Betsy
(Elizabeth) Hartmann
OFFICE ADDRESS:
Director, Population and
Development Program
CLPP
Hampshire College
Amherst, Massachusetts 01002
Phone: (413) 559-6046
Fax: (413) 559-5826
EDUCATION:
B.A., Yale University, 1974.
Magna cum laude with
Divisional Honors.
Self-Designed Interdisciplinary
Major in South Asian Studies.
PhD, Development Studies, London
School of Economics and Political Science, March 2003.
Dissertation title: Strategic
Scarcity: The Origins and Impact of Environmental Conflict
Ideas.
POSITION
Director, Population and
Development Program, Hampshire College
(from 1988)
Associate Professor, Development
Studies, School of Social Science, Hampshire College
(from 2006)
Responsibilities include
teaching; research; writing; curricular development; editing
program publications; public speaking and advocacy in the
fields of international women's health, reproductive rights,
development, environment and security; and working with the
Civil Liberties and Public Policy Program on joint projects
and programs such as the annual conference on reproductive
rights and the Reproductive Rights Activist Service Corps
summer internship program.
PUBLICATIONS
Books and monographs:
(2007) Deadly Election.
White River, VT: White River Press.
(2005) Making Threats:
Biofears and Environmental Anxieties, eds. Betsy
Hartmann, Banu Subramaniam and Charles Zerner, Rowman and
Littlefield.
(2005)
Mainstreaming Gender in
Environmental Assessment and Early Warning: Conceptual
Challenges and Opportunities,
A Report by Joni Seager and Betsy Hartmann, United Nations
Environment Program, Division of Early Warning and
Assessment.
(2002) The Truth about Fire,
a novel about the Far Right. New York: Carroll & Graf
Publishers.
(1995) Reproductive Rights
and Wrongs: The Global Politics of Population Control
(updated and revised edition). Boston: South End Publishers.
(l989) The Poverty of
Population Control: Family Planning and Health Policy in
Bangladesh (with Hilary Standing). London:
Bangladesh International Action Group.
(1987) Reproductive Rights
and Wrongs: The Global Politics of Population Control and
Contraceptive Choice. New York: Harper and Row
Publishers.
(1985) Food, Saris, and
Sterilization: Population Control in Bangladesh (with
Hilary Standing). London: Bangladesh International Action
Group.
(1983) A Quiet Violence: View
from a Bangladesh Village (with James Boyce). London:
Zed Press; Delhi: Oxford University Press; and San
Francisco: Institute for Food and Development Policy.
(1979) Needless Hunger:
Voices from a Bangladesh Village (with James Boyce).
San Francisco: Institute for Food and Development Policy.
German edition, l989.
(1978) “Bangladesh: Aid to the
Needy? (with James Boyce). International Policy
Report, Washington, DC: Center for International
Policy, Vol. 4, No. 1, May.
Chapters in books:
(2006) Preface to Lara M.
Knudsen, Reproductive Rights in a Global Context.
Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press.
(2005) “Population Growth is Unfairly
Blamed for Ecological Problems,” Population: Opposing
Viewpoints, Farmington Hills, MI: Green Haven
Press/Thomson Gale Publishers. Adaptation of “Conserving
Racism: The Greening of Hate at Home and Abroad,” Znet,
December, 10, 2003.
(2005) “Pernicious Peasants and
Angry Young Men: The Strategic Demography of Threats,” by
Betsy Hartmann and Anne Hendrixson, in Hartmann, Subramaniam
and Zerner eds., Making Threats: Biofears and
Environmental Anxieties.
(2002 ) "The Changing Faces of
Population Control,” in Anannya Bhattacharjee and Jael
Silliman, eds., Policing the National Body: Sex, Race and
Criminalization. Boston: South End Press.
(2001) "Will the Circle Be
Unbroken: A Critique of the Project on Environment,
Population and Security," in Nancy Peluso and Michael Watts,
eds., Violent Environments. Ithaca: Cornell
University Press.
(2001) "Population Control," in
The Routledge International Encyclopedia of Women's
Studies.
(1999) "Population, Environment
and Security: A New Trinity," in Jael Silliman and Ynestra
King, eds., Dangerous Intersections: Feminist
Perspectives on Population, Environment and Development.
Boston: South End Press.
(1997) "Women, Population and
the Environment: Whose Consensus? Whose Empowerment?" in
Lynn Duggan et al, eds., The Women, Gender and
Development Reader. London: Zed Books.
(1993) "The Impact of Population
Control Policies on Health Policy in Bangladesh," in
Meredeth Turshen and Briavel Holcomb, eds., Women's Lives
and Public Policy: The International Experience.
Connecticut: Greenwood Press.
(1992) "Contraceptive Choice: A
Multitude of Meanings," in Helen Holmes, ed., Issues in
Reproductive Technology I: An Anthology. New York:
Garland Press
(1981) "Needless Hunger: Poverty
and Power in Rural Bangladesh" (with James Boyce), in R.
Galli, ed., The Political Economy of Rural Development:
Peasants, International Capital and the State.Albany:
State University of New York Press, pp. 175-210.
Forthcoming:
“Rethinking the Role of
Population in Human Security,” chapter contribution to
Global Environmental Change and Human Security, edited
by Richard Matthew et al, SUNY Press.
“Ghosts of Malthus: Fear,
Loathing and Scarcity,” chapter contribution to an anthology
on scarcity edited by Lyla Mehta, Earthscan.
“Gender and Environmental Change: Easy
Answers or Hard Questions?” chapter contribution to Women
and Human Security: Challenges of Conflict and Global Change,
edited by Richard A. Matthew and Heather Goldsworthy.
Academic/Policy Papers:
“Climate Conflict and Climate Refugees:
Who’s Taking the Heat for Global Warming?” paper delivered
at panel on Climate Change, Society for the Social Studies
of Science Annual Meeting, Montreal, Canada, October 11,
2007.
“Eugenics of the Everyday: Some
Preliminary Reflections,” background paper for the
consultation on ‘New” Reproductive and Genetic
Technologies and Women’s Lives, SAMA-Resource Group for
Women and Health, New Delhi, India, June 16-17, 2006. (Will
be published in a collection of the conference papers by
Zubaan Books, New Delhi)
(2004) “Pulling the Population Thread:
Neo-Malthusian Ideas, Actors and Interests in the
Construction of Environmental Conflict,” paper prepared for
panel on Critical Views of Environmental Security and
Conflict, 2004 International Studies Association Annual
Conference, Montreal, March 17, 2004.
“Ghosts of
Malthus: Fear, Loathing and Scarcity,” discussion paper for
the joint U.K. Economic and Social Research Council and
Institute for Development Studies workshop on Scarcity
and the Politics of Allocation, University of Sussex,
June 6-7, 2005.
Works in progress:
The Naturalist
(novel), in progress.
Articles and book reviews
(1994-present):
“A Bigger, and greener, America,” (with
Amy Oliver), Daily Hampshire Gazette, October 18, 2006.
“Liberal Ends, Illiberal Means: National
Security, ‘Environmental Conflict’ and the Making of the Cairo
Consensus,” Indian Journal of Gender Studies, 13:2
(2006), pp. 195-227.
Book review of Global
Prescriptions: Gendering Health and Human Rights by
Rosalind Petchesky, Perspectives on Politics 3(2) June
2005: 425-426.
“Pro-whose-life? Ten reasons
why militarism is bad for your health,” co-authored with Ryn
Gluckman and Azi Shariatmadar, The Women’s Review of Books,
Vol. XXI, No. 12, September 2004.
“America’s Climate of Fear and
Loathing,” Boston Globe, April 19, 2002.
“The Return of Relevance,”
Political Environments, Spring 2002.
“Degradation Narratives:
Over-Simplifying the Link Between Population, Poverty and the
Environment,” IHDP Update, Newsletter of the
International Human Dimensions Program on Global Environmental
Change, No. 4, 2002, pp. 6-8.
Syndicated op-ed on World
Population Day for Progressive Media Service, July 2001.
"Population, Development and Human
Security," AVISO, Information Bulletin on Global
Environmental Change and Human Security, 2000.
"Two Steps Backward for the Sierra
Club," The Progressive, January 2000.
"Wrong Signals on Overpopulation,"
Boston Sunday Globe, October 10, 1999.
"Dressing Up Malthus," Sojourner,
Vol. 25, No. 3, November 1999.
"Population, Environment and
Security: A New Trinity," Environment and Urbanization,
vol. 10, no. 2, October 1998.
"Pastoral Symphony," review of
Ariel Salleh's Ecofeminism as Politics, Women's Review of
Books, vol. XVI, no. 1, October 1998.
Review of Asoka Bandarage's
Population and Global Crisis, Development in Practice,
November 1997.
"Numbers Games and Final
Solutions," Politics and the Life Sciences, vol. 16,
no. 2, September 1997.
"A Risky Business?: Quinacrine,
used to sterilize women worldwide, has yet to be proved safe,"
(with Nalini Visvanathan), Boston Sunday Globe, August
3, 1997.
"Cairo Consensus Sparks New Hopes,
Old Worries," Forum for Applied Research and Public Policy,
vol. 12, no. 2, Summer 1997. Excerpted in The New Our
Bodies, Ourselves, 1998 edition.
"Population Control I: Birth of an
Ideology," and "Population Control II: The Population
Establishment Today" (chapters from Reproductive Rights and
Wrongs), International Journal of Health Services,
vol. 27, no. 3, 1997.
"The Greening of Prejudice," review
of Robert Kaplan, The Ends of the Earth: A Journey
at the Dawn of the 21st Century,
Technology Review, Nov./Dec. 1996.
Review of Faye D. Ginsburg and
Rayna Rapp, eds., Conceiving the New World Order: The
Global Politics of Reproduction in
Contemporary Sociology, vol. 25, no. 5, 1996.
"The Double Challenge:
Reproductive Rights at the Fourth World Women's Conference,"
Whole Earth Review, Fall Issue, 1995.
"Women of the World," In These
Times, October 2, l995.
"Dangerous Intersections,"
Political Environments, No. 2, Summer 1995.
"Questioning the Population
Consensus," Earth Island Journal, Spring 1995.
"The Cairo 'Consensus': Women's
Empowerment or Business as Usual?" Geo Journal, vol.
35, no. 2, February 1995.
"Population Fictions: The
Malthusians are Back in Town," Dollars and Sense,
Boston, Sept./Oct. 1994. Reprinted in Theodore Goldfarb, ed.,
Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Controversial
Environmental Issues (Sixth Edition), Guilford,
Connecticut: Dushkin Publishing Group, 1995.
"What Success Story?" New York
Times (op-ed), September 29, l994.
"Ar Banwt mun eller manniska,"
Dagens Nyheter (Swedish daily), Stockholm, Sept. 3, l994.
"Consensus and Contradiction on the
Road to Cairo," Terra Femina, IDAC, Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil, August 1994.
"To Vanquish the Hydra,"
Political Environments, No. 1, Spring 1994.
"Old Maps and New Terrain,"
Development, no. 1, 1994.
Projects,
Editorial Work and Consultancies:
(Ongoing)
Co-editor and writer for the DifferenTakes issue paper
series produced by the Population and Development Program,
Hampshire College. Bound compilations include Reviving
Reproductive Safety (Fall 2005) and Babies, Burdens and
Threats: The Changing Faces of Population Control (Winter
2007).
(2002-present)
Archival co-editor, Visual Imagery Project, Rethink and
Stop the Blame: Population Imagery from 1933 to the Present,
Flash computer presentation by Binta Jeffers, Committee on
Women, Population and the Environment, forthcoming February
2007.
(2005-6)
Project director and co-editor, Rethinking the Link: A
Critical Review of Population-Environment Programs, report
by James Oldham, a joint publication of the Population and
Development Program and the Political Economy Research
Institute, UMass, February 2006.
(2004) Principal Investigator/Consultant
(with Joni Seager), United Nations Environment Program (UNEP),
Department of Early Warning and Assessment (DEWA), Nairobi,
Kenya, “Assessment of the Current State of Gender
Mainstreaming in the Operations, Mission and Work of DEWA,”
December 2003-March 2004.
(2004) Project Director and member of the
editorial board, Population in Perspective: A Curriculum
Resource, produced by the Population and Development
Program with the Committee on Women, Population and the
Environment, Spring 2004.
(2003) Co-editor, Militarized Zones:
Gender, Race, Immigration and the Environment, Special
Issue of Political Environments (No. 10), a joint
publication of the American Friends Service Committee,
Committee on Women, Population and the Environment (CWPE), and
the Hampshire College Population and Development Program,
November 2003.
Radio commentary:
“Where Have All the Young Men
Gone?” WFCR News, November 8, 2002.
On-line commentary:
“Nine Theses on Moving the Peace
Movement Forward,” Foreign Policy in Focus,
www.fpif.org, April 7, 2003.
For Z-net (www.zmag.org):
“Abortion and
the Politics of Prevention,” November 7, 2006.
“Everyday
Eugenics,” September 22, 2006. (Znet Science)
“Gender, Militarism, and Climate Change,”
April 10, 2006.
“Too Heavy a
Price to Pay: India’s Two-Child Norm Hurts Women, Girls and
the Poor,” January 6, 2006.
“The Testosterone Threat: Where
Sociobiology Meets National Security,” November 21, 2005.
“Narcissus and the Mind/Body
Problem,” December 2004.
“Girlie Men and the Great
Democratic Disconnect,” October 2004.
“Bread, Roses – and Time,” August
2004. (Reproduced in the Utne Reader online, and translated
into German and published in arranca! and
Wochenzeitung WOZ.)
“Conserving Racism: The Greening of Hate
at Home and Abroad,” December 10, 2003. (Also published as a
DifferenTakes issue paper by the Hampshire College Population
and Development Program.)
“End of History: The Sequel,” April
20, 2003.
“Normalizing Nightmares,” March 13,
2003.
“White Supremacy and the
Anti-Immigrant Movement,” December 23, 2002.
“Population Policy: Will Coercion
Come Back in Vogue?” May 1, 2000.
“A Visit to Los Alamos,” March 5,
2000.
“Cracking Open CRACK,” October 22,
1999.
“Cross-Dressing Malthus,” September
20, 1999.
Recent interviews:
“The Greening of Hate,” interview
with Betsy Hartmann by Fred Pearce, New Scientist,
February 22, 2003, pp. 44-47.
Wendy Harcourt, “Refuting Security
Demographics: In Dialogue with Betsy Hartmann,” Development
48(4) (2005).
COURSES TAUGHT
Rethinking the Population Problem
Reproductive Rights: National and
International Perspectives
Population, Environment and
Security
Interrogating Fear: Bioterror, the
Environment and the Construction of Threats
SELECTED INVITED LECTURES AND
SEMINARS
(1994-present)
“Strategic Demography and the
Naturalizing of National Security,” panel presentation,
Interrogating Fear: Bioterror, the Environment and the
Construction of Threats, 20th Annual
Conference, Society for Literature, Science and Art, Dactyl
Foundation, New York, NY, November 11, 2006.
“Population Politics: Old Maps, New
Terrain,” lecture sponsored by the Women’s and Gender Studies
Program, Middlebury College, October 24, 2006.
“Rethinking the Population
Problem,” lecture and dialogue, Bioneers by the Bay Youth
Initiative, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, October
20, 2006.
“Abortion and the Politics of
Prevention,” panel on Hyde and Seek: Towards a New Abortion
Politics, Hampshire College, October 19, 2006.
Participation and presentations in
International Learning Circle on Migration and Citizenship,
sponsored by Inter Pares, CAMMAC, Quebec, Canada, September
26-29, 2006.
“Population Politics at the
International Women and Health Meeting,” seminar presentation,
International Development, Community and Environment program,
Clark University, October 27, 2005.
“Who Counts?” symposium
presentation, Who Counts in the Americas? Center for
Women’s InterCultural Leadership, Saint Mary’s College, Notre
Dame, Indiana, September 27, 2005.
“Strategic Scarcity: The Deployment
of Population Fears,” introductory speech to the plenary on
The Politics and Resurgence of Population Policies, 10th
International Women and Health Meeting, New Delhi, India,
September 23, 2005; also two panel presentations, “Between a
Rock and a Hard Place” and “Population, Environment and
Security.”
“Are Poor Women Destroying Planet
Earth? An Assessment of the Environmental Security Debate and
its Links to the ‘War on Terror’, lecture sponsored by the
Oberlin College Environmental Studies Program and Luce
Foundation, Oberlin, Ohio, September 30, 2004.
“Gender and Vulnerability to Environmental
Change,” presentation to UNEP/DEWA staff, Nairobi, Kenya,
January 21, 2004.
“Another Look at Choice: Body Politics at
Home and Abroad,” invited lecture, Women’s Studies Program,
Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA., November 13, 2003.
“Population, Security and Coercive
Conservation,” presentation to the panel on The New Faces
of Population Control: Coercive Conservation, Security and
Environmental Racism, SisterSong Women of Color
Reproductive Health and Sexual Rights National Conference,
Atlanta, GA., November 15, 2003.
“Political Multi-Tasking,”
presentation to the Peace and World Security Studies (PAWSS)
Public Forum on ‘The War with Iraq,’ Hampshire College,
Amherst, MA, March 24, 2003.
“Strategic Scarcity: The Politics
of Population, Environment and Security,” invited seminar
presentation, Harvard Center for Population and Development
Studies, February 12, 2003.
“Homer-Dixon’s Model: Truths and
their Consequences,” lecture to 2003 Watson International
Scholars of the Environment, Watson Institute for
International Studies, Brown University, January 29, 2003.
“Is Fiction Stranger than Truth, or
Truth Stranger than Fiction?,” panel presentation, National
Writers Union Conference WriteAngles 2002, Mt. Holyoke
College, South Hadley, MA, December 7, 2003.
“The Strategic Uses of Reproductive
Health,” presentation to Defining Women’s Health: An
Interdisciplinary Dialogue, Committee on Degrees in
Women’s Studies and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced
Study, Harvard University, May 4, 2002.
"The Politics of Population
Policy," Center for Public Policy, University of
Massachusetts, November 16, 2001.
"Ghosts of Malthus: Population,
Environment and Reproductive Wrongs," Sarah Lawrence College,
November 2, 2001.
"The End of History Theme Park,"
PAWSS Summer Institute, Amherst College, June 2001.
"Environmental Conflict: Wrong
Turns on the Causal Pathway," Symposium on Environment and
Security, Center for the Study of Democracy, University of
Westminster, London, March 15, 2001.
"Exploring the Links Between Global
Environmental Change and Human Security and Population,"
AVISO Policy Briefing Series, Woodrow Wilson Center,
Washington, D.C., January 30, 2001.
"Tropical Tropes and Barren Slopes:
Population, Environment and Security," Feminist Studies
Colloquium and the Institute for Social, Economic and
Ecological Sustainability, University of Minnesota, Nov. 17,
2000.
"The Changing Faces of
Neo-Malthusianism: Implications for Feminist Resistance,"
seminar talk delivered at the McGill Center for Research and
Teaching on Women, Montreal, Quebec, Nov. 9, 1999.
"The New (Old) Faces of
Neo-Malthusianism and the Critical Role of Anthropology,"
Working Group on Anthropology and Population Speaker Series,
Brown University, Providence, RI, Oct. 8, 1999.
Presentation on sterilization,
Panel on Sterilization of Women and Reproductive Rights,
Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, June 1,
1999.
"The Politics of Population,"
speech delivered at the World Affairs Seminar: Population in
the 21st Century: How Can We Avoid the Potential Crises?,
Cranbrook Schools, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, February 25,
1999.
"Cairo Plus Five: Pros and Cons,"
opening presentation to the conference on Reproductive Health
and Rights in Context: Five Years After the Cairo Conference
on Population and Development, co-organized by the Society for
International Development, the Institute for Social Studies,
and HIVOS, the Hague, Netherlands, February 5, 1999.
"Cairo Plus Five and Malthus Plus
Two Hundred: Population Politics at the Millennium," Allegheny
College, November 2, 1998.
"Current Faces of
Neo-Malthusianism," presentation to panel on Challenges Facing
the International Women's Movement, International Association
of Feminist Economists Conference, University of Amsterdam,
June 6, 1998.
Invited lectures on "Population
Politics Post-Cairo," at Sir David Owen Population Center,
Cardiff University, Wales, May 21, 1998; Oxford University
Third World First Conference, Oxford, May 2, 1998; Economic
Development Seminar, Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford University,
March 5, 1998; Department of Anthropology, School of Oriental
and African Studies, University of London, February 24, 1998;
and World Population Foundation, Hilversum, Netherlands,
January 30, 1998.
Invited lectures on "Population,
Environment and Security" at the Research Seminar in Regional
Security, Nuffield College, Oxford University, May 15, 1998;
Institute for Development Studies, Sussex University, March 4,
1998; Development Studies Institute Research Seminar, London
School of Economics, February 9, 1998; Hazards, Globalization
and Sustainability Conference, Middlesex University, UK,
October 11, 1997.
"South Asian Women's Movements and
Population Policies," presentation to International Conference
on South Asia and South Asian Communities, University of
London, October 19, 1997.
"Vertical Reform Or Lateral
Solidarity?," plenary address, panel on National and
International Policies, 8th Women and Health International
Meeting, Rio de Janeiro Brazil, March 17, 1997.
"The Politics of Population Control
and Reproductive Rights," UBINIG Discussion Series -- Ideas
for Social Action, Dhaka, Bangladesh, January 8, 1997.
"Reproductive Rights and Wrongs:
The Global Politics of Population Control," Simmons College,
November 25, 1996.
"Reviving the Political
Imagination," plenary address to the conference on Dangerous
Intersections: Feminist Perspectives on Population,
Immigration and the Environment, Union Theological Seminary,
New York, October 25, 1996.
"The Greening of Hate,"
presentation to the roundtable on Marxism and the Ecological
Crisis, conference on Politics and Languages of Contemporary
Marxism, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, December 6,
1996; Political Ecology Conference, University of
Massachusetts, Amherst, MA., May 1996; and the National
Strategy Session on Immigration and the Environment,
Sausalito, CA., March 1996.
Lectures in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
November 6-9, 1995: "Feminist Action for Health, Sexuality and
Reproductive Rights," Hearing on the Beijing Women's
Conference, Parliament of Rio, November 6; Opening Address to
the symposium, "A Pot Pourri of Health: Seven Experiences,"
sponsored by REDEH and the Feminist Network on Health and
Reproductive Rights -- Rio Region, November 7; and "Population
and the Environment: Dangerous Intersections," hosted by IBASE,
co-sponsored by FASE and IBASE, November 9.
"Beijing Decoded: Women's Rights
and the UN Women's Conference," lecture at Clark University,
International Relations Program, Worcester, MA., October 20,
1995.
"The New Population Consensus,"
panel presentation on 'The Double Challenge,' NGO Forum on
Women, Huairou, China, August 31, l995. Also presentation on
population control and health, OXFAM-America panel on women's
health, August 30, l995.
"Population Control and
Reproductive Rights: National and International Perspectives,"
Teacher Training, MIDEON Summer Institute on Population,
Gender and Development, Michigan State University, East
Lansing, MI., May 14-19, l995.
"Population Control and Women's
Rights," Reuter Forum, Columbia University School of
Journalism, New York, April 19, 1995.
"Dangerous Intersections: The
Population Consensus and the Politics of National Security and
Racial 'Purity', plenary address, EDGE Conference on
"California Today Facing the Challenge of the 21st Century:
Environmental Justice, Population and the New Majority of
Color," Los Angeles, January 14, l995.
Organized and chaired panel on
"Population and the Environment: Rethinking the Consensus," at
Down to Earth: Practical Applications of Ecological Economics,
Third Biennial Conference of the International Society for
Ecological Economics, San Jose, Costa Rica, October 24-28,
1994.
"Evaluating the Cairo Process,"
Population and Reproductive Rights: Strategizing for the UN
Conference on Population and Development in Cairo, sponsored
by KULU -- Women and Development, Copenhagen, Denmark, May 27,
l994.
"An Analysis of the Politics of
Population with Special Emphasis on the Draft Final Document
to the ICPD," Conference on Multilateral Population
Assistance, Oslo, Norway, May 25, l994.
"The Implications of the New
Population Consensus", panel presentation by the Committee on
Women, Population and the Environment, Fourth United Nations
Prep Com for the ICPD, New York, April 1994.
"Women and Population
Stabilization," Debate with Virginia Abernethy of Carrying
Capacity Network, Public Interest Environmental Law
Conference, University of Oregon School of Law, Eugene,
Oregon, March 10-13, l994.
Delivery of Thomas S. Hall Lecture
on "Women, Population and the Environment,", Biology
Department, Washington University in St. Louis, March 7, l994,
and speaking in workshop on "Population and Poverty: Two
perspectives" with Thomas Merrick, senior World Bank
population advisor, in Mary T. Hall Seminar on Population and
Development, United Nations Association, St. Louis, March 6,
1994.
"Women, Population and the
Environment: Whose Consensus? Whose Empowerment?", paper
presented at the Global Political Ecology Conference, York
University, Toronto, Canada, Feb. 24-27, l994.
OTHER PROFESSIONAL
AFFILIATIONS AND ACTIVITIES
Co-Convener, Five College
Reproductive Politics Study Group
Co-Convener, Quinacrine Alert
Network
Member, Advisory Committee,
Committee on Women, Population and the Environment
International Advisory Committee, 10th
International Women and Health Conference (New Delhi, India,
2005). |