The Virtues of Sustainability
Jason Kawall
Author Information
Jason Kawall, Carl Benton Straub '58 Endowed Chair in Culture and the Environment and Professor of Philosophy and Environmental Studies, Colgate University
Jason Kawall is the Carl Benton Straub '58 Endowed Chair in Culture and the Environment, and Professor of Philosophy and Environmental Studies at Colgate University. His research focuses on virtue ethics and epistemology, with a particular emphasis on their application to environmental and sustainability issues. He has published extensively in these and related areas, with his work appearing in such journals as American Philosophical Quarterly, Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Environmental Ethics, Ethics, Policy & Environment, and Philosophical Studies, and in several edited collections.
Contributors:
Susan Clayton is Whitmore-Williams Professor of Psychology at the College of Wooster in Ohio.
Victor Corral-Verdugo is Professor of Psychology at the University of Sonora, Mexico.
Christine J. Cuomo is Professor of Philosophy and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Georgia.
Matt Ferkany is Associate Professor in the department of Philosophy and affiliated faculty of the Environmental Science and Policy Program at Michigan State University.
Martha Frías-Armenta is Professor of Psychology and Law at The University of Sonora and a member of Mexico's National Researcher System.
Cheryl Hall is Associate Professor in the School of Interdisciplinary Global Studies at the University of South Florida.
Laura M. Hartman is Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies at Roanoke College.
Pankaj Jain is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at the University of North Texas, where he teaches courses on religions, cultures, ecologies, and films of India and Asia.
Jason Kawall is Professor of Philosophy and Environmental Studies at Colgate University.
Anais Ortiz-Valdez recently obtained a Ph.D. in Social Sciences at the University of Sonora, Mexico.
Steve Vanderheiden is Associate Professor of Political Science and Environmental Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder, where he is also a faculty member in the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research (CSTPR).
Sarah Wright is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Georgia.