Contributors

DOI10.1177/1474885109349721
Published date01 January 2010
Date01 January 2010
Subject MatterArticles
Contributors
Edited by:
Duncan Bell is a Lecturer in the Department of Politics and International
Studies at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Christ’s College. He
works on assorted topics in the history of modern European and American
political thought, and contemporary international political theory. He is
the author of The Idea of Greater Britain: Empire and the Future of World
Order, 1860–1900 (Princeton University Press, 2007), and the editor of various
books, including Political Thought and International Relations: Variations on a Realist
Theme (Oxford University Press, 2009), and, most recently, a textbook on Ethics
and World Politics (Oxford University Press, 2010).
Contributors:
Lena Halldenius is Associate Professor of Ethics and Human Rights at Malmö
University in Sweden and Life Member of Clare Hall at the University of
Cambridge. She has a PhD in philosophy from Lund University and has held
Visiting Fellowships at the University of Essex, Uppsala University, and the
University of Cambridge. Her main area of research is political philosophy, with
a particular focus on the concept of freedom, its modern history, its relations
to other moral/political concepts and to institutions. Her publications include
Liberalism (2003, in Swedish), Locke and the Non-Arbitrary (2003, in this jour-
nal), The Immorality of Emotional Response. Liberty and the Slavery Metaphor in
Wollstonecraft’s Theory of Property (2005), Dissecting Discrimination (2005), Genetic
Discrimination (2007), The Primacy of Right. On the Triad of Liberty, Equality,
and Virtue in Wollstonecraft’s Political Thought (2007), Liberty, Law and Social
Construction” (2007), and “Liberty and its Circumstances – A Functional Approach
(2009). Her current project is a study of the relation between politics and morality
in Mary Wollstonecraft’s philosophy. More information can be found at http://
www.mah.se/gps/staff/lenahalldenius.
Duncan Ivison is Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Sydney.
He is author of the Self at Liberty (Cornell University Press, 1997); Postcolonial
Liberalism (Cambridge University Press, 2002) and Rights (Acumen, 2008). He is
editor of the Ashgate Research Companion to Multiculturalism (2010) and co-editor
of Political Theory and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Cambridge University Press,
2000). 7
EJPT
European Journal of Political Theory
9(1) 7–8
© The Author(s), 2010
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[DOI: 10.1177/1474885109349721]
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