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DANIEL J. KLOOSTER Environmental Studies, University of Redlands, 1200 East Colton Ave Redlands, CA 92373 Home: 909-793-5640 Office: 909-748-8642. Daniel_Klooster@Redlands.edu. EDUCATION PhD. November 1997. University of California Los Angeles, Department of Geography. MA. June 1992. University of California Los Angeles. Latin American Studies. MA. June 1992. University of California Los Angeles. Urban Planning. BA. May 1987. Macalester College, St. Paul MN. Concentrations in geology, Spanish, journalism. FACULTY POSITIONS HELD University of Redlands. 2008 to present Florida State University. 2000 to 2008 TEACHING AWARDS 2010-2011 Virginia Hunsaker Innovative Teaching Award, University of Redlands 2005 Graduate Faculty Member of the Year, Department of Geography, Florida State University 2004-2005 University Teaching Award, Florida State University CURRENT RESEARCH PROPOSALS Trans-border Indigenous Environmental Governance: Assessing the connections of Mexican indigenous peoples in the US to their communities of origin. National Science Foundation, Collaborative Research and Geography and Spatial Sciences program. BCS-1127534. http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showaward.do?awardnumber=1127534 EDITORIAL POSITIONS Contributing Editor. Geography: Mexico section of the Handbook of Latin American Studies. Library of Congress and University of Texas Press. 2010 to present. Publications Committee. Journal of Latin American Geography. Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers. 2008 to 2012. Special Issue Editor. Quality certification as rural governance: What is at stake? Journal of Rural Studies. With Tad Mutersbaugh, Marie-Christine Renard, Pete Taylor. 2004-2005. PUBLICATIONS Peer reviewed journal articles and book chapters Klooster and Alejandro Mercado Celis. (Under revision). Sustainable Production Networks: Capturing value for labor and nature. Requested for re-submission to Regional Studies. Klooster. (2013). Migration, trans-border communities, and commons management among indigenous communities in Mexico. Journal of Latin American Geography 12 (1): 57- Page 1 of 6. Daniel_klooster@redlands.edu

86. (Included in a special issue on commons management in Latin America). Klooster. (2012). Geography: Mexico. Handbook of Latin American Studies. Social Sciences. Vol 67. Tracy North, editor. University of Texas Press. Claudio Garibay, Andrew Boni, Francesco Panico, Pedro Urquijo, and Dan Klooster. (2011). Unequal Partners, Unequal Exchange: Goldcorp, the Mexican State, and Campesino dispossession at the Peñasquito goldmine. Journal of Latin American Geography 10 (2): 153-176. Klooster. (2011). Relatoría Final: Geografias Socioambientales. In Geografía, Ambiente, y Geografía Ambiental en América Latina, a book based on the International Colloquium: Geography and Environment in Latin America, Center for Research in Environmental Geography, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Morelia campus. http://www.ciga.unam.mx/ciga/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=67&itemid=392 Klooster. (2011). The local instrumentality of global standards: How Mexican indigenous communities use FSC certification to foster a furniture production network, in S Ponte, P Gibbon and J Vestergaard editors. Pp. 395-430 in Governing through standards: Origins, drivers and limitations. London and New York: Palgrave. http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=495948 Mutersbaugh, Tad, and Klooster. (2010) Environmental Certification: standardization for diversity, Chapter 10 in Agriculture, Biodiversity and Markets. Stewart Lockie and David Carpenter, editors. Earthscan. pp. 155-174. Klooster. (2010). Standardizing Sustainable Development? The Forest Stewardship Council s plantation policy review process. Geoforum 41(1):117-129. Klooster. (2006). Environmental Certification of Forests in Mexico: The political ecology of a nongovernmental market intervention. Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 96 (3): 541-565. Barkin, D. and D. Klooster (2006). Estrategias de la Gestion del Agua Urbana. La Gestion del Agua Urbana en Mexico: Retos, Debates y Bienestar. D. Barkin. Guadalajara, Universidad de Guadalajara. Available in English as: Barkin, D. and D. Klooster (2006). Water Management Strategies in Urban Mexico: Limitations of the privatization debate. MPRA Paper No. 15423, posted 26. May 2009 / 21:32 http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/15423/1/mpra_paper_15423.pdf Klooster. (2006). Forest Struggles and Forest Policy: Villagers environmental activism in Mexico. In Shades of Green, Christof Mauch, Nathan Stoltzfus, and Doug Weiner, editors. Rowman and Littlefield. Pp 183-196. Klooster. (2006) Global Markets and Certification: Key issues, recommendations, and questions. In Managing the Commons: Global markets and certification, edited by L. Merino and J. Robson. Mexico City: Instituto de Ecologia. ISBN: 968-817-736-9. http://www.ine.gob.mx/publicaciones/consultapublicacion.html?id_pub=473 in Spanish at http://www.ine.gob.mx/publicaciones/consultapublicacion.html?id_pub=484 Klooster and Shrinidhi Ambinakudige. (2005). The Global Significance of Community Forestry in Mexico. Chapter 13 in The Community-Managed Forests of Mexico: The Struggle for Page 2 of 6. Daniel_klooster@redlands.edu

Equity and Sustainability. Edited by David Barton Bray, Leticia Merino-Pérez, and Deborah Barry. University of Texas Press. In Spanish at http://www.ine.gob.mx/publicaciones/consultapublicacion.html?id_pub=532 Klooster. (2005). Environmental Certification of Forests: The evolution of environmental governance in a commodity network. Journal of Rural Studies. 21 (2005): 403-417. Klooster. (2005) Producing Social Nature in the Mexican Countryside. Cultural Geographies (formerly Ecumene) 12: 321-344. Klooster. (2003). Regional Forest Transitions in Highland Mexico? The importance of local institutions in a globalized countryside. Professional Geographer. 55(2): 227-327. Klooster. (2003). Campesinos and Mexican Forest Policy During the 20 th Century. Latin American Research Review. 38(2): 94-126. Klooster. (2002). Towards Adaptive Community Forest Management: Integrating local forest knowledge with scientific forestry. Economic Geography. 78(1):43-70. Klooster. (2001). Forest Conservation and Degradation in a Sub-Subsistence Agricultural System: Community and forestry in Mexico. Pp. 53-67 in Interactions Between Agroecosystems and Rural Communities, C.B. Flora (ed.) New York: CRC Press. Klooster and Omar Masera. (2000). Community Forest Management in Mexico: Carbon mitigation and biodiversity conservation through rural development. Global Environmental Change 10(4):259-272. Klooster. (2000). Beyond Deforestation: The Social Context of Forest Change in Two Indigenous Communities in Highland Mexico. Yearbook, Conference of Latin Americanist Geographers (Journal of Latin American Geography) 26:47-59. Klooster. (2000). Community Forestry and Tree Theft in Mexico. Resistance, or Complicity in Conservation? Development and Change 31: 281-306. Klooster. (2000). Institutional Choice, Community, and Struggle: A case study of forest comanagement in Mexico. World Development 28(1): 1-20. Klooster. (1999). Community-Based Forestry in Mexico: Can it reverse processes of degradation? Land Degradation and Development. 10(4): 363-379. Klooster. (1996). Como No Conservar el Bosque: La Marginalización del Campesino en la Historia Forestal Mexicana. (How Not to Conserve the Forest: The marginalization of peasants in the history of Mexican forest policy). Cuadernos Agrarios. 14:144-156. PAST RESEARCH PROPOSALS Landscapes of Mexican Migration. LENS (LEarNing Spatially) Fellowship to work on curricular ideas around the theme of Mapping Migrations. 2011. With support from the W.M. Keck Foundation, LENS promotes spatial literacy as a foundational component in curriculum and research. Constructing Competitive Advantage in North American Furniture Districts: Using design, environmental quality, and regional distinctiveness to maintain space in a global economy. Submitted by the Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana Cuajimalpa to the North American Research Linkages Program of the Canadian Embassy, April 30, 2008, Page 3 of 6. Daniel_klooster@redlands.edu

for $11,941 Canadian. With Dr. Alejandro Mercado Celis, UAM-Cuajimalpa and Dr. Deborah Leslie, University of Toronto. Certified Markets for Conservation and Development: The Equity and Evolution of Forest Certification in Mexico. Fulbright-Garcia Robles (CIES) Fellowship. Funded for approximately $30,000. August 2007 to June 2008. Water Management Strategies in Urban Mexico: A comparison of concession, NGO, and grassroots approaches to improve human and ecosystem health. (Funded for $70,000 by the University of South Florida Globalization Research Center. June 1, 2004 to May 31, 2005.) With David Barkin at the Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Xochimilco. Fulbright-Hayes-Garcia Robles Scholar and Inter-American Fellow. Oaxaca, Mexico. Dissertation research on community forestry. 1995. IIE Fulbright Scholar. Studied the social and geomorphologic context of squatter settlements in landslide zones, Colombia, South America. 1987 to 1988. INVITED TALKS Klooster and Adrian Poloni (student). Migracion y la Gestion Comunitaria del Territorio y sus Recursos Naturales. Coloquium. CIIDIR Oaxaca, Instituto Politécnico Nacional y Florida International University. Oaxaca, Mexico. March 1, 2013. Klooster. Las Comunidades, Trans-fronterizas en la Gestión del Territorio y sus Recursos. Center for Research in Environmental Geography, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Morelia campus. November 20, 2012 Klooster and Alejandro Mercado Celis. Hacia una red de producción sostenible en Oaxaca. Simposio Internacional: Integrando Conocimientos para el Uso y Conservacion de los Bosques Comunitarios de la Sierra Norte de Oaxaca, México. 29 y 30 de abril, 2011. CIIDIR Oaxaca, Instituto Politécnico Nacional y Florida International University. Oaxaca, Mexico. Klooster. FSC Forest Certification: Hopeful Contradictions in the Promotion of Sustainability. University College London, Department of Geography. October 29, 2010. Klooster. Driven to Drive Markets: The Contradictions of Forest Certification in the Promotion of Sustainability. Oxford Martin School, The Old Indian Institute, University of Oxford. October 28, 2010. http://www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/videos/view/67 Klooster. Relatoría Final: Geografías Socioambientales. Invited summary presentation of the International Colloquium: Geography and Environment in Latin America, Center for Research in Environmental Geography, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Morelia campus. August 18-20, 2010. Klooster. Forest Certification as Value Chain Governance: Certified Furniture Production Networks in Mexico. Presented by invitation at the conference Governing Through Standards, Danish Institute for International Studies, February 24-27, 2010. Copenhagen, Denmark. Klooster and Alejandro Mercado. Redes de Valor en la Produccion de Muebles de Madera: Los casos de Oaxacay y Tlaquepaque-Tonala. Invited presentation at the Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Cuajimalpa. Mexico City, June 2009. Page 4 of 6. Daniel_klooster@redlands.edu

Klooster. Making a Market for Community Forestry: Linking Sustainability and Design in a Value Chain. Colloquium presentation, Department of Geography, University of Toronto. November, 2008. Klooster. La Certificación Forestal como Instrumento de Desarrollo Sostenible, (Forest Certification as an Instrument of Sustainable Development.) The University of the Northern Sierra, Ixtlan, Oaxaca. January 17, 2008. Klooster. Forest Certification in Mexico: Searching for Space in a Globalized Market. Small and medium forest enterprise development for poverty reduction: Opportunities and challenges in globalizing markets. CATIE, Turrialba, Costa Rica. May 23-25, 2006 SELECTED CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS Klooster and Adrian Poloni. Migration, trans-border communities, and commons management among indigenous communities in Mexico. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG), Los Angeles, April 11, 2013. Robson, Jim and Klooster. The Re-Spatialized Geography of Commons Theory: How migration reconfigures Institutional Choice in the territorial commons of Mexico. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the AAG, Los Angeles, April 11, 2013. Klooster and Alejandro Mercado. (2012). Elementos de una Estrategia de Producción Sostenible de Muebles de Madera en Oaxaca. Memoria del Simposio Internacional: Integrando Conocimientos para el Uso y Conservacion de los Bosques Comunitarios de la Sierra Norte de Oaxaca, México. 29 y 30 de abril, 2011. CIIDIR Oaxaca, Instituto Politécnico Nacional y Florida International University. Oaxaca, Mexico. Klooster. Building a Network to Achieve Rural Environmental Governance: Environmentally- Certified, Community-Made Furniture in Oaxaca. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Seattle, April 12-14, 2011. Klooster. The Role of Forest Certification in Cooperative Sustainable Development Strategies Among Forest Enterprises in Oaxaca. Presented at the University of California Riverside Latin American Studies Program conference, Crises and Opportunities in Latin America April 23-24, 2010. University of California, Riverside. Klooster. Los Carpinteros Integrados: Hacia un desarrollo mas sustentable? Congreso de Geografos Latinoamericanistas. Bogota, Colombia. 27 Mayo, 2010. Klooster. Forest Certification in the Construction of Sustainable Markets Society for Applied Anthropology. Merida, Yucatan, Mexico March 25, 2010. Klooster and Alejandro Mercado. Redes de Valor en la Produccion de Muebles de Madera: Los casos de Oaxacay y Tlaquepaque-Tonala. Conference presentation at the Welte Institute for Oaxaca Studies, Oaxaca ` of India: An Extended Environmental Entitlement Analysis. Assistant Professor at Mississippi State University. OTHER PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Expert Workshop on the Construction of a Monitoring and Evaluation System for Hydrological Environmental Services in the Copalita-Zimatan-Huatulco, Oaxaca Autonomous National University of Mexico, Mexico City. Grupo Autónomo para la Investigación Page 5 of 6. Daniel_klooster@redlands.edu

Ambiental, A.C. (GAIA), Gerencia de Servicios Ambientales del Bosque de la Comisión Nacional Forestal (CONAFOR).. November 29 and 30, 2010. Capacity Building Needs Assessment Workshop for REDD+ Strategies in Mexico. Mexico City. Centro de Diálogo y Análisis sobre América del Norte (CEDAN), Comisión Nacional Forestal (CONAFOR), Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), and World Wildlife Fund (WWF). 2010. Fulbright-Garcia Robles Scholar for sabbatical study in Oaxaca, Mexico. August 2007 to June 2008. Certified Markets for Conservation and Development: Forest Certification in Mexico. CIPEC Summer Institute. 1998. Center for the Study of Institutions, Population, and Environmental Change, Indiana University. (Intensive training in remote sensing, GIS, and institutional analysis of the human dimensions of global change.) 1998. Forest Certification Peer Reviewer and Evaluator, CCMSS (Mexican Civil Council for Sustainable Silviculture) and SmartWood Program. 1995 to 2003. Fulbright-Hayes Scholar and Inter-American Fellow. Oaxaca, Mexico. Dissertation research on community forestry. 1995. IIE Fulbright Scholar. Studied the social and geomorphologic context of squatter settlements in landslide zones, Colombia, South America. 1987 to 1988. COURSES DELIVERED IN MEXICO Basic Concepts: Common property, collective action, and the role of advisors. Presented as part of the certifícate course on Evaluation and Use of Forest Resources for Sustainable Development in Rural Communities. Chilpancingo, Guerrero, November 15, 2008. Delivered in Spanish. Three sessions of the Certificate Course in The Use and Sustainable Management of Community Forests in Mexico, CIIDIR-Oaxaca, Instituto Politecnico Nacional de Mexico. October 2007 April 2008. Basic Concepts: Common Property, Collective Action, and the Role of Community Extension Agents. The Global Context of Community Forestry. Forest Certification. Delivered in Spanish. COURSES TAUGHT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF REDLANDS Sustainable Rural Development and Migration in Oaxaca EVST 340. (May Term Travel Course). Markets for Conservation EVST 360. Food and Nature EVST 242. Immigration Policy GOVT 364. Introduction to Environmental Studies EVST 100. Environment and Development EVST 335. Food, Nature, Power JNST seminar. Serving Latino Communities LAST 360. (May Term. Service learning on day labor corners). Environment and Development in Latin America LAST 335. Introduction to Latin America LAST 101. US Immigration Policy and Latino Communities LAST 360 (May Term Field Course). Culture, Nature, Power in Latin America. LAST 110. (Writing Across the Curriculum). Page 6 of 6. Daniel_klooster@redlands.edu