Would anyone have handy data or a reference that compares the contributions of 
different countries to climate change research?  This could be money spent on 
climate change science, number of publications by national origin of authors, 
or something along these lines.  I am doing a short piece for a public radio 
program (in a few hours...) and I would like to point to the disparity between 
US action and US research in this area.

Thanks for any leads!

Paul  

Paul F. Steinberg
Associate Professor of Political Science &
Environmental Policy
http://www.hmc.edu/steinberg

Department of Humanities, Social Sciences, & the Arts
301 East Platt Boulevard
Harvey Mudd College
Claremont, CA 91711
tel. 909-607-3840


----- Original Message -----
From: "DG Webster" <d.g.webs...@dartmouth.edu>
To: "Gep-Ed (gep-ed@googlegroups.com)" <gep-ed@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 28, 2011 1:22:54 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific
Subject: [gep-ed] Fwd: ISA 2012 panel/paper/poster proposals

Hello again, 

I'm happy to see several panels forming up. In hopes of facilitating further, 
I've created a simple web-site that 1) has useful information about the ISA 
2012 deadlines and San Diego, 2) includes a "Panel planning" page where people 
can post calls for panels, sign up for panels, etc. and 3) also features a few 
pages for some of the panel ideas already sent out to the list where people can 
comment and attach files. If you'd like me to create a page for your panel 
proposal, just e-mail me a short description or I'll be checking posts on the 
site periodically. This is an experiment of sorts, if it proves to be useful, 
great, if not, no worries. If you'd like to send feedback either way, feel 
free. 

You'll need this link to access the site: 
http://sites.google.com/site/isaess2012/home . It is open to anyone with the 
link but should not be available via search engines which provides some 
privacy. 

Best, 
D.G. Webster 


---------- Forwarded message ---------- 
From: DG Webster < d.g.webs...@dartmouth.edu > 
Date: Tue, Apr 26, 2011 at 11:45 AM 
Subject: ISA 2012 panel/paper/poster proposals 
To: "Gep-Ed ( gep-ed@googlegroups.com )" < gep-ed@googlegroups.com > 


Hi Folks, 

Here's some pertinent information for those of you who plan to submit panels, 
posters, and papers for ISA 2012 in San Diego. The big deadline is June 1, 
details on other deadlines can be found below. I've also pasted in the intro to 
the call for papers for next year, in case anyone wants to submit for a 
cross-over panel with the conference theme: Power Principles and Participation 
in the Global Information Age. Suggestions for other cross-over panels (with 
other ISA sections) are welcome as well. Below that is a list of possible panel 
topics that came up at the ESS meeting in Montreal in March. I strongly 
recommend organizing panel submissions, not just because it will make my job 
easier but also because panels organized by participants work quite well and 
because organizing panels can be a great way to network within the community. 
Lastly, please do remember to include accurate keywords in all your submissions 
to ensure that your paper/panel comes up when I'm searching for proposals on a 
particular topic. 

Best, 
D.G. Webster 
Vice-Chair 
Environmental Studies Section 
International Studies Association 

The 2012 ISA Conference will be in San Diego from 1-4 April 2012. The deadline 
for the submission of panels is 1 June 2011. 

a. If you are interested in proposing an innovative panel, the deadline is 16 
May 2011. 

b. If you are interested in proposing a working group, the deadline is 15 June 
2011. 

c. For more information, go to www.isanet.org 
Power, Principles and Participation in the Global Information Age 
Canadian communication theorist Marshall McLuhan famously said, “The medium is 
the 
message,” and coined the term “global village.” McLuhan died in 1980, but his 
insights are even more relevant today. The information environment is 
drastically different from that of even a decade ago, as new forms of 
information flows come into existence almost annually. Facebook now has over 
500 million users, and Twitter, a service barely in existence three years ago, 
counts over 175 million users. These tools are not only for finding long-lost 
school friends or sharing pictures of loved ones: they often are used for 
political purposes. For instance, both text messages and tweets served as vital 
communication tools during the 2010 post-election protests in Iran. Indeed, 
Reuters reported that United States government went so far as to ask Twitter to 
postpone maintenance and maintain service during this time. Humanitarian groups 
also use these communications technologies to bring attention to events 
worldwide: in the wake of Haiti’s 2010 earthquake, the Red Cross collected $30 
million in SMSbased donations from US phone users. And the 2010 elections 
witnessed US political candidates (and their staffs) tweeting and facebooking 
like never before. 

The theme of this year’s conference is inspired by the apparent impact of new 
information and 
communication technologies on international and transnational affairs. 
Information has altered power relations; it has help to globalize norms and 
principles; it has the potential to bring new participants into political and 
social processes world-wide. From geographic information systems that bring 
satellite images to our research to sophisticated form of electronic textual 
analysis to internet surveys, it is undeniable that a whole range of new 
technologies is affecting the way we think about and do research in 
international studies. 

see http://www.isanet.org/annual_convention/call-for-papers.html for the full 
call. 

List of panel topics proposed at the ESS meeting at ISA 2011 

(in the order they were mentioned) 
1. Sustainability 
2. GEP text books 
3. The peer-review process 
4. Climate justice 
5. CA practitioners 
6. Interaction between INGO leaders/policy makers and academics 
7. Changes in the middle east and GEP 
8. Rio +20 events 
9. Japan tsunami one year later 
10. Nuclear energy 
11. Big crises 
12. Risk analysis and uncertainty (Beck's global risk analysis) 
13. Oceans/fish 
14. Social ecological systems 

-- 
D.G. Webster 
Assistant Professor 
Environmental Studies Program 
Dartmouth College 
6182 Steele Hall 
Hanover, NH 03755 
phone: 603-646-0213 
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~envs/faculty/webster.html 




-- 
D.G. Webster 
Assistant Professor 
Environmental Studies Program 
Dartmouth College 
6182 Steele Hall 
Hanover, NH 03755 
phone: 603-646-0213 
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~envs/faculty/webster.html 

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