Professor, Department of Political Science

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Professor, Department of Political Science

MARK B. BROWN Professor, Department of Political Science California State University, Sacramento 6000 J Street, Sacramento, CA 95819-6089 USA 916-278-6430 (office), 530-304-1156 (cell) [email protected] http://www.csus.edu/indiv/b/brownm

November 2017

EDUCATION

2001 Ph.D., Political Science, Rutgers University. 1996 M.A., Political Science, Rutgers University. 1990 B.A., Politics, with Honors, University of California, Santa Cruz.

ACADEMIC POSITIONS

2013- Professor, Department of Government, California State University, Sacramento. 2008-13 Associate Professor, Department of Government, California State University, Sacramento. 2008-09 Co-leader, Junior Research Group "Science, Values, and Democracy," Bielefeld Graduate School in History and Sociology (BGHS), Bielefeld University. 2003-08 Assistant Professor, Department of Government, California State University, Sacramento. 2001-03 Postdoctoral Fellow, Institute for Science and Technology Studies (IWT), Bielefeld University. 2001 Lecturer, Department of Philosophy, University of San Francisco. 2000 Lecturer, Department of Political Science, University of California, Davis.

AWARDS, GRANTS, FELLOWSHIPS

Research and Creative Activity Award, summer stipend and one course release for “James Baldwin and the Future of White Identity,” California State University, Sacramento, 2017-18.

Outstanding Teaching Award for 2013-14, College of Social Sciences and Interdisciplinary Studies, California State University, Sacramento.

Visiting Fellow, Department of Philosophy, Bielefeld University, June-July 2011.

National Science Foundation, Ethics and Values Studies program, standard grant ($129,935, Nr. 0451289), “Toward a Political Theory of Bioethics: Participation, Representation, and Deliberation on Federal Bioethics Advisory Committees,” 2005- 2007.

Virginia Walsh Award for best dissertation in science, technology, and environmental Mark B. Brown 2 politics, American Political Science Association, 2004.

National Science Foundation, Ethics and Values Studies program, Dissertation Research Grant (No. SBR 9810316), 1998-99.

PUBLICATIONS

Books

2009. Science in Democracy: Expertise, Institutions, and Representation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Honorable Mention, 2010 First Book Award, given by the Foundations of Political Theory section of the American Political Science Association.

Chinese simplified character translation, Shanghai Jiao Tong University Press, 2015.

Reviewed in Contemporary Political Theory, Social Studies of Science, Science and Public Policy, Public Understanding of Science, Science Studies, Isis, Minerva, Science as Culture, Environment and Planning A, Metascience, Political Studies, Indian Journal of Political Science, Choice, Environmental Health Perspectives, Chemical Heritage Magazine, Metapsychology, Politikon, Review of Policy Research, Plurilogue, The Bubble Chamber, Sozialwissenschaftliche Literatur Rundschau

2006. Brown, Mark B., Justus Lentsch and Peter Weingart. Politikberatung und Parlament [Political Advice and Parliament]. Opladen: Verlag Barbara Budrich.

Reviewed in Soziologische Revue, Zeitschrift für Parlamentsfragen

Refereed Journal Articles

2017. Speaking for Nature: Hobbes, Latour, and the Democratic Representation of Nonhumans. Science and Technology Studies. Forthcoming.

2015. Politicizing Science: Conceptions of Politics in Science and Technology Studies. Social Studies of Science 45(1): 3-30.

2009. Brown, Mark B., and David H. Guston. Science, Democracy, and the Right to Research. Science and Engineering Ethics 15(3): 351-366.

2009. Three Ways to Politicize Bioethics. American Journal of Bioethics 9(2): 43-54; and "Response to Open Peer Commentaries on 'Three Ways to Politicize Bioethics,'" American Journal of Bioethics 9(2): W6-W7. Mark B. Brown 3

2008. Fairly Balanced: The Politics of Representation on Government Advisory Committees. Political Research Quarterly 61(4): 547-560.

2007. Can Technologies Represent Their Publics? Technology in Society 29(3): 327– 338.

2006. Citizen Panels and the Concept of Representation. Journal of Political Philosophy 14(2): 203–225

2004. The Political Philosophy of Science Policy. Essay Review of Science, Truth, and Democracy by Philip Kitcher. Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy 42(1): 77-95.

2001. The Civic Shaping of Technology: California’s Electric Vehicle Program. Science, Technology, & Human Values 26(1): 56-81.

1995. Brown, Mark B., Weert Canzler, Frank Fischer, and Andreas Knie. Technological Innovation through Environmental Policy: California's Zero-Emission Vehicle Regulation. Public Productivity & Management Review 9:1 (1995): 77-93..

Book Chapters

2017. Representation and Deliberation. In The Oxford Handbook of Deliberative Democracy, ed. André Bächtiger, John S. Dryzek, Jane J. Mansbridge, and Mark E. Warren. Oxford: Oxford University Press, Forthcoming.

2017. Expertise. In Science and the Politics of Openness: Here Be Monsters, ed. Brigitte Nerlich, Sarah Hartley, Sujatha Raman and Alexander Smith. Manchester: Manchester University Press, Forthcoming.

2016. Environmental Science and Politics. In The Oxford Handbook of Environmental Political Theory, ed. Teena Gabrielson, Cheryl Hall, John M. Meyer, and David Schlosberg, 491-504. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

2014. Climate Science, Populism, and the Democracy of Rejection. In Culture, Politics and Climate Change: How Information Shapes our Common Future, ed. Deserai A. Crow and Max Boykoff, 129-145. London and New York: Routledge Earthscan.

2014. Expertise and Deliberative Democracy. In Deliberative Democracy: Issues and Cases, ed. Stephen Elstub and Peter McLaverty, 50-68. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

2013. Toumey, Chris, John Besley, Meg Blanchard, Mark B. Brown, Michael Cobb, Elaine Howard Ecklund, Margaret Glass, Thomas Guterbock, A. Eamon Kelly, Bruce V. Lewenstein. Rethinking Public Knowledge of Science: The Process of Mark B. Brown 4

Crafting the Concept of Science in the Service of Citizens & Consumers. In Knowledges in Publics, ed. Simon Locke and Lorraine Locke, 16-34. Newcastle on Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

2012. Comment les scientifiques représentent-ils les citoyens dans les débats publics? [How do scientists represent citizens in public debate?]. In La Science et le Débat public, ed. Marie-Françoise Chevallier-Le Guyader, 117-128. Arles: Actes Sud / IHEST.

2010. What Does It Mean to Have a Right to Research? Proceedings of the Second Meeting of the World Congress for Freedom of Scientific Research, ed. Carmen Sorrentino, 93-100. Milano: Mimesis.

2010. Coercion, Corruption, and Politics in the Commodification of Academic Science. In The Commodification of Academic Research: Science and the Modern University, ed. Hans Radder, 259-276. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press.

2010. Interdisciplinarity and Liberalism's Epistemic Division of Labor: The Integration of Lay and Expert Deliberation. In Inter- und Transdisziplinarität im Wandel? Neue Perspektiven auf problemorientierte Forschung und Politikberatung, ed. Alexander Bogner, Karen Kastenhofer, and Helge Torgersen, 189-204. Baden- Baden: Nomos.

2009. Federal Advisory Committees in the United States: A Survey of the Political and Administrative Landscape. In Scientific Advice to Policymaking: International Comparison, edited by Justus Lentsch and Peter Weingart, 17-39. Opladen, Germany, and Farmington Hills, MI: Verlag Barbara Budrich.

2006. Ethics, Politics, and the Public: Shaping the Research Agenda. In Shaping Science & Technology Policy: The Next Generation of Research, ed. David H. Guston and Daniel Sarewitz, 10-32. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.

2005. Brown, Mark B., Justus Lentsch and Peter Weingart. 2005. Representation, Expertise, and the German Parliament: A Comparison of Three Advisory Institutions. In Democratization of Expertise? Exploring Novel Forms of Scientific Advice in Political Decision-Making, ed. Sabine Maasen and Peter Weingart, 81- 100. Dordrecht: Springer, 2005.

2000. Conceptions of Science in Political Theory: A Tale of Cloaks and Daggers,” in Vocations of Political Theory, ed. Jason A. Frank and John Tambornino, 189- 211. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Book Reviews, Opinion Pieces, and Other Publications

2017. Beyond Privatization in Higher Education. In Halffman, Willem, and Hans Mark B. Brown 5

Radder, eds., International Responses to the Academic Manifesto: Reports from 14 Countries. Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective, Special Report (2017): 9-14.

2017. Not Everything Political is Politics: Reflections on the March for Science. Public Seminar (June 2).

2016. Three Approaches to Environmental Political Theory. Essay review of Allocating the Earth by Breena Holland, Consensus and Global Environmental Governance by Walter F. Baber and Robert V. Bartlett, and Engaging the Everyday by John M. Meyer. Contemporary Political Theory 15(3): e21-e28.

2014. Latour, Bruno (1947-). In The Encyclopedia of Political Thought, ed. Michael Gibbons, 2058–2060. London: Blackwell.

2014. Review of Science, Democracy, and the American University: From the Civil War to the Cold War, by Andrew Jewett. Isis 105(1): 164-166.

2013. Public University Funding and the Privatization of Politics. Spontaneous Generations: A Journal for the History and Philosophy of Science 7(1): 21-28.

2013. Science and Democracy. In Oxford Bibliographies in Political Science, ed. Rick Valelly. New York: Oxford University Press.

2013. Winickoff, David E., and Mark B. Brown. Time for a Government Advisory Committee on Geoengineering Research. Issues in Science and Technology (Summer): 79-85.

2013. Review of Science in a Democratic Society, by Philip Kitcher. Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy 51(3): 389-397.

2012. Too Much to Read. Inside Higher Ed (April 20).

2012. Review of The Representative Claim, by Michael Saward. Political Studies Review 10(2): 245-246.

2012. Review of Environmental Skepticism, by Peter J. Jacques. Political Studies Review 10(1): 138-139.

2010. Review of How Do You Know? The Economics of Ordinary Knowledge, by Russell Hardin. Perspectives on Politics 8(4): 1214-1215.

2010. Review of Progress in Bioethics edited by Jonathan D. Moreno and Sam Berger. Science & Public Policy 37(9): 724-726.

2010. Review of Democratic Professionalism: Citizen Participation and the Mark B. Brown 6

Reconstruction of Professional Ethics, Identity, and Practice by Albert W. Dzur. The Review of Metaphysics 63(3): 691-693.

2010. Science in the Service of Citizens and Consumers: The NSF Workshop on Public Knowledge of Science. Workshop Report. National Science Foundation, 2010.

2009. Review of Knowledge and Democracy: A 21st Century Perspective, edited by Nico Stehr. Contemporary Sociology 38(5): 452-453.

2008. Review of The Honest Broker: Making Sense of Science in Policy and Politics by Roger S. Pielke, Jr. Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy 46(4): 485-489.

2005. Brown, Mark B., and Ramshin Daneshi. Advancing Both Science, Democracy. Sacramento Bee (May 1).

2003. Wie kommt Gesellschaft in die Wissenschaft? Über Repräsentation, Partizipation und Beratung [How does society get into science? On Representation, Participation, and Advice], Gegenworte (Spring): 55-57.

2002. Brown, Mark B., and Matthias Groß. Eine neue Gesellschaft? Von Kollektiven, Assoziationen und der Repräsentation des Nicht-Menschlichen,“ [A New Society? On Collectives, Associations, and Representation of the Non-Human]. Review Essay. Soziologische Revue 25(4): 380-394.

1997. Review of Democracy and Technology by Richard E. Sclove. Organization and Environment 10: 341-344.

1997. Review of The Environmental Promise of Democratic Deliberation by Adolf G. Gundersen. Organization & Environment 10: 93-95.

1996. Review of Civic Environmentalism: Alternatives to Regulation in States and Communities by DeWitt John. Industrial & Environmental Crisis Quarterly 9: 408- 410.

INVITED TALKS AND WORKSHOPS

2016 Co-Teacher, with Heather Douglas and Andrew Jewett, Summer School, “Science, Values, and Democracy?” Institute Vienna Circle, University of Vienna, July 4-15.

2015 “Climate Change and the Politicization of Science,” Climate Futures Initiative, Princeton University, October 12.

2015 Anchor Teacher, PhD Summer School, “Politics of Science, Technology, and STS,” Netherlands Graduate Research School of Science, Technology and Mark B. Brown 7

Modern Culture (WTMC), August 24-28.

2015 “Climate Change and the Politicization of Science,” Center for Knowledge, Science, and Policy, University of Edinburgh, June 18.

2014 “What Does It Mean to Politicize Science?” European Summer School, "When Science Gets Political," Institute for Advanced Studies in Science and Technology (IHEST), Les Fontaines, Gouvieux, France, July 8-11.

2014 “The Politicization of Science: Political Spheres and Activities in Social Studies of Science and Technology,” Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, June 30.

2014 Workshop on SRM Geoengineering Governance, sponsored by the Bipartisan Policy Center, Environmental Defense Fund, Carnegie Melon University, and UC Berkeley, San Francisco, April 2-3.

2013 “Communication and Democracy,” key note lecture at conference on “Science in Transition,” Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, Amsterdam, November 7-8.

2013 “Climate Science, Populism, and the Democracy of Rejection,” Holtz Center for Science and Technology Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, October 24.

2013 Workshop on Studies of Expertise and Experience (SEESHOP), Arizona State University, May 20-24.

2013 Workshop on “Challenging Futures of Citizen Panels,” Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, April 26.

2012 "What Does It Mean to Politicize Science?" Philosophy Department Colloquium, University of Waterloo, Canada, October 26.

2012 "Realism in the Philosophy of Science," presented at workshop on "The Social Relevance of the Philosophy of Science," Center for Interdisciplinary Research (ZiF), Bielefeld University, June 11-13.

2012 "What Could it Mean to Democratize Science?" Berlin Social Science Center (WZB), June 4.

2012 "The Civic Purpose and Production of Science Literacy," presented at workshop on "Science and the Public," Center for Interdisciplinary Research (ZiF), Bielefeld University, May 30-June 1.

2012 "Coercion and Corruption in Academic Science," Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes, Arizona State University, April 11. Mark B. Brown 8

2012 "The Role of Faculty Governance in Ensuring Institutional Integrity," presented at workshop on "Industry Sponsorship and Health-Related Food Research," Rock Ethics Institute, Pennsylvania State University, March 29-30.

2012 “Populism and Cosmopolitanism in the Politics of Climate Science” presented at workshop on "Engineers, Exact Scientists (Technocrats) and Political Processes: Global Perspectives," Harvey Mudd College, Mach 2-3.

2011 "Climate Change Denial and Counter-Democracy," UCLA Political Theory Workshop, December 2.

2011 Workshop on "Advocacy in Science," American Association for the Advancement of Science, Washington, DC, October 17-18.

2011 "Is Climate Change Good for Democracy?" Center for Values in Medicine, Science and Technology, University of Texas at Dallas, September 21.

2011 "Rethinking the Democratization of Expertise," presented at workshop on "Science versus Democracy?" Centre for Logic and Philosophy of Science, Ghent University, Belgium, June 10.

2011 “John Dewey, Science Policy, and the Limits of Epistemic Democracy,” Melbern G. Glasscock Center for Humanities Research, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, March 21.

2010 “The Politics of Ethics Education in Science and Engineering,” Fall Ethics Symposium, Cosumnes River College, Sacramento, California, November 16-17.

2010 Workshop on "Lay Public Knowledge of Science," National Science Foundation, Washington, DC, October 21-22.

2010 Workshop on new approaches to political representation, "Political Representation Institute," University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, October 1-2.

2010 "How Scientists Represent Citizens in Public Debate," European Summer School, "Which place for science in the public debate?" Institute for Advanced Studies in Science and Technology (IHEST), Saline royale d’Arc et Senans, France, Aug. 25-29.

2010 "Experts as Representatives," Gordon Research Conference on Science and Technology Policy, Waterville Valley, New Hampshire, August 8-13.

2010 International Conference on Climate Intervention Technologies, Asilomar Conference Center, Pacific Grove, California, March 22-26.

2010 "How Science Becomes Political, and What to Do about It," Consortium for Mark B. Brown 9

Science, Policy, and Outcomes, Arizona State University, January 21.

2009 Workshop on "Linking Science to Societal Benefits: Why, How and When?" Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research, Linköping University, Sweden, September 14-17.

2009 "How Environmental Science Becomes Political," Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Leipzig, Germany, March 19.

2009 "What Does It Mean to Have a Right to Research?" World Congress for Freedom of Scientific Research, Brussels, March 5-7.

2007 “Commodified Science, Political Theory, and Public Representation,” workshop on “The Commodification of Academic Research: Analyses, Assessments, Alternatives,” Faculty of Philosophy, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, June 21-23.

2007 “From Participation to Representation in the Politics of Technology,” Centre for Ethics and Technology, Delft University of Technology, June 18.

2006 “Democratic Politics and Scientific Representation,” workshop on "The Stuff of Politics: Technoscience, Democracy, and Public Life," University of Oxford, December 7-10.

2006 "The Co-Production of Scientific and Political Representation," workshop on "Rethinking Democratic Representation," Centre for the Study of Democratic Institutions, University of British Columbia, May 18-19.

2006 "The Politics of Representation on Federal Advisory Committees," Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes, Arizona State University, March 30.

2006 Workshop on "Quality Control & Assurance in Scientific Advice to Policy," Interdisciplinary Research Group on Scientific Advice to Policy in Democracy, Berlin Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Berlin, January 12- 14.

2005 Dartmouth College Ethics Institute, Summer Fellowship, “Teaching the Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications of the Human Genome Project,” Howard University, June 12-17.

CONFERENCE PAPERS AND COMMENTARY (selected)

2017. “The Paradox of White Identity Politics,” conference on “Political Participation beyond the Post-democratic Turn,” Institute for Social Change and Sustainability (IGN), Vienna University for Economics and Business, September 27-29.

2016. “Whiteness in the Neoliberal University,” Association for Political Theory, Mark B. Brown 10

Columbus, Ohio, October 20-22.

2016 Commentator at conference on “Making Science Public: Opening Up Closed Spaces,” University of Nottingham, June 22.

2015 Discussant for panel on “The Legitimacy of Public Engagement,” Society for Social Studies of Science, Denver, Colorado, November 11-15.

2015 Discussant for panel on “New Books in Environmental Political Theory,” Western Political Science Association, Las Vegas, April 2-4.

2014 “What Are Boundary Organizations and Why Are They Important?” Ecological Society of America annual meting, Sacramento, August 13.

2014 “Democratic Agency, Posthumanism, and Getting Things Done,” Western Political Science Association, Seattle, Washington, April 17-19.

2013 “Political Advocacy and Discussion in the Classroom,” California State University Annual Teaching Symposium, California Maritime Academy, February 22-23.

2013 "Science Advice and Democratic Realism," American Association for the Advancement of Science, Boston, February 14-18.

2012 "Climate Change Denial and Counter-Democracy," International Conference on Culture, Politics, and Climate Change, University of Colorado, Boulder, Sept 13- 15.

2011 “John Dewey, Science Policy, and the Limits of Epistemic Democracy,” Three Rivers Philosophy Conference: Science, Knowledge and Democracy, University of South Carolina, Columbia, April 1-3.

2010 "What Geoengineering Could Do to (and for) Democracy," Western Political Science Association, San Francisco, April 1-3.

2009 "How Science Becomes Political," conference on "Science and Values: The Politicisation of Science," sponsored by the European Science Foundation (ESF) and Center for Interdisciplinary Research (ZiF), Bielefeld University, May 25-30.

2008 "When Is Science Political?" Society for Social Studies of Science, and European Association for the Study of Science and Technology, Rotterdam, August 20-23.

2008 "Norms and Practices of Representation on the US President’s Council on Bioethics," International Conference in Interpretive Policy Analysis, University of Essex, June 19-21.

2007 “Three Ways to Politicize Bioethics,” Science and Democracy Network annual Mark B. Brown 11

meeting, University of Cambridge, June 27-29.

2006 “Scientific and Political Representation: Symmetries and Asymmetries,” Society for Social Studies of Science, Vancouver, November 2-5.

2006 "Politics and Legitimacy on Federal Bioethics Commissions," conference on "Bioethics & Politics: The Future of Bioethics in a Divided Democracy," Alden March Bioethics Institute, Albany, New York, July 13-14.

2004 “Democratizing Expertise,” Society for Social Studies of Science, Paris, Aug. 25- 28

2003 “Representation, Participation, and the German Parliament: A Comparison of Three Advisory Institutions,” with Peter Weingart and Justus Lentsch, conference on "Scientific Expertise and Political Decision-Making," Basel University, December.

2002 “Ethics, Politics, and Agenda-Setting for Scientific Research," Research Symposium with the Next Generation of Leaders in Science & Technology Policy, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Washington, DC, November 22-23.

2002 Participant: "Living with the Genie: Governing the Scientific and Technological Transformation of Society in the 21st Century," Center for Science, Policy, and Outcomes, Columbia University, New York, March.

MEDIA INTERVIEWS (selected)

2014 Interviewed for cover story by Melinda Walsh, “MOOCs: High-tech hype, or the future of education?” Sacramento News & Review, March 6.

2013 Interviewed for television program “Toekomst van de Wetenschap” (Future of Science), Labyrint, VPRO, The Netherlands, broadcast on December 22.

2012 Interviewed on radio program "Scholar's Circle" (KPFK, Southern California) on science and politics with host Maria Armoudian, and guests David Guston and Naomi Oreskes, broadcast on May 13.

2011 Interviewed on one-hour call-in radio show Think (KERA, Dallas, Texas) on "Climate Change, Science, and Democracy," broadcast on Sept. 21.

2006 Interviewed on KCRA News (Sacramento) for television report on new reproductive technology, broadcast on May 18.

TEACHING EXPERIENCE Mark B. Brown 12

Sacramento State Undergraduate Courses Democratic Theory (Fall 2003, F04, F08, F09, F10, F11, S13, S14, S15, F15) Modern Political Theory (Fall 2004, S07, F10, F11, F12, F13, F14, F16, S17, F17) Contemporary Political Theory (Fall 2007, S08, S10, S11, S13, S14, S15, F15, F16) American Political Thought (Spring 2004, S08, F10, F12, F12, F15) Science, Technology, and Politics (Spring 2005, S06, F09, S11, F11, F12, F14, F16) Marxism, Socialism, Communism (Spring 2017) Environmental Political Thought (Fall 2013) Science and Religion (Spring 2006) American Government (Sprig 2004, F04, S05, F09, S10)

Sacramento State M.A. Courses History of Political Thought (Fall 2006) Contemporary Political Theory (Spring 2004, F16) Democratic Theory (Spring 2013, S14, F15)

Bielefeld University, Germany Knowledge and Decision Making, with Prof. Dr. Peter Weingart (Spring 2003) Science, Values, and Democracy, with Dr. Cornelis Menke (Spring 2009)

University of San Francisco Introduction to Philosophy (Spring 2001)

Golden Gate University, San Francisco Political Ideas in World Civilization (Fall 2000) Contemporary Political Ideologies (Fall 1999)

University of California, Davis Mass Media and Politics (Winter 2000) American Presidency (Winter 2000) Politics and Inequality (Spring 2000) Elections and Voting Behavior (Fall 2000)

Rutgers University Teaching Assistant: Politics, Literature, and the Arts (Fall 1995) Teaching Assistant: Introduction to Political Theory (Fall 1994) Citizenship and the Environment (Spring 1994)

THESIS ADVISING

M.A. thesis advisor: Kevin Scott Erbe, “The Capitalist System and Representative Democracy: Capital, Legislative Influence, and Political Equality.” California State University, Sacramento, 2015.

M.A. thesis advisor: James D. Stassi, “Authentic Political Action: The Unlikely Theoretical Convergence of Hannah Arendt and John Dewey.” California State Mark B. Brown 13

University, Sacramento, 2014

Ph.D. thesis committee member: Jennifer E. Dyck Brian, “Assessing Corporate Bioethics: A Qualitative Exploration of How Bioethics is Enacted in Biomedical Companies." Arizona State University, 2012.

M.A. thesis advisor: Michael D. Valle, "Justice in Intellectual Property: The Narrative of Knowledge as a Commons." California State University, Sacramento, 2011.

UNIVERSITY AND COMMUNITY SERVICE

Member and co-chair of task force to establish a new campus center on race, immigration, and social justice, College of Social Sciences and Interdisciplinary Studies, CSUS, 2016-17.

Invited talk for “The Neighbors Breakfast,” Neighborhood Services Division, City of Sacramento, October 25, 2014.

Participant in Faculty Learning Community, monthly seminar, “Integrated Learning Across Disciplines: Academic Learning Communities and Collaboratives,” Center for Teaching and Learning, CSUS, September 2013-May 2014.

Invited talk for Arsalyn Youth Forums annual conference, Sacramento, CA, June 24, 2014.

Instructor for three-session course, “The Politics of Climate Change,” Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, UC Davis Extension, April 4-18, 2013.

Chair, Faculty Council, College of Social Sciences and Interdisciplinary Studies, CSUS, 2013-15. Faculty Council Member, 2011-13.

Research and Creative Activities Committee, CSUS, 2005-08.

Proposal Review Panel, Research and Creative Activity Award Program, CSUS, 2003- 08.

OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

Editorial board member, Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy.

Executive Council, Western Political Science Association, 2017 to present.

Nominating Committee, Western Political Science Association, 2012-14.

Grant proposal reviews: National Science Foundation, Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), Welcome Trust Mark B. Brown 14

Manuscript reviews for book publishers: Cambridge University Press, Columbia University Press, Cornell University Press, CQ Press, Oxford University Press, Routledge

Manuscript reviews for journals: American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, Constellations, Contemporary Political Theory, Critical Policy Studies, Journal of Philosophy, Science and Law, Journal of Politics, Journal of Responsible Innovation, Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, Nature and Culture, Perspectives on Politics, Perspectives on Science, Philosophy of Science, Political Research Quarterly, Political Studies, Politics and the Life Sciences, PS: Political Science and Politics, Policy Sciences, Public Understanding of Science, Scandinavian Political Studies, Science and Engineering Ethics, Science and Public Policy, Science Communication, Science, Technology and Human Values, Social Studies of Science, Social Epistemology, Theory and Society

MEMBERSHIPS

American Political Science Association Western Political Science Association Society for Social Studies of Science European Association for the Study of Science and Technology California Faculty Association American Association of University Professors

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