracy, Culture, Environment, edited by Catrin Gersdorf and Juliane Braun. Universitätsverlag Winter, 2016. “Sacrifice and the Possibilities for Environmental Action.” In Oxford Handbook of Environmental Ethics, edited by Stephen Gardiner and Allen Thompson, Oxford University Press, 2016. “Introducing Environmental Political Theory.” With Teena Gabrielson, Cheryl Hall, and David Schlosberg. In Oxford Handbook of Environmental Political Theory, edited by Teena Gabrielson, Cheryl Hall, John M. Meyer, and David Schlosberg. Oxford University Press, 2016. “Hobbes: Relating Nature and Politics.” In Engaging Nature: Environmentalism and the Political Theory Canon, edited by Peter Cannavò and Joseph H. Lane. The MIT Press, 2014. “A Democratic Politics of Sacrifice?” In The Environmental Politics of Sacrifice, edited by Michael Maniates and John M. Meyer. The MIT Press, 2010. “Must We Sacrifice? Confronting the Politics of Sacrifice in an Ecologically Full World.” With Michael Maniates. In The Environmental Politics of Sacrifice, edited by Michael Maniates and John M. Meyer. The MIT Press, 2010. “Sacrifice and a New Environmental Politics.” With Michael Maniates. In The Environmental Politics of Sacrifice, edited by Michael Maniates and John M. Meyer. The MIT Press, 2010. “Beyond ‘Postmaterialism’: Building a foundation for popular environmental action.” Written for PostEnvironmentalism, edited by William Chaloupka, Jim Proctor, and Jay Odenbaugh. “Political Theory and the Environment.” In Oxford Handbook of Political Theory, edited by John Dryzek, Bonnie Honig, and Anne Phillips. Oxford University Press, 2006. “Global Liberalism, Environmentalism, and the Changing Boundaries of the Political: Karl Polanyi’s Insights.” In Environmental Values in a Globalizing World: Nature, Justice, and Governance, edited by Jouni Paavola and Ian Lowe. Routledge, 2005. ESSAYS “The Anthropocene Idea: Janus-Faced and Interdisciplinary.” Blog post in Inhabiting the Anthropocene, August 2016. inhabitingtheanthropocene.com/2016/08/10/the-anthropocene-idea-janus-faced-andinterdisciplinary/. “Politics in – but not of – the Anthropocene.” In “Whose Anthropocene? Revisiting Dipesh Chakrabarty’s Four Theses,” Transformations in Environment and Society: Perspectives from the RCC, the journal of the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, edited by Robert Emmett and Thomas Lekan, No. 2, 2016. “Less is More.” In “Minding the Gap: Working across Disciplines in Environmental Studies,” RCC Perspectives, the journal of the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, edited by Robert Emmett and Frank Zelko, No. 2, 2014. John M. Meyer, Curriculum Vitae, page 4 of 10 “Sacrifice and a New Politics of Sustainability.” In State of the World 2012: Moving Toward Sustainable Prosperity, edited by Erik Assadourian, Worldwatch Institute, Island Press 2012. “Rethinking Personal Sacrifice.” The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, November/December 2008. “Another Inconvenient Truth.” Dissent, Fall 2006. “The Afterlife of Environmentalism.” In “Special Report: Toward a Greener Politics,” The American Prospect, Vol. 16, No. 10, October 2005. “Does Environmentalism Have a Future?” Dissent, Spring 2005. REVIEW ESSAYS; COMMENTARIES; ENCYCLOPEDIA ARTICLES “Critical Dialogue” on Consensus and Global Environmental Governance by Walter F. Baber and Robert V. Bartlett and Engaging the Everyday by John M. Meyer. Perspectives on Politics, Vol. 14, No. 1, March 2016. (Paired book reviews, along with responses, by Frank Baber and Robert Bartlett and me). “Hypocrisy, NIMBY, and the Politics of Everybody’s Backyard,” Ethics, Place, and the Environment, Vol. 13, No. 3, Fall 2010. (Peer commentary). “Environmental Political Theory,” core article (~3000 words) in The Encyclopedia of Political Science, ed. George Thomas Kurian, et.al., CQ Press, 2010. “Anarchism,” interpretive essay (~1000 words) in The Encyclopedia of Political Science, ed. George Thomas Kurian, et.al., CQ Press, 2010. “Whose Nature?” Theory & Event, Vol. 8, No. 3, 2005. (Review essay of two books examining the relationship between nature, culture, indigeneity, and race). “Green Liberalism and Beyond.” Organization and Environment, Vol. 18, No. 1, March 2005. (Review essay of two books analyzing the relationship of liberalism, environmentalism, and citizenship). “Review Essay on Dobson and Luke.” Political Theory, Vol. 29, No. 2, April 2001. (First review essay on environmental political thought -– three books -- to be published in a major disciplinary journal). BOOK REVIEWS Sustainability by Leslie Paul Thiele, in Environmental Values, Vol. 23, No. 3, June 2014. The Landscape of Reform: Civic Pragmatism and Environmental Thought in America by Ben A. Minteer, in Perspectives on Politics, Vol. 5, No. 2, June 2007. Constitutional Environmental Rights by Tim Hayward, in Organization and Environment, Vol. 19, No. 4, December 2006. Native Waters: Contemporary Indian Water Settlements and the Second Treaty Era by Daniel McCool, in the Journal of Politics, Vol. 66, No. 3, August 2004. A Companion to Environmental Thought by Peter Hay, in Organization and Environment, Vol. 16, No. 1, March 2003. The Promise of Green Politics: Environmentalism and the Public Sphere by Douglas Torgerson, in American Political Science Review, Vol. 94, No. 1, March 2000. Requiem for Modern Politics: The Tragedy of the Enlightenment and the Challenge of the New Millennium by William Ophuls, in Political Science, Vol. 51, No. 1, July 1999. Machiavelli, Leonardo and the Science of Power by Roger D. Masters, in the Journal of Politics, Vol. 60, No. 1, February 1998. John M. Meyer, Curriculum Vitae, page 5 of 10 Environmental Politics and Institutional Change by Elim Papadakis, in Political Science, Vol. 49, No. 2, December 1997. The Third World in Global Environmental Politics by Marian A.L. Miller, in AntePodium: An Antipodean electronic journal of world affairs, February 1997. KEYNOTES AND OTHER INVITED TALKS Robert and Mary Neher Endowed Lecture, University of La Verne, to be presented in April 2017. “Environmentalism, New Materialism, and the Resonance Dilemma.” Talk sponsored by Genre: Forms of Discourse and Culture, and the University of Oklahoma Department of English, April 2015. “Engaging the Everyday: The Challenge for Environmentalism and Political Theory.” Political Theory Workshop and Interdisciplinary Forum for Environmental Research (joint event), University of California-San Diego, April 2015. “Environmentalism and the Resonance Dilemma.” Sustainable Futures Speaker Series, Humboldt State University, April 2015. “American Environmentalism and the Resonance Dilemma.” Keynote Address, conference on “America After Nature: Democracy – Culture – Environment.” German Association for American Studies, Würzburg, Germany, June, 2014. “Connecting Sustainability with Everyday Concerns.” California Student Sustainability Coalition (CSSC) Convergence, Humboldt State University, November 2013. Guest Instructor. European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) Ph.D. Summer School on Environmental Politics and Policy. Keele University, UK, June 2013. “Environmentalism as Social Criticism.” Lunchtime Colloquium, Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, Munich, Germany, June 2013. “Liberalism, Materialism, and Environmental Criticism.” Colloquium, Institut für Politische Wissenschaft, Leibniz Universität, Hannover, Germany, May 2013. “Defining Sustainable Materialism: An Environmentalism of Everyday Life.” Sydney Ideas Roundtable, University of Sydney, Australia, November 2012. “Automobility and the Politics of Freedom.” Harrison McCain Foundation Lecture, and “Questions of Materiality and the Discourses of Environmentalism.” Graduate Colloquium, Acadia University, Nova Scotia, Canada, October 2012. “The Art of Problem-Driven Theorizing: Writing Dissertations that Engage with the World,” Ph.D. student workshop, and “Sacrifice and a New Environmental Politics,” panel discussion and book launch, School of International Service, American University, Washington D.C., September 2010. John M. Meyer, Curriculum Vitae, page 6 of 10 “Climate Change and the Politics of Sacrifice.” Climate Change and Ethics Lecture Series, Ohio University, October 2008. “The Environmental Politics of Sacrifice.” Building Sustainable Futures Lecture Series, Humboldt State University, April 2008. “The Politics of Sacrifice.” Invited panelist, co-organizer, and co-facilitator of workshop. Allegheny College, September 2007. “Populism, Paternalism, and the Future of U.S. Environmentalism.” Environmental Ethics and Policy Lecture Series, University of Washington, Seattle, January 2007. “The Paradox of Property and Environmentalism.” Environmental Studies Department Seminar Series, University of California-Santa Cruz, January 2006. “The Death and Life of Progressive Politics.” Roundtable. Co-sponsored by The American Prospect magazine, dropping knowledge, Nathan Cummings Foundation, Wallace Global Fund. Allaire Studios, Woodstock, NY, September 2005. “Nature, Property and Democracy in the Debate over Genetically Modified Organisms,” public lecture, and “Does Environmentalism Have a Future?” seminar. Southwestern University, April 2005. “Nature, Property, and Democracy in the Debate over Genetically Modified Organisms.” Thursday Seminar, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, December 2004. “How Do Property Rights Relate to Sovereignty? Conflicting American Indian and European-American Views.” Institute on American Indian Civics, sponsored by W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Humboldt State University, June 1999. “Rights to Life? Nature, Property and Biotechnology.” Selected via national competition. Trinity Center for Collaborative Teaching and Research, Trinity College, March 1999. “On Relating Nature and Politics: Environmentalism and Western Political Thought.” Humanities and Social Sciences Interdisciplinary Seminar, Victoria University of Wellington, September 1997. “Environmentalism and the Boundaries of Politics.” Center for Urban Affairs and Policy Research, Northwestern University, October 1995. INVITED WORKSHOPS (Funded) “After Nature: Politics and Practice in Dipesh Chakrabarty’s Four Theses of Climate History.” Workshop with Professor Chakrabarty, University of South Carolina, February 2015. Co-organizer and presenter, “The Greening of Everyday Life: Reimagining Environmentalism in Postindustrial Societies.” Workshop sponsored by the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, Munich, June 2014. “Studying the Environment – Working Across Disciplines.” Workshop sponsored by the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, Vollmar Akademie, Kochelsee, Germany, July 2013. “Flows of Food, Water, and Energy: Sustainable Materialism in Practice.” Symposium sponsored by the Sydney Network on Climate Change and Society at University of Sydney, November 2012. “Exploring Breakthroughs in Entrepreneurship and Public Policy.” Conference Series in Public Policy, Risk Analysis, and the Law, Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment and Montana State University, Bozeman, June 2008. John M. Meyer, Curriculum Vitae, page 7 of 10 “Integrating Ethics into Environmental Studies: Ethics, Science, and Civic Responsibility.” Workshop cosponsored by Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs; Center for Humans and Nature; New York University. New York, May 2004. CONFERENCES Presentations “Vocations of (Environmental) Political Theory in the Anthropocene.” European Consortium for Political Research, Joint Session Workshop on “Reframing Environmentalism? Environmental Political Theory in the Anthropocene,” organized by John Barry and Manuel Arias-Maldonado, Pisa, April 2016, and Western Political Science Association, San Diego, March 2016. Author presentation on Engaging the Everyday for panel on “New Books in Environmental Political Theory.” Western Political Science Association, Las Vegas, April 2015. “Materiality and the Challenge of the Politicizing ‘Private’ Practices.” Association for Political Theory conference, Madison, Wisconsin, October 2014. “‘Sustainable’ Household Practices: Citizenship, Consumerism, or Both?” Western Political Science Association, Seattle, April 2014. “The Question of Materiality in Environmental Politics.” Atlantic Provinces Political Science Association, Fredericton, New Brunswick, September 2012. “Automobility and Freedom.” American Political Science Association, Seattle, September 2011. “Hobbes, Nature, and Environmental Political Thought,” with Justin Williams. Western Political Science Association, San Antonio, April 2011. “On the Possibilities for a Democratic Politics of Sacrifice.” Association for Environmental Studies and Sciences, Portland, Oregon, June 2010. “Environmental Politics in a Time of Economic Crisis,” roundtable participant. Environmental Political Theory workshop, San Francisco, March 2010. “We Have Never Been Liberal: Possibilities for Effective Environmental Social Criticism.” American Political Science Association, Toronto, September 2009. “Popular environmentalism(s) and Materialist Concerns: Is there a Trade-Off?” Western Political Science Association, San Diego, March 2008. “Can Sacrifice be Democratic? Reflections on an Environmentalist Dilemma.” American Political Science Association, Chicago, August 2007. “Populism, Paternalism, and the State of Environmentalism in the U.S.” Western Political Science Association, Las Vegas, March 2007. “Pedagogical Strategies and Syllabus Construction for Teaching Environmental Political Theory.” Presenter and Facilitator, Environmental Political Theory Workshop, Las Vegas, March 2007. “Populism and Environmentalism.” International Conference on Globalization, Environmental Ethics, and Environmental Justice, Michigan State University, August 2006. “Sacrifice, Hope, and the Future of Environmentalist Social Criticism.” International Studies Association, San Diego, March 2006 and Western Political Science Association, Albuquerque, March 2006. “Theorizing American Environmentalism.” Roundtable. Western Political Science Association, Albuquerque, March 2006. John M. Meyer, Curriculum Vitae, page 8 of 10 “The Paradox of Property Rights and Environmentalism: Rethinking the Lockean Myth.” Western Political Science Association, Oakland, March 2005. “The Environmentalist Turn toward Liberalism and the Possibilities for Social Criticism.” Southern Political Science Association, New Orleans, January 2005. “What Is Environmental Political Theory (and what should it be)?” Western Political Science Association, Portland, March 2004. “Global Liberalism, Environmentalism, and the Changing Boundaries of the Political.” Workshop on “Reconceiving Environmental Values in an Globalising World,” Oxford Centre for Environment, Ethics & Society, Mansfield College, Oxford University, July 2002. Author presentation on Political Nature for panels on “New Books in Environmental Politics” American Political Science Association, Boston, September 2002 and Western Political Science Association, Long Beach, March 2002. “Connecting Theory and Practice in Environmental Conflict.” 2001 Environment: Land, Air, Water (ELAW) Conference, School of Law, University of Oregon, March 2001. “Grounding Political Theory: On Nature, Place, and the Foundations of Political Ideas.” American Political Science Association, Atlanta, September 1999. “Rights to Life?: Nature, Property and Biotechnology.” American Political Science Association, Boston, September 1998. “Dualism and Derivation: Interpreting Nature and Politics in Western Thought.” International Conference on Environmental Justice: Global Ethics for the 21st Century, Melbourne, October 1997. “The Character and Scope of Ecological Politics.” Northeastern Political Science Association, Newark, November 1995. “A Critical Examination of the Conceptual Relationship between Nature and Politics in Environmental Argument.” Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World, Estes Park, Colorado, August 1995. “The Politics of Nature: Environmental Philosophy and the Evasion of Political Judgment.” Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, April 1995. Discussant or Chair Paper Discussant, European Consortium for Political Research Joint Session Workshop, 2016. Panel Discussant, Western Political Science Association, 2001; 2002; 2006; 2009-2012, 2014-2016. Panel Chair, Western Political Science Association, 2000; 2004 – 2010, 2014-2016. Panel Chair, Association for Political Theory, 2010. Panel Chair, Association for Environmental Studies and Sciences, 2010. Panel Discussant, American Political Science Association, 2001; 2006. Panel Chair, International Conference on Environmental Justice, Melbourne, October 1997. NON-ACADEMIC PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Executive Director, Ohio Public Interest Research Group, 1987 – 1990. Outreach Director, Colorado Public Interest Research Group, 1986 – 1987. Outreach Director, U.S. Public Interest Research Group, 1986. Organizer, Colorado Public Interest Research Group, 1984 – 1986. Campaign Organizer, Vote Colorado! Ballot Initiative, 1984. Aide and Intern, Office of Alderman David Orr, Chicago, 1983. John M. Meyer, Curriculum Vitae, page 9 of 10 COURSES TAUGHT Contemporary Political Theory Democratic Theory Environmental Political Theory Introduction to Political Theory Liberalization and Resistance Politics of Everyday Life Radical Political Thought Democracy Environmental Politics Ethics and Values in Policymaking Introductory Seminar in Political Science Nature and Politics in Western Thought Politics of Sustainability Property and Politics HONORS Political Nature one of three books honored as “Great Works in Environmental Political Thought,” Western Political Science Association, 2012. Student Organization Advisor of the Year Award (for CCAT), HSU, 2006. Political Nature recognized as an “Outstanding Academic Title for 2002” by Choice. President Alistair McCrone Promising Faculty Scholar Award (First Annual), HSU, 2002. Outstanding Faculty Award, Student Disability Resource Center, HSU, 2002. Honorable Mention, APSA Strauss Award for Best Doctoral Dissertation in Political Philosophy, 1998. Department of Political Science Award for Teaching Excellence, UW-Madison, 1993. “Distinguished Teaching Assistant,” UW-Madison, 1992. PROFESSIONAL SERVICE Editor, Environmental Politics, 2016-present. Editorial Board, Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences, 2016-present. Editorial Board, Journal of Politics, 2015-present. Associate Editor, Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences, 2013-2016. Founder and Facilitator, Environmental Political Theory international listserv, 2001-present. Award committee, “Outstanding Environmental Political Theory Paper,” WPSA, 2011; 2012. Executive Council, Western Political Science Association, 2006-2009. Organizer, Environmental Political Theory workshop, Albuquerque, March 2006. Section Chair, Western Political Science Association, 2004. Organizer, first Environmental Political Theory workshop, Long Beach, 2002. Co-founder, Workshop on Environmental Political Theory, 2001. REFEREE Books Manuscripts and Proposals (#, when multiple): Ashgate; Bloomsbury; Duke University Press; MIT Press (9); Oxford University Press (4); Palgrave Macmillan; Polity Press; Routledge (3); Rowman and Littlefield; University of Minnesota Press; University of North Carolina Press; University of Toronto Press (2); University Press of Kentucky. Journals (*= multiple manuscripts): American Quarterly; Contemporary Political Theory; Cultural Critique*; Environment and Planning A; Environmental Philosophy; Environmental Politics*; Environmental Values; Ethics, Policy, and the Environment*; Global Environmental Politics*; Human Ecology Review; Humboldt Journal of Social Relations; Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences*; Journal of Political Science; Journal of Politics*; Law and Social Inquiry; Political Research Quarterly*; John M. Meyer, Curriculum Vitae, page 10 of 10 Political Theory*; Politics; Publius; Social Problems; Social Theory and Practice*; The Sociological Quarterly; Sustainability: An Open Access Journal. Awards, Grant Proposals, Tenure and Promotion Files: Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia; American Council of Learned Societies; Carleton College; Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order; Hamilton College; Lehigh University; St. Joseph’s University; St. Lawrence University; University of Louisville; University of Minnesota-Morris; University of Oklahoma. SELECTED UNIVERSITY SERVICE, HUMBOLDT Chair, University Policies Committee, 2016-present. Senator (At-large tenure-line faculty delegate), University Senate, 2013-present. Steering Committee, Campus Center for Appropriate Technology (CCAT), 1999-present. Chair, Faculty Search Committees, Department of Politics, 2003; 2004; 2016. Faculty Search Committee, Interdisciplinary Hire in Middle East Studies, 2014-2015. University Sustainability Steering Committee, 2011-2012. Chair, University Change Steering Committee, 2010-2012. Humboldt Energy Independence Fund (HEIF) Committee, 2007-2012. Convener, Committee to Create a New Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies Major, 2007-2011. University Cabinet for Institutional Change, 2009-2010. Faculty Advisor, Campus Center for Appropriate Technology (CCAT), 2000-2009. Chair, Dean Search Committee, College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, 2005-2006. University Strategic Planning Groups on Research and on Graduate Education, 2003-2004. Ad Hoc Committee on the General Faculty Constitution and Academic Senate Bylaws, 2002-2004. Founder and Co-organizer, “Building Sustainable Futures” Speaker Series, 2001-2004. University Graduate Council, 2000-2004. Strategic Planning Task Force for Graduate Education, 2001. Planning Committee, Social Science Graduate Program, 1998. PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS Workshop on Environmental Political Theory (co-founder) American Political Science Association Association for Environmental Studies and Sciences Association of Members of the Institute for Advanced Study Association for Political Theory Rachel Carson Center Society of Fellows Western Political Science Association REFERENCES AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
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