Dear Colleagues,

I wrote to the list a couple of days ago to announce the new "One Planet" 
book series with MIT Press. Apologies for this further intrusion, but I've 
learned that the document with proposal instructions failed to attach first 
time around. If you're interested, you can access the proposal guidelines 
at this link 
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__drive.google.com_file_d_183g-5F1xMgqziUydG54mceYXVixLTN8W92_view-3Fusp-3Dsharing&d=DwMFaQ&c=U0G0XJAMhEk_X0GAGzCL7Q&r=1E75UX-1UU6YFLprAhtnUYUyITvQAfY7d_wd122e_x4&m=kzjkycULZeYK6vXFb6fm5xq6X27HVU1WLX-IuZtoHGw&s=HuQig4XEauYM17u3K9sFnFSm7zJc1RbE-PGcjS_q3Kk&e=>
. 

The original email, describing the new series, follows.

Best,
Simon Nicholson (also for Sikina Jinnah)

ORIGINAL ANNOUNCEMENT

Sikina Jinnah and I are thrilled to announce that we are co-editing a new 
book series with MIT Press. The book series is entitled "One Planet." This 
new series will feature authoritative voices ready to provide guidance on 
how to understand and navigate contemporary environmental challenges. We've 
pasted the series blurb below and attached the proposal instructions. If 
you have a relevant project in mind or in the works, please consider 
submitting a proposal or reaching out to us to discuss the idea.

Many thanks,
Simon Nicholson (American University) and Sikina Jinnah (UC Santa Cruz)

*Series Blurb: *Today, the Earth’s population exceeds 7 billion people. An 
ever-increasing number of those people are plugged into globalized 
technologies, patterns of consumption, and systems of commerce such that 
the ecological foundations of the planet are being pressured like never 
before. Our species’ collective impact, especially as it triggers climate 
change and the destruction of worldwide biodiversity, is stretching the 
world beyond ecological breaking points. Identifying the problems is not 
enough; we are in desperate need of humane and insightful guidance.

This new series will feature authoritative voices ready to provide such 
guidance. No hand wringing or brow furrowing. The point is to provide a 
forum for leading experts to take their best shot at cutting a path through 
a particularly thorny thicket. Books in the series will explore and explain 
how particular expressions of environmental harm have come to be, what has 
been or is being done in response, and centrally, each monograph will chart 
pathways for future action. What will it take to move completely away from 
coal? What is needed to protect the oceans’ dying coral reefs? How can the 
world halt illegal logging? What does a sustainable food future look like? 
Is climate engineering a viable option to help alleviate the effects of 
near-term climate change?  What will it take to prevent the poaching of 
endangered species?

Though each book will be actions-oriented, the volumes will not be 
formulaic. The editors encourage intellectual creativity and invite authors 
to treat the books as extended essays rather than as academic treatises—to 
write with boldness and clarity in a voice that’s distinctly their own. 
Some books will provide comparative assessment of attempts to tackle common 
problems in different places; others will be rooted in historical or 
scientific analysis. Some books will have calls for action directed 
principally at policymakers, others at educators, or even at future 
generations who must deal with and respond to sets of problems that will be 
handed to them. Most books should speak to the public at large. All books 
will play to authors’ strong suits.

Expressions of interest from authors should be directed to Sikina Jinnah (
[email protected]) and Simon Nicholson ([email protected]). Books 
will be 50-70,000 words in length and must be written in a style that makes 
them accessible and appealing to the non-specialist, while simultaneously 
delivering a clear and cogent normative argument.

-- 
Simon Nicholson, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of International Relations
Director of the Global Environmental Politics Program
School of International Service
American University
4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW
Washington DC 20016 // +1.202.885.1614 

Links: Homepage <http://www.american.edu/sis/faculty/snichols.cfm> // GEP 
Program <http://www.american.edu/sis/gep> // Forum for Climate Engineering 
Assessment <http://dcgeoconsortium.org/>

*New Earth Politics: Essays from the Anthropocene 
<https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/new-earth-politics> *(MIT Press, 2016).

*Global Environmental Politics: From Person to Planet 
<http://www.amazon.com/Global-Environmental-Politics-Person-Planet/dp/1612056490/>
 *(Routledge, 
2015).

    

TEDx Talk: "Climate Geoengineering: Coming Soon to a Planet Near You? 
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f2UoGcqIT3Q>"

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