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SEHN operates as an organization without walls. Thanks to telecommunications, SEHN's small staff works from
locations across North America.
Carolyn Raffensperger, M.A., J.D.
Carolyn is executive director of the Science and Environmental Health
Network. In 1982 she left a career as an archaeologist in the desert Southwest to
join the environmental movement. She first worked for the Sierra Club where she
addressed an array of environmental issues, including forest management, river
protection, pesticide pollutants, and disposal of radioactive waste. She began
working for SEHN in December 1994. As an environmental lawyer she specializes
in the fundamental changes in law and policy necessary for the protection and
restoration of public health and the environment.
Carolyn is co-editor of Precautionary Tools for Reshaping Environmental Policy
published by M.I.T. Press (2006) and Protecting Public Health and the
Environment: Implementing the Precautionary Principle, published by Island Press
(1999). Together, these volumes are the most comprehensive exploration to date of
the history, theory, and implementation of the precautionary principle.
Carolyn coined the term "ecological medicine" to encompass the broad notions that
both health and healing are entwined with the natural world. She has served on
editorial review boards for several environmental and sustainable agriculture
journals, and on USEPA and National Research Council committees. She wrote a
bimonthly column for the Environmental Law Institute's journal Environmental
Forum from 1999 until 2008.
Carolyn has been featured in Gourmet magazine, the Utne Reader, Yes!
Magazine, the Sun, Whole Earth, and Scientific American. Along with leading workshops
and giving frequent lectures on the Precautionary Principle, Carolyn is at the
forefront of developing new models for government that depend on these larger
ideas of precaution and ecological integrity. The new models include
guardianship for future generations, a vision for the courts of the 21st century and
the public trust doctrine.
carolyn@sehn.org
Ted Schettler, M.D., M.P.H.
Ted, SEHN's Science Director, received his MD from Case-Western Reserve University and a masters degree in public health from the Harvard School of Public Health. He practiced medicine for many years in New England.
Ted has worked extensively with community groups and non-governmental organizations throughout the US and internationally, addressing many aspects of human health and the environment. He has served on advisory committees of the US EPA and National Academy of Sciences and continues to work closely with Greater Boston Physicians for Social Responsibility.
Ted is co-author of Generations at Risk: Reproductive Health and the Environment, which examines reproductive and developmental health effects of exposure to a variety of environmental toxicants. He is also co-author of In Harm's Way: Toxic Threats to Child Development, which discusses the impact of environmental exposures on neurological development in children. Ted has published numerous articles in the medical literature, and is frequently quoted in the popular press.
Among many others, Ted's current projects include heading the science work group for the Collaborative on Health and Environment (CHE) and active participation in the Health Care Without Harm coalition, contributing to its international campaign to improve the environmental performance of hospitals and other healthcare institutions. Ted works with colleagues from other organizations and maintains an intensive public speaking schedule, giving frequent talks on environmental health, ecological health, and the precautionary principle.
He lives in Ann Arbor, MI.
ted@sehn.org
Nancy Myers, M.A.
Nancy is SEHN's Communications Director. She is lead author and editor of SEHN's how-to book on the precautionary principle, Precautionary Tools for Reshaping Environmental Policy (MIT Press 2006). She has been making the precautionary principle a useful tool for activists and policy makers since the 1998 Wingspread Conference. She writes the Network's reports and proposals and co-edits SEHN's electronic newsletter, The Networker, with Carolyn Raffensperger.
As a former managing editor of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the "Doomsday Clock" magazine, Nancy developed some of the first international-security writing fellowships for journalists from the former Soviet Union. She was executive director of the Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science from 1993 to 1997 and co-edited, with George Lopez, Peace and Security: The Next Generation (Rowman & Littlefield, 1997). Nancy has a Master of Arts in Teaching from Northwestern University and has taught English to high school students in Japan, Zaire-Congo, and Chicago. She has both witnessed and participated in the growth of international civil society in recent decades. A "downshifter," Nancy works part time so she can commune with trees and watch wildflowers bloom in her patch of woods in southwest Michigan.
nancy@sehn.org
Katie Silberman, J.D.
Katie joined SEHN as Associate Director in July 2005. Prior to working with SEHN, Katie spent five years with the
non-profit Center for Environmental Health in Oakland, CA, where she was Associate Director and Policy Director. During
that time, she was a co-founder of the Bay Area Working Group on the Precautionary Principle, which worked collaboratively
with San Francisco city government to pass the nation's first precautionary principle ordinance, in 2003.
The first Ralph S. Abascal Fellow at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law, Katie has focused on reducing
communities’ exposure to environmental harm through policy change, advocacy and activism. She received her BA from
Brown University and her law degree from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law. She is a member of the
California Bar, and worked previously with such organizations as Breast Cancer Action, Communities for a Better Environment
and the Center on Race, Poverty and the Environment. Her work has been published in The New York Times, Time
magazine, Forbes, the Oakland Tribune, the San Francisco Chronicle and other media outlets. She was also featured in
two hour-long radio broadcasts covering the precautionary principle on KQED's "Forum", the National Public Radio affiliate in
San Francisco.
Katie currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Center for Environmental Health.
She lives in St. Louis, MO with her husband and their son.
katie@sehn.org
Sherri Seidmon, B.S.
Sherri joined the SEHN Staff in January 2005 as Finance Director. Sherri has a Bachelor of Science Degree from the
University of Illinois. Her background includes working in banking for many years as well as co-owning a family restaurant.
Sherri is working part-time assisting the Associate Director with SEHN’s bookkeeping and budgets, donor database, and
development research. She lives in Eugene Oregon with her husband and two teenage sons.
sherri@sehn.org
Joseph H. Guth, J.D., Ph.D
Joe joined SEHN as Legal Director in March, 2006. He is a member of the New York State Bar, has a law degree from New York University, a Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of Madison, Wisconsin, and an undergraduate degree in biochemistry from the University of California, Berkeley. Joe has worked for the Natural Resources Defense Council in New York City, doing both litigation of Clean Water Act citizen's suits and toxic chemicals regulatory policy advocacy. Joe was Executive Director of the California League for Environmental Enforcement Now, a coalition of environmental groups and law firms in Oakland, California, and he was Senior Policy Analyst for the Center for Environmental Health in Oakland, California, working on chemicals policy reform. Joe has worked as a litigator in private law firms in New York in the areas of environmental torts, intellectual property and products liability, and as a Vice-president of intellectual property for Chiron Corporation, a biotechnology company in California. Joe is also a past member of EPA's National Pollution Prevention and Toxics Advisory Committee (NPPTAC), which advises EPA on its implementation of U.S. laws governing toxic chemicals.
Joe's principal legal work at SEHN is the transformation of the law so that it will promote preservation of the earth rather than accept environmental destruction as a byproduct of economic growth. Key areas that Joe's work draws from include the public trust doctrine, law of the commons, ecological economics, precautionary principle theory and the fundamental structure of cost-benefit analysis. Joe also works to achieve comprehensive reform of chemicals policy in California and in the United States, work that involves intensive study of the REACH legislation in the European Union.
Joe lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife and two daughters.
joe@sehn.org
Board of Directors, 2007
Martha Dina Arguello
Executive Director, Health and Environment Programs, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Los Angeles, CA
Steve Lester
Science Director, Center for Health, Environment, and Justice, Falls
Church, VA
Peter Montague, President
Executive Director, Environmental Research Foundation, and Editor, Rachel's Environment and Health News, New Brunswick, N.J.
Frank Peterman
Southeast Regional Director
The Wilderness Society
Atlanta, GA
Madeleine Kangsen Scammell
Ph.D. candidate and project manager, Community Environmental Health Research, Boston University School of Public Health, Dept. of Environmental Health, Boston, MA
Bhavna Shamasunder
Bhavna Shamasunder has worked on environmental health and justice
issues in the Bay Area for the past seven years as a scientist,
researcher, and advocate. She is currently pursuing her Ph.D. at the
Environmental Science, Policy, and Management Department at the
University of California, Berkeley.
Sandra Steingraber
Visiting Distinguished Scholar, Ithaca College, Interdisciplinary Studies, Ithaca, N.Y. Author of Living Downstream: A Scientist's Personal Investigation of Cancer and the Environment, and Having Faith: An Ecologist's Journey to Motherhood.
David Wallinga, Board Member Emeritus
Antibiotic Resistance Project Director, Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, Minneapolis, MN
Peter deFur, Board Member Emeritus
Associate Professor, Center for Environmental Studies, Virginia Commonwealth University, and President, Environmental Stewardship Concepts, Richmond, VA
Roxanne Turnage, Board Member Emeritus
Executive Director, C.S. Fund, Freestone, CA
Lois N. Epstein, P.E., Board Member Emeritus
Director, Alaska Transportation Priorities Project
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