Notes on Contributors

Published date01 June 2001
DOI10.1111/1467-9248.00317
Date01 June 2001
Subject MatterNotes on Contributors
POLITICAL STUDIES: 2001 VOL 49, 331–332
© Political Studies Association, 2001.
Published by Blackwell Publishers, 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA
Notes on Contributors
Rita Abrahamsen lectures in Third World Studies in the Department of International
Politics, University of Wales, Aberystwyth. She is author of Disciplining Democracy:
Development Discourse and Good Governance in Africa (Zed Books, 2000).
Malcolm Brynin is Principal Research Officer at ISER, the University of Essex. His
research interests include voting studies, education, and domestic IT usage, mostly
using household panel data.
Margaret Canovan is Professor of Political Thought at Keele University.
Her books include Nationhood and Political Theory (Edward Elgar, 1996) and
Hannah Arendt: a Reinterpretation of her Political Thought (Cambridge University Press,
1992).
Ron Johnston is a Professor in the School of Geographical Sciences at the
University of Bristol. He has been studying elections – in Australia, New Zealand
and the USA as well as in the UK – for some 30 years, with particular interests in
estimating small-area voting patterns from aggregate data, the impact of local
campaigns, and the procedures for constituency-definition.
Mike Marinetto is a lecturer at Cardiff Business School, the University of Wales,
Cardiff. He is interested in the policy process and political sociology, particularly
territorial and regional politics.
Murray Milgate is a Fellow and Senior Tutor at Queens’ College, Cambridge. He
co-edited The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics (2000) and The New Palgrave
Dictionary of Money and Finance (2000).
Kenneth Newton is Professor of Politics at the University of Southampton and
Executive Director of the European Consortium for Political Research. His recent
work has been on mass attitudes and behaviour, the comparative study of social
capital and the mass media and politics.
Charles Pattie is Professor of Geography at the University of Sheffield. He has
published widely on various aspects of electoral geography and is co-author of A
Nation Dividing (Longman, 1988), The Boundary Commissions (Manchester University
Press, 1999) and From Votes to Seats (Manchester University Press, 2001).
Colin Rallings is Professor of Politics and co-director of the Local Government
Chronicle Elections Centre at the University of Plymouth. Together with Michael
Thrasher he is the author of Local Elections in Britain (Routledge, 1997) and of
numerous articles on elections and electoral behaviour.

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