Fordham University Comparative Politics/Environmental Policy position

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Kate O'NEILL

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Oct 9, 2019, 4:22:59 PM10/9/19
to 'GEP-Ed List, Association Studies and Sciences, Sarah Lockhart
Dear all,

Please also pass along to your networks! (And direct any questions to Professor Lockhart cc’d!)

Apologies for the cross-postings,

Best,

Kate

(For those who are curious: still waiting for the power to be turned off in Berkeley… PG&E keep pushing back the time, but if it happens, they estimate 48 hours-6 days)




Assistant Professor of Comparative Politics (Fordham University)

The Department of Political Science invites applications for a tenure track position in Comparative Politics at the Assistant Professor level, beginning Fall 2020. The position is located at Fordham’s Lincoln Center (Manhattan) campus.

We are particularly interested in candidates in the field of comparative environmental policy. A regional specialization focusing Asia or Latin America is especially desired. The successful candidate will be expected to contribute to undergraduate and graduate curricular needs in political science, as well as contribute to Fordham’s interdisciplinary Environmental Studies Program. We encourage to apply candidates who will deepen our engagement with institutions within New York City and contribute to our University and department’s commitment to quality teaching and research.

Consistent with our Jesuit and Catholic mission, we believe that cultural and intellectual diversity is central to the excellence of our academic program, and we strive to create an academic community and campus culture that attracts and facilitates the development of promising and diverse teacher-scholars. As our student body becomes increasingly diverse, we are especially interested in candidates with substantive experience and commitment to teaching and mentoring students from a range of social, cultural, and economic backgrounds.

Review of applications will begin on October 15. Interested applicants must submit the following documents in electronic format (PDF or Microsoft Word) to Professor Sarah Lockhart, Committee Chair, via Interfolio, at http://apply.interfolio.com/68311: cover letter, curriculum vitae, writing sample (no more than 30-35 pages), course syllabi, evidence of teaching effectiveness, and three letters of reference. Application materials should also address how the candidate's teaching, mentoring, scholarship, and/or community service supports Fordham University's commitment to diversity. Ph.D. at the time of appointment is required.

Fordham is an independent, Catholic University in the Jesuit tradition that welcomes applicants from all backgrounds. Fordham is an equal opportunity employer.


Charles Chester

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Oct 9, 2019, 5:54:56 PM10/9/19
to 'GEP-Ed List
Kate,

Your parenthetical coda was intriguing…please power up your computer while you can (and obtain a satellite uplink, I guess) so you can send us gep-eders some real-time updates from your (increasingly remote?) outpost on the climate change front.

You also inspired me to google <<california power outage climate change>>. Some notable finds came up, including the first, which I thought most on this email list would appreciate:

Think California's Preemptive Blackouts Are Scary? Buckle Up

Good luck,

Charlie Chester
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GEP-guide.net • BCI • Y2Y • Brandeis • Fletcher




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Ronnie Lipschutz

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Oct 9, 2019, 6:05:42 PM10/9/19
to charles...@gmail.com, 'GEP-Ed List
Those of us at UC Santa Cruz keep getting warnings of imminent shutoffs, which keep being postponed.  There is a growing suspicion that PG&E is engaged in a form of blackmail, intended to motivate a public demand to accede to all of its bankruptcy demands and wishes (including smaller payouts to fire victims).  There is, so far, no sign of the predicted Diablo winds that are supposed to trigger the shutoff.

All of this makes me thing the case for regional microgrids, operated by community power aggregators, is stronger than ever.  At least then you would not have to shut down half of California in seeking to prevent another costly fire.  Either utilities need to underground their transmission networks--extremely costly--or create subgrids that can be shut off independently as necessary.  Otherwise, their asteroid is on its way.

Ronnie



--

Ronnie D. Lipschutz, Professor of Politics
UC Santa Cruz,1156 High St. Santa Cruz, CA  95064
Host, "Sustainability Now!" every other Sunday on KSQD 90.7FM & KSQD.org (archived at https://tinyurl.com/y4nbrenv)

"I have to die. If it is now, well, then, I die now; if later, then now I will take my lunch, since the hour for lunch has arrived — and dying I will tend to later.”  --Epictetus--



Shannon Kathryn Orr

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Oct 9, 2019, 7:49:50 PM10/9/19
to 'GEP-Ed List

It’s also an interesting case study of how climate change can be a “multiplier effect”.  You take the aging infrastructure (power lines in this case) and add in warm weather/high winds and it escalates the danger of wildfire.

 

And unfortunately, those who are most vulnerable (e.g. hourly workers in retail and food service who will not be called into work during power outages) are the ones who feel the biggest impact. Along with parents who are dealing with school closures and no back up child care.

 

Shannon

 

 

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Shannon K. Orr, Ph.D.

Professor/Graduate Coordinator

Political Science Department

118 Williams Hall

Bowling Green State University

sk...@bgsu.edu

419-372-7593

Kate O'NEILL

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Oct 9, 2019, 9:40:06 PM10/9/19
to sk...@bgsu.edu, 'GEP-Ed List
Reporting from the “blistering" fire conditions in Berkeley (Temp 64F/17C, Winds 8 mph, and humidity 41%): Ronnie’s hypothesis is looking increasingly more likely to be borne out, classes are back on, and I won’t have to stretch for examples in tomorrow’s (already as scheduled) lecture on North and South and on the diminishing difference between/diversity within countries on both sides of the divide. Tim Doyle’s work on majority and minority worlds is highly appropriate moving forward. 

Kate 



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