Heidi Morrison is an assistant professor of history at the University of Wisconsin, La Crosse, specializing in the modern Middle East. She is the author of Childhood and Colonial Modernity in Egypt (Palgrave, 2015) and editor of The Global History of Childhood Reader (Routledge, 2012). Her current work focuses on children and urban warfare in Palestine. E-mail: hmorrison@uwlax.edu
James S. Finley is an assistant professor of English at New Mexico State University. His scholarship focuses on ecology and antislavery in the antebellum United States. E-mail: jsfinley@nmsu.edu
Daniel Owen Spence is a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of the Free State, and author of Colonial Naval Culture and British Imperialism, 1922–67 (Manchester University Press, 2015). E-mail: spencedo@ufs.ac.za
Aaron Hatley received his PhD in the History of American Civilization from Harvard University in 2015. E-mail: aaron.hatley@gmail.com
Rachael Squire is a PhD student in the Geography Department at Royal Holloway University of London. Her research focuses on the geopolitics of undersea space. E-mail: rachael.Squire.2009@live.rhul.ac.uk
Michael Ra-shon Hall is an assistant professor of English at Virginia Commonwealth University. His recent publications have appeared in Postcolonial Studies, the South Carolina Review, and the edited volume Travel and Imagination. E-mail: mrhall@vcu.edu
Stéphanie Vincent-Geslin holds a PhD in sociology from the Université Paris Descartes–Sorbonne and specializes in mobility and urban issues. After working for fi ve years as a scientific collaborator at the Laboratory of Urban Sociology (LaSUR) at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, she is currently a researcher at the Transport Economics Laboratory at ENTPE in Lyon, France, and remains associate researcher at LaSUR. Vincent-Geslin’s research deals with mobility practices, multimodal transportation, job-related mobility, and youth mobility patterns. Email: stephanie.vincent@entpe.fr
Sibo Chen is a PhD candidate in the School of Communication, Simon Fraser University. His major research interests include critical discourse analysis, environmental communication, and environmental justice. E-mail: siboc@sfu.ca
Tawny Andersen is a PhD candidate in the Department of Art History and Communication Studies at McGill University. Her dissertation research stages the works of a group of contemporary, female philosophers as modes of performative, critical praxis. She is also a contemporary dancer, and has toured the world in the productions of many of Europe’s foremost directors. E-mail: tawnyandersen@hotmail.com
Stéphanie Ponsavady is an assistant professor of French studies at Wesleyan University. E-mail: sponsavady@wesleyan.edu