Hi all

This bounced the first time- my fault for a confusion in my email address.

Cheers
Mat
Hi all
 
Just a quick comment on the GEP journal part of this point by Jeannie. She
is probably right that we have fewer Œcomparative¹ than Œinternational¹
papers published, although we haven¹t counted to monitor such things, and
the boundary is in any case often blurred in the context of a specific
paper. But I would strongly suspect that if we did count we also get fewer
comparative papers submitted to the journal ­ perhaps because as she says,
comparativists have perhaps other outlets like EP. Our policy is only not to
accept papers which are single country case studies which don¹t attempt to
make any broader claims ­ comparative, international, theoretical or
empirical. So we¹d certainly welcome more comparative submissions to the
journal!
 
Cheers
Mat
 
 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sowers, Jeannie
Sent: Wednesday November 11, 2009 5:05 PM
To: Paul Steinberg; Sherrie Baver
Cc: Raul Pacheco; [email protected]
Subject: Re: Do we have an equivalent to GEP-ED in comparative politics
and/or public policy?
 
Hello all,
Very glad to see this discussion start, and I look forward to participating
in whatever forum, listserv, or ongoing discussion ensues.   While I enjoy
the GEP journal, I don¹t think it has highlighted the work of comparativists
very much, and instead other journals, like the Journal of Environment and
Development, Environmental Politics, etc have filled that niche.
Best,
Jeannie


On 11/11/09 12:45 PM, "Paul Steinberg" <[email protected]> wrote:
Dear Sherrie, Raul and All,

I would be very supportive of any efforts to raise the profile of
comparative work within GEP.  I am not sure that a separate list is the way
to go, though I'm certainly open to it.  I think it might be more fruitful
to encourage more discussion of comparative themes within the GEP list (and
other GEP fora), recognizing - as has long been recognized within IR more
broadly - that a clear account of international politics requires a solid
understanding of domestic politics, and often vice-versa.  I think the GEP
journal has done a good job of highlighting comparative work, though the
connections to theories and methods of comparative politics remain tenuous.

On that note, Stacy VanDeveer and I are co-editing a new book, Comparative
Environmental Politics, that is due to appear through MIT Press next summer.
The idea is to build bridges between GEP and comparative politics, with an
emphasis on identifying theoretical frameworks that can illuminate applied
environmental problems and facilitate a cumulative research agenda.  It is
designed for classroom use at the upper-division and graduate level.  The
Table of Contents is below.

All the best,

Paul


Comparative Environmental Politics

Paul F. Steinberg and Stacy D. VanDeveer, eds.

Table of Contents


Part I. Building Bridges: Comparative Politics and the Environment
1. Comparative Environmental Politics: An Introduction
-- Paul F. Steinberg and Stacy D. VanDeveer
2. Bridging Archipelagos
-- Paul F. Steinberg and Stacy D. VanDeveer

Part II. Greening States and Societies
3. Greening the State?
-- James Meadowcroft
4. The Globalization of Environmental Concern: A Challenge to the
Post-Materialist Thesis
-- Riley Dunlap and Richard E. York

Part III. Nonstate Actors and Social Mobilization
5. Environmentalism in Political Context: The Comparative Study of
Environmental Movements
-- Kate O'Neill
6. Corporate Social Responsibility: Out of the Shadow of Environmental
Regulation
-- Deborah Rigling Gallagher & Erika Weinthal
7. Explaining the ³meaning of greening² in European politics: A Theoretical
Overview
-- Michael O'Neill

Part IV. Institutional Effectiveness across Political Systems
8. Comparative Environmental Politics and Democracy: Latin America and
Eastern Europe Compared
-- Kathryn Hochstetler
9. Institutional Change and Environmental Governance in Authoritarian
Regimes: Water and Authority in Egypt
-- Jeannie Sowers
10. Surviving the Storm: Environmental Governance amid Social Instability
-- Paul F. Steinberg

Part V. Comparative Multilevel Governance
11. The Internationalization of Domestic Environmental Politics in Central
and Eastern Europe
-- Liliana B. Andonova & Stacy D. VanDeveer
12. The Governance of Forest Commons and Comparative Environmental Politics
-- Arun Agrawal

Part VI CEP Conclusions and Futures
13. Distinguishing Comparative Environmental Politics: Conclusions, Comments
and Research Agendas
        -- Paul F. Steinberg and Stacy D. VanDeveer



Paul F. Steinberg
Visiting Scholar
Environmental Science, Policy & Management
University of California at Berkeley
510-526-4090

Associate Professor of Political Science &
Environmental Policy
Harvey Mudd College
http://www.hmc.edu/steinberg





----- Original Message -----
From: "Sherrie Baver" <[email protected]>
To: "Raul Pacheco" <[email protected]>,
[email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, November 11, 2009 8:55:28 AM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific
Subject: RE: Do we have an equivalent to GEP-ED in comparative politics
and/or public policy?

Dear Raul and Others on the List,
     Perhaps it's time to start another list for comparativists.  I've been
thinking (admittedly fitfully) about this for several years.  Perhaps other
comparativists on the GEP-ED list might identify themselves and we could
begin talking among ourselves.  I would be willing to explore what my
college might do in terms of hosting a list unless Raul or someone else is
already experienced in setting up listserves.

Best,
Sherrie Baver
The City College and The Graduate Center-CUNY

________________________________________
From: [email protected]
[[email protected]] On Behalf Of Raul Pacheco
[[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, November 08, 2009 11:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Do we have an equivalent to GEP-ED in comparative politics and/or
public policy?

Dear all,

An in-depth Google search of listservs in the field of political science and
public policy yielded pretty much zero results. Do we have an equivalent to
GEP-ED in the fields of comparative politics and in public policy? Any
guidance would be much appreciated.

Best wishes, and thanks in advance!
Raul



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