BENJAMIN HALE - University of Colorado Boulder · ELECTED OFFICE PRESIDENT, International Society...

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Benjamin Hale Last Revised: 29 January 2020 1 BENJAMIN HALE http://www.practicalreason.com ENVS and Philosophy University of Colorado, Boulder Campus Box 488 Boulder, CO 80309-0488 [email protected] AREA OF SPECIALIZATION Environmental Ethics, Bioethics, Public Policy and Philosophy, Applied Ethics, Social and Political Philosophy, Ethical Theory. AREAS OF CONCENTRATION Practical Reason, Discourse Ethics, Neo-Kantian Moral Theory. CURRENT POSITION UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO, BOULDER Associate Professor, ENVS and Philosophy, 2013-present. Assistant Professor, ENVS and Philosophy, 2007-2013. Interim Director, Benson Center for Western Civilization, 2019-present. Director of Graduate Studies, ENVS, 2012-2014. Director, Center for Values and Social Policy, Philosophy, 2006-2008. Visiting Instructor, Philosophy Department, 2005-2007. ELECTED OFFICE PRESIDENT, International Society for Environmental Ethics, 2016-2019. Three year term. VICE PRESIDENT, International Society for Environmental Ethics 2013- 2016. Three year term. PREVIOUS POSITIONS NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, Interim Director, Environmental Studies Program and Visiting Asst. Prof. of Environmental Philosophy, 2005 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, Adjunct Asst. Professor, Environmental Science and Policy Program, School of International and Public Affairs STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY, Learning Communities Program, 2003-04 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY, Adjunct Asst. Professor, 2003-04. STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY, Graduate Instructor, 1999-2002 EDUCATION: DEGREES PH.D. (Philosophy, 2004), SUNY AT STONY BROOK Dissertation: The Roots of Moral Considerability: Ecological Responsibility in Deontological Ethics M.P.A. (Natural Resource Policy, 1997), UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA Specialization: Natural Resource Policy B.A. (1994), KALAMAZOO COLLEGE NON-DEGREE ACADEMIC AFFILIATIONS EBERHARD KARLS UNIVERSITÄT TÜBINGEN, Philosophy Dept. Tübingen, Germany. Doctoral Exchange Arrangement. 2000-2002. MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE, German Language Program. Summer 2000. UNIVERSITY OF ST. PETERSBURG, St. Petersburg, Russia. Fall 1992. AWARDS AND HONORS INCLUSIVE FACULTY HIRING AND DIVERSITY IN ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES: Funded: $3,000. Co-submitted with David Ciplet and Carol Wessman. C-RIG SPECIAL EVENTS GRANT: Funded: $7,709. University of

Transcript of BENJAMIN HALE - University of Colorado Boulder · ELECTED OFFICE PRESIDENT, International Society...

Benjamin Hale Last Revised: 29 January 2020 1

BENJAMIN HALE http://www.practicalreason.com

ENVS and Philosophy

University of Colorado, Boulder

Campus Box 488

Boulder, CO 80309-0488

[email protected]

AREA OF

SPECIALIZATION Environmental Ethics, Bioethics, Public Policy and Philosophy, Applied Ethics, Social and Political Philosophy, Ethical Theory.

AREAS OF

CONCENTRATION Practical Reason, Discourse Ethics, Neo-Kantian Moral Theory.

CURRENT POSITION UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO, BOULDER Associate Professor, ENVS and Philosophy, 2013-present. Assistant Professor, ENVS and Philosophy, 2007-2013. Interim Director, Benson Center for Western Civilization, 2019-present. Director of Graduate Studies, ENVS, 2012-2014. Director, Center for Values and Social Policy, Philosophy, 2006-2008. Visiting Instructor, Philosophy Department, 2005-2007.

ELECTED OFFICE PRESIDENT, International Society for Environmental Ethics, 2016-2019. Three year term. VICE PRESIDENT, International Society for Environmental Ethics 2013-2016. Three year term.

PREVIOUS POSITIONS NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, Interim Director, Environmental Studies Program and Visiting Asst. Prof. of Environmental Philosophy, 2005

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, Adjunct Asst. Professor, Environmental Science and Policy Program, School of International and Public Affairs

STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY, Learning Communities Program, 2003-04 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY, Adjunct Asst. Professor, 2003-04. STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY, Graduate Instructor, 1999-2002

EDUCATION: DEGREES

PH.D. (Philosophy, 2004), SUNY AT STONY BROOK Dissertation: The Roots of Moral Considerability: Ecological Responsibility

in Deontological Ethics M.P.A. (Natural Resource Policy, 1997), UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA Specialization: Natural Resource Policy B.A. (1994), KALAMAZOO COLLEGE

NON-DEGREE

ACADEMIC

AFFILIATIONS

EBERHARD KARLS UNIVERSITÄT TÜBINGEN, Philosophy Dept. Tübingen, Germany. Doctoral Exchange Arrangement. 2000-2002.

MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE, German Language Program. Summer 2000. UNIVERSITY OF ST. PETERSBURG, St. Petersburg, Russia. Fall 1992.

AWARDS AND HONORS INCLUSIVE FACULTY HIRING AND DIVERSITY IN ENVIRONMENTAL

STUDIES: Funded: $3,000. Co-submitted with David Ciplet and Carol Wessman.

C-RIG SPECIAL EVENTS GRANT: Funded: $7,709. University of

Benjamin Hale Last Revised: 29 January 2020 2

Colorado Liaison/Principal Investigator. Received funding to conduct workshop at the University of California, Santa Barbara on the Ethics of Grizzly Bear Reintroduction.

NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION GRANT 11-514: Total funded: $399,949 ($99,967 to CU). Co-PI on joint grant between Northern Arizona University, University of Montana, and the University of Colorado, Boulder. “Collaborative Research: Deliberation and Communication—Building Practical Skills in the Next Generation of Environmental Scientists.” 2012-2015. Extension through 2016.

DEAN’S FUND FOR EXCELLENCE GRANT: $700 to attend the Three Rivers Philosophy at the University of South Carolina, 2011.

ROME III (THIRD ANNUAL ROME): $3000, President’s Fund for Humanities, 2010

DEAN’S FUND FOR EXCELLENCE GRANT: $1000 to attend the Inland North Philosophy Conference. 2009.

SYMPOSIUM: RESEARCH ON PRISONERS AND OTHER VULNERABLE

POPULATIONS: $23,750 total; (Ford Foundation Grant: $8,000; Law School: $10,000; also, money from PFH, CHA, and Sociology) SEED GRANT: To bring Ajume Wingo, Visiting Scholar, $4,000 ROME (FIRST ANNUAL ROCKY MOUNTAIN ETHICS CONGRESS): $9,000 total (CHA grant: $4,000; PFH grant: $5,000) TÜBINGEN STIPEND: Two year recipient of the doctoral exchange

fellowship between Universität Tübingen and Stony Brook University, 2000-02.

SCHOLARSHIP TO MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE: Recipient of academic scholarship to Middlebury’s Intensive German Language Program.

THOMAS J. WATSON FELLOWSHIP, August 1994 – August 1995. HODGE PRIZE IN PHILOSOPHY, Kalamazoo College. 1994. Highest

academic average in the philosophy department. PUBLICATIONS: BOOKS

1. The Wicked and the Wild, MIT Press. December, 2016. (328 pages)

a. Reviewed in: i. New York Times ii. LA Times iii. Environmental Values iv. New Political Science v. Geographical vi. Quarterly Review of Biology vii. Environmental History

2. Routledge Companion to Environmental Ethics, Benjamin Hale and Andrew Light, eds. Routledge Press. Under Contract.

3. Philosophy Looks at Chess, Benjamin Hale, editor. Open Court Press. August, 2008.

Series Editor, Routledge Environmental Ethics, 2019-Present

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JOURNALS Co-Editor, with Andrew Light. Ethics, Policy & Environment. Routledge: Taylor and Francis. October 2009, V12.3 – Present. Three issues/year:

٠ Volume 22, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 22, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 22, Issue 1 ٠ Volume 21, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 21, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 21, Issue 1 ٠ Volume 20, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 20, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 20, Issue 1 ٠ Volume 19, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 19, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 19, Issue 1 ٠ Volume 18, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 18, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 18, Issue 1

٠ Volume 17, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 17, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 17, Issue 1 ٠ Volume 16, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 16, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 16, Issue 1 ٠ Volume 15, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 15, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 15, Issue 1 ٠ Volume 14, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 14, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 14, Issue 1 ٠ Volume 13, Issue 3 ٠ Volume 13, Issue 2 ٠ Volume 13, Issue 1 ٠ Volume 12, Issue 3

Guest Editor, with Alison Jaggar, Annette Dula, and Dayna Matthew. Bioethics. Special Issue: Research on Prisoners and Vulnerable Populations. 24(1). 2010.

REFEREED ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS (All articles were double blind refereed unless otherwise noted. Most book chapters were submitted through open calls and externally refereed. † = Single Blind Refereed. Underlined names are grad student co-authors.)

1. Benjamin Hale and Lucy McAllister. “From Treasure to Trash: The Lingering Value of Technological Artifacts.” Science and Engineering Ethics. May 2019.

2. Duncan Purves and Benjamin Hale. “Non-identity for Non-humans.” Ethical Theory and Moral Practice. 19(5): 1165-1185. 2016.

3. Adam Hermans, Alexander Lee, Lydia Dixon, Benjamin Hale. “Wolf Reintroduction: Ecological Management and the Substitution Problem.” Ecological Restoration. 32(3): 221-228. 2014.

4. Lucy McAllister, Amanda Magee, and Benjamin Hale. “Women, E-Waste, and Technical Solutions to Climate Change,” Health and Human Rights. 16(1): 166-178. 2014.

5. Alexander Lee, Adam Hermans, and Benjamin Hale. “Restoration, Obligation, and the Baseline Problem.” Environmental Ethics. 36(2): 171-186. 2014.

6. Daniel F. Doak, Victoria Bakker, Bruce Evan Goldstein, Benjamin Hale. “Moving forward with effective goals and methods for conservation: a reply to Marvier and Kareiva” Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 29(3): 132-133. 2014. †

7. Benjamin Hale, Adam Hermans, Alexander Lee, “Clowning Around with Conservation: Adaptation, Reparation, and the New Substitution Problem.” Environmental Values. 23: 181-198. April 2014.

8. Daniel F. Doak, Victoria Bakker, Bruce Evan Goldstein, Benjamin Hale. “What is the Future of Conservation?” Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 29(2). 2014. 77-81. †

a. Reprinted in Protecting the Wild: Parks and Wilderness, Eds. George Wuethrner, Eileen Crist, and Tom Butler. Island Press. 2015.

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9. Hale, Benjamin. “The World that Would Have Been: Moral Hazard Arguments against Geoengineering.” In Engineering the Climate: The Ethics of Solar Radiation Management. Ed. Christopher Preston. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. 2012. †

10. Hale, Benjamin. “Getting the Bad Out: Remediation Technologies and Respect for Others” The Environment: Philosophy, Science, and Ethics. Eds. Kabasenche, W.P., O'Rourke, M., and Slater, M. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. 2012. †

a. Reprinted in Philosophy, Technology, and the Environment, Ed. David Kaplan. MIT Press. 2017.

11. Hale, Benjamin. “Applied Philosophy and the Tools of the Policy Sciences.” The International Journal of Applied Philosophy. 25(2). 2011.

12. Hale, Benjamin. “Moral Considerability: Deontological, not Metaphysical.” Ethics & the Environment. 16(2). 2011.

13. Hale, Benjamin. “Nonrenewable Resources and the Inevitability of Outcomes.” The Monist. 94(1). July 2011.

14. Hale, Benjamin and Lisa Dilling. “Geoengineering, Ocean Fertilization, and the Problem of Permissible Pollution,” Science, Technology, and Human Values. 36(2): 190-212. 2011.

15. Hale, Lauren and Benjamin Hale. “Treat the Source not the Symptoms: Why Thinking about Sleep Informs the Social Determinants of Health,” Health Education Research. 25(3): 395-400. 2010.

16. Hale, Benjamin and Lauren Hale.“Respecting Autonomy in Population Policy: An argument for International Family Planning Programs” in Public Health Ethics, 3(2): 157-166. 2010.

17. Hale, Benjamin and Lauren Hale. “Is Justice Good for Your Sleep? (And therefore, Good for Your Health?)” Social Theory and Health. 7(4): 354-370. 2009.

18. Hale, Benjamin and W.P. Grundy. “Remediation and Respect: Do Remediation Technologies Alter Our Responsibility?” Environmental Values. 18(4): 397-415. 2009.

19. Hale, Benjamin and Lauren Hale. “Choosing to Sleep,” in The Philosophy of Public Health, ed. Angus Dawson. Aldershot: Ashgate: 121-132. 2009.

20. Hale, Benjamin. “What’s so Moral About the Moral Hazard?” Public Affairs Quarterly, 23(1): 1-23. Jan 2009.

21. Hale, Benjamin. “Open to Debate: Moral Consideration and the Lab Monkey,” Am Journal of Bioethics, 8(6): 53-54. June 2008. †

22. Hale, Benjamin. “Private Property and Environmental Ethics: Some New Directions,” Metaphilosophy. 29(3): 402-421. 2008.

23. Hale, Benjamin. “Culpability and Blame after Pregnancy Loss,” Journal of Medical Ethics, 33(1): 24-27. 2007.

24. Hale, Benjamin. “Risk, Judgment, and Fairness in Research Incentives,” Am Journal of Bioethics, 7(2): 82-83. 2007. †

25. Hale, Benjamin. “Gavagai Goulash: Growing Organs for Food,” THINK: Philosophy for Everyone. Royal Institute of Philosophy. 16: 61-70. 2007.

26. Hale, Benjamin. “The Moral Considerability of Invasive, Transgenic Animals,” Journal of Agricultural and Environmental

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Ethics, 19(4): 337-366. 2006. 27. Hale, Benjamin. “Identity Crisis: Face Recognition Technology

and Freedom of the Will,” Ethics, Place, & Environment 8(2): 141-158. 2005.

INVITED CHAPTERS (All chapters were invited, though some were refereed. † = Single Blind Refereed)

28. Hermans, Adam, Alexander P. Lee, and Benjamin Hale. “Wildness without Naturalness,” in Ethics, Policy & Environment. Forthcoming 2020.

29. Hale, Benjamin. “Extinction, Intervention, and Resurrection.” In Environmental Ethics, Ed. David Schmidtz. Macmillan Cengage Publishing. 2017.

30. Hale, Benjamin. “Finding Our Way in a Diverse and Wild World or How to Derive Substantive Principles for Environmental Ethics from Formal Principles of Discourse,” forthcoming white paper. Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics. Doha, Qatar. 2016.

31. Hale, Benjamin. “Rights, Rules, and Respect for Nature.” In The Oxford Handbook of Environmental Ethics, Eds. Stephen Gardiner and Allen Thompson. Oxford University Press. 2016.†

32. Hale, Benjamin. “What We Have Done ≠ What They Can Do.” In Climate Change and Justice, Ed Jeremy Moss. Cambridge University Press. 201-218. November, 2015.

33. Hale, Benjamin. “Pollution,” in The Handbook of Global Ethics. Eds. Darrel Moellendorf and Heather Widdows. Acumen. 2014.

34. Hale, Benjamin. “Can We Remediate Wrongs?” in Consequentialism and Environmental Ethics, Eds. Avram Hiller, Ramona Ilea, and Leonard Kahn. Routledge. 147-163. 2013.

35. Hale, Benjamin. “Remediation vs. Steering: An Act-Description Approach to Approving and Funding Geoengineering Research” in Designer Biology: The Ethics of Intensively Engineering Biological and Ecological Systems. Eds. John Basl and Ron Sandler. Lexington Books. 197-211. 2013. †

36. Hale, Benjamin. “Polluting and Unpolluting.” In Environmental Ethics, 2nd Edition. Ed. Michael Boylan. Wiley -Blackwell. 216-231. 2013. †

37. Hale, Benjamin, Adam Hermans, and Alex Lee. “Adaptation, Reparation, and the Baseline Problem.” In Toward Successful Adaptation: Linking Science and Practice in Managing Climate Change Impacts. Eds Boykoff, M. T. and Moser, S. C. Routledge. 67-80. 2013. †

38. Hale, Benjamin. “Sustainability as Justifiability” Sustainability Ethics: 5 Questions. Eds. Robison, W., Raffelle, R., and Selinger, E. Automatic/VIP Press. 105-116. 2010.

39. Hale, Benjamin. “Technology, the Environment, and the Moral Considerability of Artifacts,” in New Waves in Philosophy of Technology, eds. Evan Selinger, Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen, and Søren Riis. 216-240. Aldershot: Ashgate. 2008.

40. Hale, Benjamin. “Quiet Please! There’s a Game Here: Discourse and Silence in the Formal Pragmatics of a Chess Match,” in Philosophy Looks at Chess, Benjamin Hale, ed. 157-170. (Open Court Publishing, 2008).

41. Hale, Benjamin. “Scape Invaders: Transgenic Animals, Nature,

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and the Ecoscape,” Ecoscapes, Gary Backhaus and John Murungi, eds. pp 17-38. Lexington Books. 2006. †

OTHER ESSAYS 42. Hale, Benjamin. Five Philosophers Discuss “Joker.” Aesthetics for Birds blogpost. (Approx: 1500 words)

https://aestheticsforbirds.com/2019/10/22/five-philosophers-

discuss-joker-spoilers/#hale 43. Light, Andrew and Benjamin Hale. “Year One of Donald

Trump’s Presidency on Climate and the Environment,” Ethics, Policy & Environment, Taylor and Francis. 21(1). 2018

44. Hale, Benjamin. “Rethinking Earth Day.” MIT Press Blogpost. https://mitpress.mit.edu/blog/rethinking-earth-day . 2017.

45. Hale, Benjamin. “A Hot, Glorious Mess.” Guest Post, Daily Nous. http://dailynous.com/2015/12/08/philosophers-on-climate-change/#Hale .

46. Hale, Benjamin. “Poisoning the Well: Pollution as Trespass.” High Country News. Jan 19, 2015. (Approx 1500 words; appeared online under a different title). http://www.hcn.org/issues/47.1/think-of-pollution-as-trespassing

47. Hale, Benjamin. “Would You Lie to Airport Screeners about Ebola?” Slate. October 14, 2014. (Approx 1300 words). http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/medical_examiner/2014/10/airport_screening_for_ebola_did_thomas_eric_duncan_lie_and_should_liars.html

48. Hale, Benjamin. “The Most Terrifying Thing about Ebola.” Slate. September 19, 2014. (Approx 2100 words; 7500+ facebook shares; +280 tweets). http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/medical_examiner/2014/09/why_ebola_is_terrifying_and_dangerous_it_preys_on_family_caregiving_and.html

49. Hale, Benjamin. “The Normative Dimensions of Climate Change.” Ogmius: Newsletter of the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research. Winter 2012.

50. Hale, Benjamin. “The Veil of Opulence.” The New York Times. August 12, 2012.

a. Selected and reprinted in The Stone Reader, Eds Peter Catapano and Simon Critchley. W.W. Norton and Company. 2015.

51. Hale, Benjamin. “Fukushima Daiichi, Normal Accidents, and Moral Responsibility: Ethical Questions about Nuclear Energy,” Ethics, Policy & Environment. 14(3). 2011.

52. Hale, Benjamin and Andrew Light. “Ethics, Policy & Environment: A New Name and a Renewed Mission.” Ethics, Policy & Environment. 14(1). 2011.

53. Hale, Benjamin, Alison Jaggar, Annette Dula, and Dayna Matthew. "Beyond the IOM: Prisoners, Children, and other Vulnerable Research Subjects," Introduction to special edition. Bioethics 24(1). Jan 2010.

54. Hale, Benjamin. “You say ‘solution’, I say ‘pollution’: Ocean fertilization is a fishy solution to a whale of a problem,” Science Progress. Guest Commentary. August 18, 2009.

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http://www.scienceprogress.org/2009/08/ocean-fertilization-ethics 55. Hale, Benjamin. "More Justice for Prisoners," Guest Opinion,

Daily Camera, Feb 14, 2008. 56. Hale, Benjamin. "Introduction,” for Philosophy Looks at Chess,

Benjamin Hale, ed. (Open Court Publishing, 2008). 57. Hale, Benjamin. "Mother Gruesome's Nursery," Ogmius:

Newsletter of the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research, No.20/2007.

58. Hale, Benjamin. "Headstrong and Heartfelt." On-line essay for Z-mag (www.zmag.org). May, 2001. Article at: http://www.zmag.org/CrisesCurEvts/Globalism/answerkrug.htm

59. Hale, Benjamin. "Diversification and Resistance: Student Environmental Activism in the 90's." Counterpoise. Volume 2, Number 3. December 1998.

BOOK REVIEWS AND

ENCYCLOPEDIA

ENTRIES

60. Lawhon, Lydia and Benjamin Hale. “The Carnivore Way: Coexisting with and Conserving North America’s Predators.” Ecological Restoration. 33(2): 224-225. 2015.

61. Hale, Benjamin. “Climate Justice.” Encyclopedia of Global Warming and Climate Change, Second Edition. Philander, S. George, Golson, J. Geoffrey, Eds. 287-289. SAGE Publishing. 2012.

62. Hale, Benjamin. “Unfinished Project” Review of The Incompleat Eco-Philosopher by Anthony Weston. Social Theory and Practice 38(1), January 2012.

63. Hale, Benjamin. “Takings,” in the Encyclopedia of Environmental Ethics and Philosophy. J. Baird Callicott and R. Frodeman, eds. Macmillan Reference. 2008.

64. Hale, Benjamin. Do Animals Have Rights? by Alison Hills. Philosophical Quarterly. 58(231). 379-382. April 2008.

65. Hale, Benjamin. Ecological Ethics: An Introduction by Patrick Curry. Organization and the Environment. 20(4). 2007.

66. Hale, Benjamin. John Dewey and Environmental Philosophy, by Hugh McDonald. Journal of Applied Philosophy. 24(3). Aug 2007.

67. Hale, Benjamin. What Animals Want, by Larry Carbone. American Journal of Bioethics. 4(4). Fall 2004.

68. Hale, Benjamin. “Experience and the Environment: Phenomenology Returns to Earth”; Review of Eco-phenomenology, by Charles S. Brown and Ted Toadvine, eds. Human Studies, Volume 28, No. 1. December 2004.

69. Hale, Benjamin and Lauren Hale. “Biography of Nathan Mantel.” Encyclopedia of Biostatistics 2. Peter Armitage and Theodore Colton, Eds. (West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2004).

a. Hale, Benjamin and Lauren Hale. “Nathan Mantel.” Encyclopedia of Statistical Sciences 2. (West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2005).

70. Hale, Benjamin. The Phenomenology of Modern Legal Discourse by William E. Conklin. Symposium 6(1), Spring 2002.

TRANSLATIONS

71. Hale, Benjamin and Taras Zakydalsky. “The Role of Hermeneutic Phenomenology in the Well-Founded Positive

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Philosophy of Gustav Gustavovich Shpet,” V.G. Kuznetsov. Translation from the Russian. Russian Studies in Philosophy, Spring 1999.

BOOK PROJECTS IN

PROGRESS

• Academic Monograph: Dialing Down (partially complete, but in progress)

• Trade Monograph: You Suck: Why We Hate Each Other and What to Do About It (in progress)

PAPERS IN PROGRESS • “The Ethics of Grizzly Reintroduction” (In progress)

• “The Bear Minimum: Reintroduction and the Weaknesses of Minimalist Conservation” (Under Review)

• “Right-Leveling Indeterminacy: Environmental Problems, Non-State Actors, and the Global Market” (In progress)

• “Non-Renewable Resources and the Indeterminacy of Outcomes” (In progress)

• “Undoing and Disallowing” (Under revision)

• “Moral Friction” (In progress)

• “Fixing the Wrong Wrong: Geoengineering and the End of the World” (In progress)

PAPER

PRESENTATIONS

1. ISEE Conference, “Degradation Floors and Conservation Ceilings.” HJ Andrews Experimental Forest Research Station. Blue River, Oregon.

2. Colloquium Speaker. “Unconscious Consumers: Individual Actions and the Indeterminacy of Outcomes.” ENVS Colloquium. CU Boulder. April 2019.

3. Invited Speaker. Utah Valley University, “The Ethics of (Air) Pollution.” March 2019.

4. Invited Speaker. “Unconscious Consumers: Individual Actions and the Indeterminacy of Outcomes.” Rice University, Moody Center, A Night of Philosophy and Ideas. Jan 2019.

5. Invited Participant. “The Justificatory Burdens of Non-State Actors.” University of New South Wales, Australia, Nov 2018

6. Invited Speaker. “Unconscious Consumers: Individual Actions and the Indeterminacy of Outcomes.” University of Reading, UK, Nov 2018

7. Masterclass, University of Reading, UK, Nov 2018 8. UCSB, Grizzly Workshop, Oct 2018 9. Author Meets Critics Sesssion on The Wild and the Wicked. Society

for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy. Memphis, TN. October 2017.

10. Invited Speaker. “The Wild and the Wicked.” Oregon State University, Philosophy, History and Religion Dept. Feb, 3, 2017.

11. Invited Speaker. “The Wild and the Wicked.” University of Oregon, Philosophy Department. Feb 2, 2017.

12. Invited Speaker. “Lingering Value of Technological Artifacts.” University of Oregon, Philosophy Department. Feb 2, 2017.

13. Invited Speaker. “The Wild and the Wicked.” Rachel Carson Center. Munich, Germany. 2016.

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PAPER

PRESENTATIONS (cont.)

14. Invited Speaker. “Lingering Value of Technological Artifacts.” San Luis Obispo. Spring, 2016

15. “Lingering Value of Technological Artifacts.” ENVS colloquium. 2016.

16. Invited Contributor. “Extinction, Intervention, and Resurrection.” Environmental Ethics Workshop. University of Arizona. Tucson. November 13-14, 2015.

17. Invited Speaker: “Intervention in Novel Ecosystems.” Beyond Two Degrees Workshop. Frankfurt Universät. Normative Orders Group. Frankfurt, Germany. October 2-3, 2015.

18. Invited Speaker: Comments on Darrel Moellendorf’s “Intergenerational Equality,” Graduate Workshop. University of Arizona, Tucson. October 10, 2015.

19. Invited Presenter: Scripps Oceanographic Institute, two-day workshop leader on Environmental Ethics, August 18-19, 2013.

20. Comment on Marcus Hedahl’s “Owing It to Us.” RoME VIII. August 2015.

21. Invited Speaker: Environmental Sustainability as Intergenerational Justice. University of Calgary, CA. Jun 12-14. 2015.

22. Paper presented remotely by co-author Lucy McAllister: “Women, E-Waste, and Technical Solutions to Climate Change,” Gendered Dimensions of E-waste Management. World Summit on the Information Society. United Nations, Geneva, Switzerland. May 25, 2015. http://www.itu.int/net4/wsis/forum/2015/Agenda/Session/190

23. Invited Speaker: “Damage to Nature” Second Workshop on Ethics and Adaptation: Loss, Damage, and Harm. University of Buffalo, May 8-9, 2015.

24. Invited Speaker: The Anthropocene. George Mason University, May 7, 2015.

25. Invited Speaker: “Moral Friction.” Goethe Universität - Frankfurt am Main, Normative Orders Group weekly colloquium. Frankfurt, Germany. April 28, 2015.

26. Invited Speaker: “The Lingering Value of Technological Artifacts.” Minnesota State University. Mankato, MN. April 9, 2015.

27. Invited Speaker: UNEP and UN University StEP (Solving the E-Waste Problem) Initiative, E-Waste Academy. Shanghai, China. Nov 1-7, 2014.

28. Participant: International Conference in Applied Ethics. Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan. Oct 30-Nov 3, 2014.

29. Comment on David Morrow and Toby Svoboda, “Geoengineering and Non-Ideal Theory,” RoME VII, August 2014.

30. Invited Participant: Goethe Universität - Frankfurt am Main. Workshop on Geoengineering. Frankfurt, Germany. July 17, 2014

31. Invited Participant: Warwick University Goengineering Workshop. Warwick, UK. July 10-11, 2014.

32. “The Shifting Frontier: Ethics in a Changing Climate,” Multimedia presentation, NOAA. Boulder, Colorado.

33. Invited Participant: “Principles of Environmental Ethics.” CILE Seminar on Ethics and the Environment. Doha, Qatar. Jan 4-6,

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PAPER

PRESENTATIONS (cont.)

2014. 34. “Women, E-Waste, and Technical Solutions to Climate Change,”

Lucy McAllister, Amanda Magee, and Benjamin Hale. Paper presented by Lucy McAllister at the American Studies Association, Washington DC, Nov 21-24, 2013.

35. Invited Participant: “Adaptation, Reparation, and the New Substitution Problem.” Extinction Symposium. Benjamin Hale, Adam Pérou Hermans, Alex Lee. Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario. Nov 14-16, 2013.

36. “The Shifting Frontier: Ethics in a Changing Climate,” Multimedia presentation, Multi-disciplinary Perspectives on Climate Change, Lake Como, Italy. Sept 26-28, 2013.

37. Invited Presenter: Scripps Oceanographic Institute, two-day workshop leader on Environmental Ethics, August 18-19, 2013.

38. Comment on John Basl, “Two Dogmas of Biocentrism,” RoME VI, 2013.

39. “Women, E-Waste, and Technical Solutions to Climate Change,” Lucy McAllister, Amanda Magee, and Benjamin Hale. Workshop in Global Environmental Justice. Universität Bremen, April 26-28, 2013.

40. “Wildness Without Naturalness: Expanding Environmental Focus in the Anthropocene,” Adam Pérou Hermans, Alex Lee, and Benjamin Hale, University of Colorado at Boulder. Pacific Division APA. March 30, 2013.

41. “Wolf Reintroduction: Ecological Management and the Substitution Problem.” Adam Pérou Hermans, Alex Lee, and Benjamin Hale. Public Philosophy Network Conference Atlanta, GA.March 16-19, 2013

42. Invited Speaker: “Ethics, Environment, and Markets,” Center for Ethics, Muhlenberg College. February 19, 2013.

43. Invited Speaker: “Moral Friction.” Colorado State University. Nov 2. 2012.

44. Invited Participant: “Women, E-Waste, and Technical Solutions to Climate Change,” Paper co-authored with Lucy McAllister and Amanda Magee. Engineering Ethics in a Globalized World. University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana. October 7-9, 2012.

45. “Restoration, Obligation, and the Baseline Problem,” Paper co-authored with Alex Lee and Adam Hermans. ISEE Conference. Allens Park, Colorado, June 2012. †

46. Invited Participant: Sustainability and Game Theory Workshop, Boston, MA. May 19, 2012.

47. Invited Paper: “Fixing the Wrong Wrong: Geoengineering and the End of the World,” Institute for Ethics and Public Affairs, San Diego State University. April 12, 2012.

48. Invited Paper: Colgate Workshop on Mass Extinction. Colgate University. March 17-18, 2012.

49. Invited Paper: “Climate Adaptation, Moral Reparation, and the Baseline Problem,” Co-authored with Adam Hermans and Alex Lee. Buffalo Workshop on Ethics and Adaptation. University at Buffalo. March 10-11, 2012.

50. Invited Speaker: Launch of CILE, the Center for Islamic

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PAPER

PRESENTATIONS (cont.)

Legislation and Ethics, Doha, Qatar. Jan 14, 2012. 51. “Moral Friction,” Eastern Division APA. December 2011.† 52. Comment on Matthew Altman’s “Future Generations and the

Problem of Consent: A Free Market Defense of Environmental Sin Taxes,” Eastern Division APA. December 2011.

53. Comment on Diane McKnight, ENVS Colloquium, Nov 30, 2011. 54. Invited Paper: Texas A&M University workshop in Doha, Qatar:

“Engineering Ethics for a Globalized World.” October 23-28, 2011. Doha, Qatar.

55. Advancing Publicly Engaged Philosophy Conference. Washington DC. October 7-9, 2011

a. Paper presentation: “Philosophy and the Tools of the Policy Sciences”

b. Co-Chair “Climate Ethics Workshop” 56. “Geoengineering Research, the Demands of Knowledge, and the

Right Reasons.” Workshop in Applied Philosophy: Ethical Issues in Engineering Biological and Ecological Systems. Northeastern University. Sept 30-Oct 2, 2011.

57. Comment on Nick Beckstead’s “The Case for Focusing on Existential Risk.” Fourth Annual Rocky Mountain Ethics Congress (RoME IV). Aug 4-7, 2011.

58. Invited Paper: “Fixing the Wrong Wrong: Geoengineering and the End of the World,” and…

59. Invited Paper: “The Wicked and the Wild: Why You Don’t Have to Love Nature to Be Green,” Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment. Seminar on Environmental Economics of Creation Stewardship. Bozeman, MT. July 18-22, 2011.

60. “Geoengineering Research, the Demands of Knowledge, and the Right Reasons,” Three Rivers Philosophy Conference: Knowledge, Science, and Democracy. University of South Carolina. April 1-3, 2011.

61. Invited Paper: “Fixing the Wrong Wrong: Geoengineering and the End of the World,” University of Washington, March 2, 2011.

62. “Adaptation, Opportunism, and Intergenerational Justice,” United Nations Climate Change Conference. Side Event. December 3, 2010. COP16, Cancun, Mexico.

63. Poster Presentation: “Social justice and sleep: policy implications of social disparities in sleep.” Co-authored with Lauren Hale. APHA. Denver, Colorado, November 6-10, 2010.

64. “Undoing and Disallowing,” Center for Values and Social Policy, CU-Boulder. Sept 17, 2010.

65. Invited Paper: “Moral Hazards and Geoengineering,” Missoula Workshop on Geoengineering. University of Montana, Oct 2010.

66. Comment on Justin Weinberg’s “When is Moral Hazard Hazardous?” Third Annual Rocky Mountain Ethics (RoME) Congress, University of Colorado, Boulder. Aug 5-8, 2010. (NOTE: Weinberg’s paper is partly a response to my original paper on Moral Hazards)

67. “Moral Hazard Arguments Against Geoengineering,” Association for Environmental Studies (AESS) Conference.

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PAPER

PRESENTATIONS (cont.)

Lewis and Clark College. Portland, Oregon. June 17-20, 2010. 68. “Undoing and Disallowing,” Joint Meeting of ISEE and IAEP.

Allens Park, Colorado. June 8-10, 2010. 69. “Can we Remediate Wrongs?” UCCS Philosophy Department,

Colorado Springs, Colorado. April 26, 2010. 70. Comment on Deen Chatterjee, ENVS Colloquium, April 5, 2010. 71. “Nonrenewable Resources and the Inevitability of Outcomes,”

Center for Values and Social Policy. CU-Boulder. Feb 2010. 72. “Nonrenewable Resources and the Inevitability of Outcomes,”

ISEE Group Meeting. Eastern Division APA. Dec 27-30, 2009. 73. “Assessing the Mitigation and Remediation Options.” COP15

United Nations Climate Change Conference, Credentialed Side Event. December 7-18, 2009. Copenhagen, Denmark.

74. Comment on Steve Rayner’s “Climate Geoengineering: The Governance Dilemma” ENVS Colloquium. Oct 19, 2009.

75. “Benefits are No Good.” At the Linking Science to Societal Benefits: Why, How and When? Workshop. Organized jointly by the Linköping University Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research and CU’s Center for Science and Technology Policy Research. Linköping University, Sweden. September 14-17.

76. Comment on John Garthoff’s “Meriting Concern and Meriting Respect,” Second Annual Rocky Mountain Ethics (RoME) Congress, University of Colorado, Boulder. Aug 6-9, 2009.

77. Invited Paper: “Getting the Bad Out: Remediation Technologies and Respect for Nature,” Inland North Philosophy Conference. May 2009.

78. “Getting the Bad Out,” 3TEP Conference. Colorado School of Mines. April 20-21, 2009.

79. “Carbon Sequestration, Ocean Fertilization, and the Problem of Permissible Pollution.” Center Talk, CSTPR, Philosophy Department, March 20, 2009.

80. “Can We Remediate Wrongs?” Philosophy Department. University of Colorado, Denver. December 3, 2008.

81. “Why You Don’t Have to Love Nature to be Green,” Think Talk. University of Colorado, Boulder. November 18, 2008.

82. Poster Presentation: “What’s Wrong with Remediation?” Energy Initiative Symposium. CU Boulder. November 17, 2008.

83. “Restoration and Remediation as Redress to Wrongdoing,” Human Flourishing and Restoration in the Age of Global Warming, Clemson University. Sept 5-7, 2008.

84. Comment on Hallie Liberto’s “Rawls and Animals,” First Annual RoME Congress, CU-Boulder. Aug 8-10, 2008.

85. “The Cumbers of Ontology,” Thinking Through Nature. University of Oregon. June 19-22, 2008.

86. Comment on Rob Figueroa’s “Expanding Environmental Justice.” Joint Meeting of ISEE and IAEP. Allens Park, Colorado. May 22-May 25, 2008.

87. Trajectory of Research. Environment, Philosophy, and Technology Workshop. University of Twente, Netherlands. May 21-24, 2008.

88. “Tongue Tied: How Non-human Animals Lose their Voice in Habermas’s Discourse Ethics,” Giving Voice to Other Beings,

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Vanderbilt University. May 2-4, 2008. 89. “Carbon Sequestration, Ocean Fertilization, and the Problem of

Permissible Pollution,” co-authored with Lisa Dilling. Energy and Responsibility: A Conference on Ethics and the Environment. University of Tennessee. April 11, 2008.

90. “Can We Remediate Wrongs?” Center for Science and Technology Policy Research. Oct 25, 2007.

91. “What’s Fair, What’s Right? Respecting Autonomy in Population Policy,” co-authored with Lauren Hale. Conference: Setting an Ethical Agenda for Health Promotion. University of Ghent, Belgium. Sept 22, 2007.

92. Invited Paper: “What’s so Moral About the Moral Hazard?” • ENVS/Philosophy, U. of Colorado, Boulder, Feb 20, 2007 • Phil. Dept., Case Western Reserve University, Feb 15, 2007 • Classics, Phil., Religion, U. of Mary Washington, Feb 9, 2007 • Phil. Dept., California State University – Chico, Feb 7, 2007 • Phil. Dept., University of North Florida, Feb 2, 2007 • Philosophy/MSE, McGill University, Jan 11, 2007 93. Invited Paper: “Moral Considerability, the Land Ethic, and All-

Pervasive Technology,” Phil Dept, UNC-Charlotte. Jan 22, 2007.

94. “Is Justice Good for Your Sleep?” Center for Values and Social Policy, University of Colorado, Boulder. December 8, 2006

95. “Strange Bedfellows: Autonomy, Ethics, and the Sleep of Reason,” co-authored with Lauren Hale. Society for Applied Philosophy Annual Conference, 2006. Philosophy of Public Health. Manchester University, UK. July 2, 2006.

96. “Staking a Claim.” Panel on Environmental Ethics. Teaching Business Ethics Conference. Leeds School of Business. Boulder, Colorado. June 8, 2006.

97. Comment on Piers Stephens, “Toward a Jamesian Environmental Philosophy.” Joint Meeting of ISEE and IAEP. Allens Park, Colorado. May 30-June 2, 2006.

98. “Vegetarianism and Anorexia.” Center for Values and Social Policy. University of Colorado, Boulder. April 28, 2006.

99. Invited Paper: “Nature and Culpability.” Ezra A. Hale Ethics Series. Rochester Institute of Technology. Rochester, NY. April 13, 2006.

100. “What’s So Moral About the Moral Hazard?” Lyman Briggs School and Department of Fisheries and Wildlife. Michigan State University. East Lansing, MI. February 3, 2006.

101. Comment on Aaron Simmons, “A Critique of Warren’s Weak Animal Rights View.” SSEA (Society for the Study of Ethics and Animals), Eastern Division APA, Dec. 2005, NY.

102. “Moral Hazards.” Philosophy Department. University of Colorado at Boulder. November 18, 2005.

103. “Crossing the Property Line.” Joint Meeting of ISEE and IAEP. Allens Park, Colorado. May 31-June 3, 2005.

104. “Moral Consideration, the Land Ethic, and Nano-Manipulability.” In the Department of Philosophy and in the School of the Environment. U. of South Carolina, Columbia.

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Jan. 10, 2005. 105. “Culpability, Blame, and Death in Utero.” Third International

Conference on Making Sense of Dying and Death. Vienna, Austria. December 3, 2004.

106. “Impending Perinatal Disaster? Decision-Making Under Extreme Uncertainty.” Third International Conference on Making Sense of Dying and Death. Vienna, Austria. December 4, 2004.

107. “Moral Considerability: Deontological, not Metaphysical.” Joint Meeting of ISEE and IAEP. Allens Park, Colorado. June 2, 2004.

108. “The Moral Considerability of Invasive, Genetically Modified Animals.” Ecoscapes Conference. Towson University, Baltimore, Maryland. May 1, 2004.

109. Comment on Matt Zwolinski, “Animals as Property.” Society for the Study of Ethics and Animals (SSEA). Eastern Division Meeting of the APA. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Dec, 2002.

110. “Gavagai Goulash: Growing Organs for Food.” IAEP Fall meeting. October 13, 2002.

111. “Identity Crisis: Face Recognition Technology and Freedom of the Will.” APA Morality in the 21st Century Conference. University of Delaware. October 29, 2001.

112. “Locked Away: Deliberation, Practical Identity, and the Prison Industrial Complex.” Thinking about Prisons Conference. SUNY at Cortland. October 28, 2001.

113. “Radical Asymmetrical Reciprocity: Human and Non-Human Interaction.” SSEA. 1999 Eastern Division Meeting of the APA. Boston, Massachusetts. December 28, 1999.

114. “Speechless: Non-Human Democratic Standing; A Talk on Communicative Action, Animal Ethics, and Environmental Policy.” Science, Technology and Environmental Policy Speaker Series. Princeton University. Princeton, New Jersey. October 28, 1999.

115. “Individuation Through Experientialization: James and Mead on Social Differentiation.” Annual Meeting of the Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World. Estes Park, Colorado. August 9, 1999.

116. “Radical Asymmetrical Reciprocity: Human and Non-Human Interaction” Conference on Persons. St. John’s College. Santa Fe, New Mexico. August 5, 1999.

OTHER MISC. PUBLICATIONS, PRESENTATIONS, PUBLIC RESPONSES, AND PANELS

1. Podcast Interviewee: on The Wild and the Wicked. New Books in Philosophy. April 15, 2017. http://newbooksnetwork.com/benjamin-hale-the-wild-and-the-wicked-on-nature-and-human-nature-mit-press-2016/

2. Invited Book Reader: Reading from The Wild and the Wicked. Boulder Book Store. April 3, 2017.

3. Interviewed for 5280. “A New Reason to Save Nature.” April 5, 2017. http://www.5280.com/2017/04/new-reason-save-nature/

4. Podcast Interviewee: on The Wild and the Wicked. HumaNature. Wyoming Public Radio.

5. Invited Panelist: Environmental Ethics and Analytic Philosophy.

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MISC PUBLICATIONS

AND PRESENTATIONS (cont.)

Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy. October 2016.

6. Interviewed for GOOD magazine: http://magazine.good.is/articles/geoengineering-albedo-modification-climate-change-ethics

7. Invited Guest: Mark Steiner Show (on the Politics of Ebola). Oct 21, 2014. http://www.steinershow.org/podcasts/racism/ebola-update/

8. Invited Guest: Mark Steiner Show (on Ebola). Sept 22, 2014. http://www.steinershow.org/podcasts/health-wellness/examining-the-ebola-epidemic-global-public-health-implications-the-west-more/

9. Invited Guest: Geoengineering Webinar, Security and Sustainability Forum, Elliot School of International Affairs at GWU. Feb 4, 2014.

10. Conducted Publication and Placement Workshop for Philosophy Graduate Students. February 2014.

11. Quoted in Denver Post: “Company’s Private Moon Missions Raises Questions.” December 10, 2012. http://www.denverpost.com/business/ci_22159578/companys-plan-private-moon-missions-raises-questions

12. Poster Presentation: “Ecological Management and the Substitution Problem: Wolf Reintroduction in Rocky Mountain National Park,” poster co-authored with Adam Hermans and Alex Lee. CIRES Rendezvous. Boulder, CO. April 24, 2012.

13. Panelist: “Connections between Curriculum & Campus Sustainability,” Council of Environmental Deans and Directors Annual Conference. Boulder, Colorado. July 8, 2010.

14. Interviewee: Film Documentary, “Seventh Generation.” 15. Panelist: “Geoengineering and Climate Change: Potential,

Promises, Perils,” (with Max Boykoff, Lisa Dilling, Roger Pielke Jr. and Bill Travis). March 29, 2010.

16. Panelist: “Reflections on COP15.” Panel Discussion by CU Faculty. Jan 11, 2010.

17. Panel Chair. Author Meets Critics Session: “Philosophy and Animal Life” by Cora Diamond, Cary Wolfe, Stanley Cavell, Ian Hacking, and John McDowell. Commenting: Len Lawlor, Ralph Acampora, Eastern Division APA. December 27-30, 2009.

18. Presentation and Panel. “Secular and Non-Secular Dialogue in the Environmental Sphere.” Creatio: Faith and the Environment: Questions and Challenges. August 17-19, 2009. Allenspark, CO.

19. Guest comment: KGO Radio, David Lazarus Show, July 4, 2009. 20. Peer-Reviewed Participant via Submitted Paper. Conference:

"Applied Philosophy as Common Ground." Society for Applied Philosophy. Princeton University. October 14-15, 2007.

21. Panelist. "Building Bridges to Care for Creation," Sponsored by the CU Energy Initiative. October 5, 2007.

22. Panel Moderator. “Globalization, Environmental Ethics and Environmental Justice.” Michigan State University. August 24-28, 2006.

23. Invited Speaker. “Externalist Perfectionism and Freedom of the

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Will in Andrew Niccol’s Gattaca.” Monarch Film Festival: Building Resiliency Towards Substance Abuse and At-Risk Behaviors Through Film. Louisville, Colorado. April 22, 2006.

24. Invited Faculty Speaker. Introduction of second volume of Undergraduate Philosophy Journal, Forms. University of Colorado, Boulder. February 22, 2006.

25. Speaker. “Utilitarian and Kantian Justifications for Punishment in Lars Von Trier’s Dogville.” Philosophy and Film Series. University of Colorado, Boulder. November 29, 2005.

26. Panel Moderator. “Liberal Democracy, Muliticulturalism, and Exclusion.” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (SPEP). Salt Lake City, Utah. October 20-22, 2005.

27. Invited Panelist. “The Value Basis of Environmental Problems and the Ethical Dimension of Environmental Policy.” Columbia University. The Earth Institute. April 21, 2005.

28. Invited Panelist. “Justifications for and against the Iraq War.” Provost’s Lecture Series: Part of a University-wide Colloquium on the Iraq War. The Graduate School. Stony Brook University. May 6, 2004.

29. Panel Moderator. “Modifying Our Ways of Thinking.” IAEP Annual Meeting. Boston, Massachussets. November 8, 2003.

30. Panel Chair. “Author Meets Critics” discussion of Aesthetics and the Environment. ISEE Meeting. Eastern Division APA. Dec 2002.

31. “Why the Stop Vail Expansion Campaign, and Campaigns Like It, are Essential to the Survival of the Environmental Movement.” Conference of the NY State Green Party and SEAC. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Troy, New York. September 27, 1999.

TRANSLATIONS FOR

PRESENTATIONS

32. “The Diversity of World Cultures within the Unity of Global Law,” Prof. Dr. Otfried Höffe. Translation from the German, Benjamin Hale. Presented by Dr. Höffe for a lecture in the “Program of Liberal Studies,” University of Notre Dame, Oct. 2002.

33. “Religion as a Factor in the Welfare of Liberal Society,” Jean-Christophe Merle. Translation from the German, Benjamin Hale.

34. “Fichte’s Grounding of Criminal Law,” Dr. Jean-Christophe Merle. Translation from the German, Benjamin Hale.

35. “Federalism: Local Legislative Authority or Representation in National Legislation?” Dr. Jean-Christophe Merle. Translation from the German, Benjamin Hale. Delivered in Italy at the 3rd High Level Scientific Conferences Program of the European Commission on Federalism and Subsidiarity.

36. “Liberalism and the Right to Immigration: On a Contradiction and Dilemma in Contemporary Liberal Theory,” Dr. Jean-Christophe Merle. Trans. from the German, Benjamin Hale.

37. “Experimentum Mundi. Ernst Bloch’s Utopian-Messianic Concept of Culture,” Prof. Dr. phil. lic. theol. Dr. theol. habil. Michael Eckert. Translation from the German, Benjamin Hale.

GUEST LECTURES • Guest Speaker in Joanna Lambert’s Environmental Studies

Graduate Class. Fall 2019.

• Guest Speaker in Joanna Lambert’s Environmental Studies Graduate Class. Fall 2018.

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• Guest Speaker in Tom Yulsman’s Environmental Journalism Class. 2017.

• Guest Speaker in Deserai Crow’s class on water and property rights, Oct 22, 2013.

• “Climate Ethics,” Philosophy Department Summer Seminar, July 2013.

• Guest Speaker in Roger Pielke Jr.’s class on science and truth. Oct 22, 2012.

• Guest Speaker in Deserai Crow’s class on water and property rights, Oct 16, 2012.

• Guest Speaker in Lisa Dilling’s class on Adaptation, May 3, 2012.

• Guest Speaker in Alison Jaggar’s class. Topic: “Climate Justice.” April 2, 2012.

• Guest Lecture on Responsible Research Conduct, Roger Pielke’s Class, Jan 26, 2012.

• Workshop on Environmental Philosophy, for philosophy grad students looking to specialize. September 23, 2011.

• “Intro to Environmental Ethics,” Mara Goldman’s Environmental Geography class, Fall 2011, 400 students.

• “Values and the Environment,” Lisa Dilling’s ENVS 1000 course, Sept 27, 2010.

• “Mother Nature and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Press,” Tom Yulsman’s Scripps Fellowship Seminar, Nov 11, 2010.

• “Climate Ethics,” Philosophy Department Summer Seminar, July 2010.

• “Responsible Conduct of Research,” Lisa Dilling’s Art of Research course, April 13, 2010.

• “Values and the Environment,” Jim White’s ENVS 1000 course, Jan 15, 2010.

• “Mother Nature and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Press,” Tom Yulsman’s Scripps Fellowship Seminar, Sept 24, 2009.

• “Intro to Environmental Ethics,” Mara Goldman’s Environmental Geography class, Fall 2009, 400 students.

• Roger Pielke’s ENVS 5000 course, Jan 2009.

• “Values and the Environment,” Jim White and Lisa Dilling’s ENVS 1000 course, Jan 16, 2009.

• “Intro to Environmental Ethics,” Mara Goldman’s Environmental Geography class, Fall 2008, 400 students.

• Participation as panelist in mock trial for Jill Litt’s Critical Thinking Course. Merged two classes for integrated teaching.

REVIEW ACTIVITIES • National Science Foundation. 2016, 2018, 2019.

• Book Presses: MIT Press, Routledge, Palgrave MacMillan, Oxford, Blackwell, McGraw-Hill, SUNY Press

• Journals: Ethics, Ethics and the Environment; Ethics, Policy, & Environment; Conservation Letters; Public Affairs Quarterly, Routledge

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Handbook; Environmental Health, Public Affairs Quarterly, WIRES-Climate Change; Environmental Values, Environmental Philosophy, Public Health Ethics, Biodiversity and Conservation, Hastings Center Report (IRB: Ethics and Human Research), Ethics and Information Technology; Local Government Studies; American Journal of Bioethics; Ethical Theory and Moral Practice; Environment and Planning D: Society and Space; Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences

• Grant Evaluation: Research Council KU Leuven – for a grant totaling approximately € 240,000

• Environmental Philosophy Editor, PhilPapers: a large, online database of papers in philosophy. 2011-present.

ADMINISTRATIVE

ACTIVITIES AND SERVICE

• Benson Center for Western Civilization, Interim Director.

• ENVS Committee on Inclusive Excellence, 2016-present.

• Graduate Committee for Arts and Humanities (GCAH), 2015-present.

• Conference Organizer: Rome XII, 2019 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Visiting Scholar in Conservative Thought/Center for Western Civilization search committee, 2014-2018.

• Conference Organizer: Rome XI, 2018 (with Alastair Norcross).

• ISEE Annual Conference Organizer, Anchorage, AK, June 2018.

• Cross-unit Interdisciplinary Committee in Environmental Ethics and Justice pursuant to the MOA between Philosophy and Environmental Studies

• ISEE Annual Conference Organizer, Allenspark, CO June 2017

• Conference Organizer: Rome X, 2017 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Conference Organizer: Rome IX, 2016 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Conference Organizer: Rome VIII, 2015 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Conference Organizer: Rome VII, 2014 (with Alastair Norcross).

• APA Eastern Division, ISEE Group Session Coordinator, December 2014.

• ISEE Annual Conference Organizer, Allenspark CO June 2014.

• APA Eastern Division, ISEE Group Session Coordinator, December 2013.

• Conference Organizer: Rome VI, 2013 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Vice President/President-Elect (Elected Position), International Society for Environmental Ethics, Starting Spring 2013. Three year term as VP followed by three year term as President.

• Director of Graduate Studies, Fall 2012-2014.

• Conference Organizer: CHPS Conference on the History and Philosophy of Climate Science, September 2012 (with Carol Cleland).

• Conference Organizer: Rome V, 2012 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Chair of the ENVS Advisor Search, Fall 2011

• Conference Organizer: RoME IV, 2011 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Graduate Committee, ENVS 2010-present.

• Executive Committee, Critical Theory Certificate, 2009-present.

• Responsible Conduct of Research Training Committee. With the

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Vice-Chancellor’s Office of Research.

• Executive Committee, CSTPR, 2009-present.

• ENVS Colloquium Committee (with Lisa Dilling and Jana Milford), 2008-2010.

• CSTPR Spring 2010 Symposium Planner.

• Conference Organizer: RoME III, 2010 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Conference Organizer: RoME II, 2009 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Conference Organizer: RoME I, 2008 (with Alastair Norcross).

• Director, Center for Values and Social Policy, Philosophy Dept., University of Colorado, Boulder, 2006-2008

- Grant Writing - Project Creation - Cross-disciplinary/Inter- and Intra-university Collaboration - Financial/Historical Audit - Outreach - Web design/Content authoring - Conferences:

٠ Symposium: Research on Prisoners and other Vulnerable Populations. Feb. 2008. Organized with Alison Jaggar, Annette Dula, and Dayna Matthew. Brought in George Annas, Vanessa Gamble, Dorothy Roberts, Harriet Wasahington, Alan Meisel, Jamie Fellner, Jeffrey Metzner, Leodus Jones, and Vera Sharav.

٠ RoME: First Annual Rocky Mountain Ethics Conference. Aug. 2008. Organized with Alastair Norcross. Brought in Geoff Sayre-McCord, Fred Feldman, and Bonnie Steinbock. Coordinated submission and blind review process of over 50 articles.

• Pre-Professional Advising candidate search committee

• 2007-2008 Colloquium Organizer, ENVS, with Diana Nemergut. Brought in Jeff Kiehl (NCAR), Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus (authors of Break Through).

• Spring 2007, arranged to bring Andrew Light to CU as speaker (with $2,500 from the student led Wilderness Studies Group).

• Pre-Health Advisory Committee, CU, Boulder. 2006-2008.

• Judge, Leeds Summit Award for Environmental Leadership. Leeds School of Business, University of Colorado, Boulder. 2005.

• Interim Director, Environmental Studies Program, NYU - Evaluating Applications - Advising Graduate Students - Coordinating Independent Studies

• Co-coordinator, Applied Philosophy Group, NYU. Arranged to bring Professors Steven Vogel, Evan Selinger, Tim Engström, and Darrel Morrison.

• Advisor, Stony Brook Philosophy Placement Committee

• Professorial Search Committee for Kalamazoo College, Eastern Division APA, December 2002. Conducted interviews and evaluated candidates for a tenure track position in the Philosophy Department.

• Philosophy Graduate Student Conference Coordinator, March 31-

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April 2, 2000. Coordinated Action and Identity conference. Arranged to bring Alphonso Lingis (Penn State) as Keynote.

• Philosophy Graduate Student President, 1998-1999.

• Stony Brook Provost’s “Bookstore Bid Evaluation Committee,” Graduate Student Representative, 1999-2000.

• Developed weekly environmental speaker series for the Stony Brook community, 1998.

• Philosophy Graduate Student Conference Coordinator, April 23-25, 1999. Coordinated Enigmas of the Ideal conference. Arranged to bring Hubert Dreyfus (U. California at Berkeley) as keynote.

• Philosophy Graduate Student Conference Transportation and Housing coordinator, March 1998. Transforming Traditions conference.

• Elected Representative, Graduate Student Organization. SUNY – Stony Brook. Academic Year, 1997-1998.

• SEAC: Student Environmental Action Coalition. Initiating facilitator at SUNY—Stony Brook. Fall, 1997 – 2000.

• Southwest Center for Biological Diversity. Volunteer. Tucson, AZ. 1996-1997.

• SEAC: University of Arizona. Active Member. 1996 – 1997.

• English Language Tutor. Jewish-Russian Immigrant Relocation Program. Volunteer. Tucson, AZ. 1995 – 1996.

• Peer Education Coordinator for the Women’s Resource Center in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Spring 1993 – Spring 1994.

• Women’s Resource Center volunteer. Kalamazoo, MI. 1992 – 1994.

PROFESSIONAL

AFFILIATIONS

American Philosophical Association (APA) International Association of Environmental Philosophy (IAEP) Society for the Study of Ethics and Animals (SSEA) International Society for Environmental Ethics (ISEE) Association for Practical and Professional Ethics (APPE) Society for Applied Philosophy (SAP)

DISSERTATION

ADVISOR

• Ricardo Simmonds (ENVS, Date TBD) • Chris Dunn (ENVS, Date TBD) • Michael Pellegrino (ENVS, Date TBD) • Jordan Kincaid (ENVS, 2019) • Lev Szentkiralyi (PSCI, 2017) • Paul Bowman (Co-chair, PHIL/ENVS 2018) • Alex Lee (ENVS, 2016) • Adam Hermans (ENVS, 2016)

DISSERTATION

COMMITTEES

• Joe Wilson (PHIL, TBD) • Martin Eyestone (PHIL, 2019) • Alex Zambrano (PHIL, 2017) • Shane Gronholz (PHIL, 2016) • Lucy McAllister (ENVS, 2016) • Lydia Dixon (ENVS, 2016) • Marc Rich (COMM, 2015) • Andrew Chapman (PHIL 2015)

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• Michael Growden (PHIL 2014) • Chelsea Haramia (PHIL 2014) • Ryan Jenkins (PHIL 2014) • Ashwin Ravikumar (ENVS 2013) • Duncan Purves (PHIL 2013) • Kristin Demetriou (PHIL 2012) • Jason Hyde (PHIL 2011) • Tyler Hildebrand (PHIL 2011) • Barrett Emerick (PHIL 2011) • Matt Seacord (PHIL, 2010) • David Barnes (PHIL 2010) • PJ Lomelino (PHIL 2010) • Jason Hanna (PHIL 2009) • Tom Metcalf (PHIL 2009) • Peter Higgins (PHIL, 2008)

DISSERTATION

PROSPECTUS

COMMITTEES

• Alex Standen (ENVS, TBD) • Michael Pellegrino (ENVS, TBD) • Joe Wilson (PHIL, 2018) • Chris Dunn (ENVS, 2018) • Caleb Pickard (PHIL, 2017) • Jordan Kincaid (ENVS, 2016) • Alex Zambrano (PHIL 2015) • Lucy McAllister (ENVS 2014) • Marc Rich (COMM 2014) • Lev Szentkiralyi (PSCI, 2014) • Adam Hermans (ENVS, 2014) • Paul Bowman (Co-chair, PHIL/ENVS 2013) • Michael Growden (PHIL 2013) • Lydia Dixon (ENVS 2013) • Alex Lee (Chair, ENVS 2013) • Michael Henry (ENVS 2012) • Chelsea Haramia (PHIL 2011) • Ashwin Ravikumar (ENVS 2011) • Tyler Jones (ENVS 2010) • Katherine Clark (ENVS 2010) • James Meldrum (ENVS 2009) • David Barnes (PHIL 2008) • Kelli Marie-Archie (ENVS 2008) • P.J. Lomelino (PHIL 2007) • Matt Seacord (PHIL 2007)

PRELIM EXAM • Chris Dunn (ENVS 2017) • Jordan Kincaid (ENVS 2016) • Kristin Krumhardt (ENVS 2015) • Nathalie Chardon (ENVS 2015) • Ethan Welty (ENVS 2014) • Rachel Hauser (ENVS 2014) • Ryan Langendorf (ENVS 2014)

MASTERS THESES • Alex Hamilton (ENVS/Law, MS/JD, TBD)

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• Harry Lee Brann (ENVS, TBD) • Nathan Lee-Ammons (ENVS, 2019) • Lorenzo Nericcio (PHIL, 2018) • Amorina Martinez (ENVS, 2017) • Cara Lauria (ENVS, 2017) • Anja Semanco (CMCI, TBD) • Jeannine Bailey (PHIL 2013) • Lucy McAllister (ENVS 2013) • Julia Gibson (PHIL 2013) • Alex Lee (Chair, ENVS 2012) • Kelsey Cody (ENVS 2011) • Ricardo Simmonds (Chair, ENVS 2011) • Gustavo Oliveira (PHIL 2009) • Anthony P. Smith (PHIL 2008)

HONORS THESES • Catherine Archer (ENVS 2017)

• Anna Dorovskikh (ENVS 2015) • Cali Basman (ENVS 2012) (Thesis Advisor) • Carmen Lee Franklin (ENVS 2012) (Thesis Advisor) • Taylor Garrett (ENVS 2012) (Thesis Advisor) • Jordan Osterman (ENVS 2010) • Devin Brandt (CHEM 2010) • Cecelia Gilboy (ENVS 2009) (Thesis Advisor) • Andrew Bowe (PHIL 2009) • Jennie Lee-Trefren (PHIL 2009) (Thesis Advisor) • Erik Phillips-Nania (ENVS 2008) • Ricardo Simmonds (ENVS 2008)

LETTERS WRITTEN (Tenure and promotion letters not included)

• Alex Hamilton (Fellowship) • Lee Brann (Further study) • Chris Dunn (Fellowship) • Paul Bowman (PHIL Job Market/Post-doc) • Lydia (Dixon) Lawhon (ENVS Job Market) • Patrick Smith (PHIL Job Market) • Daniel Callies (PHIL Job Market) • Stefi Mitova (Grant Application) • Andrew Chapman (PHIL Job Market) • Alex Lee (ENVS Job Market) • Adam Hermans (ENVS Job Market) • Harris Kalat (Graduate School) • Lev Szentkiralyi (PSCI Job Market) • Toby Svoboda (PHIL Job Market) • Nathalie Chardon (Fulbright Application) • Ryan Jenkins (PHIL Job Market) • Adam Hermans (Grant Application) • Julia Gibson (Graduate School) • Kara Grosse (Graduate School) • Lauren Hoffman (Law School) • Ashwin Ravikumar (ENVS Job Market) • Michael Kelly (Graduate School) • Elizabeth Koebele (Grant Application)

Benjamin Hale Last Revised: 29 January 2020 23

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