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Shangrila Joshi is a permanent member of the faculty in the Master of Environmental Studies program at The Evergreen State College. Her scholarship examines the human dimensions of global climate change, with a focus on environmental and climate justice, and institutions of commons governance. Her academic preparation is in the fields of Environmental Studies, Geography, and International Affairs. Her research has examined global climate policy and politics, within a multi-scalar political ecology theoretical framework. She is interested in continuing these investigations through the lens of Newa Indigeneity. Her first book 'Climate Change Justice and Global Resource Commons' examined climate policy and politics centered on the Kyoto Protocol and market-based climate solutions, drawing on field work in Delhi, Copenhagen, and the Nepali Terai. She has contributed book chapters to 'Climate, Science, and Society: A Primer', 'Handbook of Global Environmental Politics', and 'Handbook of Political Ecology'. Her current book project examines the Newa Guthi and its role in sustaining ancient traditions such as the Macchindranath Jatra in the Kathmandu Valley, in order to understand the ways in which Indigenous ways of being, knowing, and governing are connected, and to understand their significance for socio-ecological resilience. Shangrila earned her Ph.D. in Environmental Sciences, Studies, and Policy from the University of Oregon; an MA in International Affairs from Ohio University; and a BSc in Environmental Sciences from St. Xavier’s College, Kathmandu University. Shangrila is a Newa from Patan, Nepal, and spent her formative years there, as well as in Dhaka, Bangladesh, and Kabul, Afghanistan.
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