1 Astrida Neimanis is Lecturer in Gender Studies at University of Toronto, and from January 2015 will be Lecturer in Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney (Australia). She has over 30 publications on questions such as water ethics, environmental human rights, and feminist environmental philosophy, and is co-editor of Thinking with Water (MQUP 2013). For over a decade, she served as a policy consultant for the United National Development Program. E-mail: astrida.neimanis@gmail.com Cecilia Åsberg is Head of the Gender Studies Unit at Linköping University (Sweden) and Director of The Posthumanities Hub. She has over 60 publications including most recently “Resilience Is Cyborg: Feminist Clues to a Post-Disciplinary Environmental Humanities” (Resilience, 2013): and “The Timely Ethics of Posthumanist Gender Studies” (feministische studien 2013). She has numerous major research grants, has served as Editor-in-Chief of Nora: Nordic Journal of Feminist Gender Research and on the board of various international journals. Johan Hedren is Associate Professor of Water and Environmental Studies at Linköping University (Sweden) and co-coordinator of LiU’s Green Critical Forum. His research in the natures and cultures of environmental politics has resulted in over 40 publications, including most recently Green Utopianism: Politics, Perspectives and Practices (coauthored with Karin Bradley, Routledge 2014) and “New Ideas About Sustainability? The Case of Chemical Management in EU” (coauthored with O. Udovyk) for The International Journal of Sustainability Policy and Practice. Together, Åsberg, Hedren and Neimanis launched the Environmental Humanities Collaboratory at Linköping University in 2014, of which Dr. Åsberg is Program Director and Dr. Hedren is Co- Director. Four Problems, Four Directions For Environmental Humanities: