Mike Shanahan (writer)

Mike Shanahan is a British biologist and writer whose work focuses on rainforests, climate change, biodiversity and related issues. He studied at the University of Leeds, where he received a BSc in biology, MSc in biodiversity and conservation and PhD in rainforest ecology.[1] Between 1997 and 1999, he undertook research in the rainforest of Lambir Hills National Park, in Sarawak, Borneo, and on an island volcano: Long Island, Papua New Guinea.[2][3] His research focused on figs (Ficus species) and the animals that eat them.[4]

From 2001-2004, Shanahan worked for the Environmental Justice Foundation on projects related to pesticide poisoning in Cambodia, bear farming in Vietnam and the social and environmental impacts of shrimp farming throughout the tropics.[5][6][7] From 2004-2007, he was news editor of SciDev.Net.[8] In 2005, he and colleagues won the 'Best Science Writing on the World Wide Web' prize in the Association of British Science Writers Awards, for their coverage of the Indian Ocean tsunami.[9] Shanahan has also written for Nature, The Economist, The Ecologist and Ensia.[10]

From 2006-2014, Shanahan was the International Institute for Environment and Development's press officer.[11] He published research and guidance on media coverage of climate change, biodiversity and pastoralism.[12][13][14] In 2007, Shanahan and colleagues at Internews' Earth Journalism Network and Panos London co-founded the Climate Change Media Partnership, which has enabled more than 170 journalists from developing countries to report on UN climate change negotiations.[15][16][17]

In September 2016, Unbound will publish Shanahan's book: Ladders to Heaven: How fig trees shaped our history, fed our imaginations and can enrich our future.[18] In November 2016, Chelsea Green Publishing will publish the book in North American with a new title: Gods, Wasps, and Stranglers: The Secret History and Redemptive Future of Fig Trees.[19] Shanahan illustrated Ladders to Heaven and Ross Piper's Extraordinary Animals.[20]

References

  1. University of Leeds. Faculty of Biological Sciences. Graduate Profile: Dr Mike Shanahan
  2. Shanahan, M. 2000. Ficus seed dispersal guilds: ecology, evolution and conservation implications. PhD Thesis. University of Leeds.
  3. Shanahan, M. et al. 2001. Colonization of an island volcano, Long Island, Papua New Guinea, and an emergent island, Motmot, in its caldera lake. V. Colonization by figs (Ficus spp.), their dispersers and pollinators. Journal of Biogeography 28: 1365–1377.
  4. Shanahan, M. et al. 2001. Fig-eating by vertebrate frugivores: a global review. Biological Reviews 76: 529–572.
  5. Death in Small Doses EJF. 2003. Death in Small Doses: Cambodia’s Pesticides Problems and Solutions. Environmental Justice Foundation, London, UK.
  6. EJF. 2004. Vietnamese pop star My Linh urges people not to consume bear parts or bile, raising awareness for the campaign to end the bear trade.
  7. EJF. 2003. Smash & Grab: Conflict, Corruption and Human Rights Abuses in the Shrimp Farming Industry. Environmental Justice Foundation, London, UK.
  8. LinkedIn - Mike Shanahan
  9. ABSW Science Writers' Awards for Britain and Ireland. Previous winners - 2005.
  10. Amazon.com author page: Mike Shanahan
  11. LinkedIn - Mike Shanahan
  12. Shanahan, M. 2007. Talking about a Revolution: Climate change and the media. An IIED briefing. International Institute for Environment and Development; Shanahan, M. 2009. COP15 for journalists: a guide to the UN climate change summit. An IIED briefing; Shanahan, M. 2009. Time to Adapt? Media coverage of climate change in non-industrialised countries. Chapter 12 in Climate Change and the Media. Edited by Tammy Boyce & Justin Lewis. Peter Lang Publishing.; Shanahan, M. 2011. Why the Media Matters in a Warming World: A guide for policymakers in the global South. A Climate Change Media Partnership briefing paper.
  13. Shanahan, M. 2008. Entangled in the Web of Life: Biodiversity and the media. An IIED briefing. International Institute for Environment and Development
  14. Shanahan, M. 2013. Following the herd: why pastoralism needs better media coverage. IIED briefing paper.; Shanahan, M. 2013. Media perceptions and portrayals of pastoralists in Kenya, India and China. Gatekeepers 154.
  15. Improving journalists’ capacity to cover climate change: the Climate Change Media Partnership, accessed 3 August 2016
  16. FEATURE: CDKN-backed Southern journalists spread the word about climate change, accessed 3 August 2016
  17. IIED. Climate Change Media Partnership
  18. Ladders to Heaven
  19. Chelsea Green Publishing. Gods, Wasps and Stranglers.
  20. Extraordinary Animals: An Encyclopedia of Curious and Unusual Animals
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