Notes on Contributors

Published date01 March 2008
Date01 March 2008
DOI10.1111/j.1467-9248.2007.00719.x
Subject MatterArticle
Notes on Contributors
Jack Citrin is Heller Professor of Political Science and Director of the Institute
of Governmental Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. His recent
articles are ‘Testing Huntington: Is Hispanic Immigration a Threat to American
Identity?’ and ‘European Opinion about Immigration: The Role of Identities,
Interests, and Infor mation’. His new book Amer ican Identity and the Politics of
Multiculturalism will be published by Cambridge University Press in 2008.
Russell J. Dalton is Professor of Political Science at the University of California,
Irvine. His scholarly interests include comparative political behaviour, political
parties and empirical democratic theory. His recent publications include The
Good Citizen (2007) and Democratic Challenges, Democratic Choices (2003);and he is
also the editor of The Oxford Handbook of Political Behavior (2007), Citizens,
Democracy and Markets around the Pacif‌ic Rim (2006),Democracy Transformed? (2003)
and Parties without Partisans (2001).He is now doing research on the changing role
of political parties in contemporary democracies.
Elizabeth Frazer is Lecturer in Politics, University of Oxford and Off‌icial
Fellow and Tutor in Politics, New College, Oxford. She is currently working on
a series of projects on normative ideals of political life.
Robert Frith is Lecturer in Politics and International Relations in the School of
Social Sciences at the University of Southampton. His principal research interests
relate to the normative dimensions of globalisation and regionalisation with a
particular focus on the European Union.
Leah Gilbert is a graduate student in the Department of Government at
Georgetown University. Her research interests include democratisation, civil
society, hybrid regimes and post-communist politics.
Marc Morjé Howard is Associate Professor of Government at Georgetown
University. His research focuses on a variety of topics related to democracy and
democratisation, including civil society, citizenship, hybrid reg imes, right-wing
extremism and public opinion. He is the author of TheWeakness of Civil Society in
Post-communist Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2003) and Varieties of Citi-
zenship in the European Union (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming). He is
also the Director of the US ‘Citizenship, Involvement, Democracy’(CID) sur vey
project.
doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9248.2007.00719.x
POLITICAL STUDIES: 2008 VOL 56, 257–259

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