Notes on Contributors

DOI10.1111/1467-9248.00352
Date01 December 2001
Published date01 December 2001
Subject MatterNotes on Contributors
POLITICAL STUDIES: 2001 VOL 49, 998–999
© 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
Simon Caney teaches political philosophy and international ethics at the
University of Newcastle upon Tyne. He has published articles on liberalism, human
rights, nationality, cosmopolitanism, global justice and intervention in philosophy
and politics journals. He is currently completing a book entitled Global Political
Theory.
Philip Cowley is Lecturer in the Department of Politics at the University of Hull,
and he is Deputy Director of the Centre for Legislative Studies there. He edited
Conscience and Parliament (Frank Cass 1998) and published numerous articles and
chapters.
Bernadette C. Hayes is Professor of Sociology at Queen’s University of Belfast,
Northern Ireland. Her research interests are in the areas of gender, social stratifica-
tion, religion, and politics.
Paul Kellogg received a PhD from Queen’s University (Canada) in 1991. He has
published in the area of political theory and political economy in various journals.
Ian McAllister is Director of the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian
National University. His research interests are in the areas of comparative political
behaviour, political parties, voters and electoral systems.
Pippa Norris is Associate Director (Research) of the Shorenstein Center, John F.
Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. She has published widely
on comparative elections and public opinion, political communications, and gender
politics. Recent authored books include Digital Divide (Cambridge 2001), A Virtuous
Circle (Cambridge 2000), and she edited Britain Votes 2001 (Oxford 2001) and
Comparing Democracies 2 (Sage 2002). She is currently engaged in writing a new
book for Cambridge, Count Every Voice, comparing political participation worldwide.
Piers Robinson is Lecturer in Political Communication at the School of Politics
and Communications Studies, University of Liverpool. He has published a number
of articles on the CNN effect and the book The Myth of the CNN effect: global news
media, US foreign policy and humanitarian crisis to be published by Routledge in
2002.
Joseph Ruane lectures in sociology at University College Cork. He has published
extensively on Irish culture and society and on the Northern Ireland conflict,
including The Dynamics of Conflict in Northern Ireland (Cambridge University Press
1996) and After the Good Friday Agreement (University College Dublin Press 1999).
Patricia Springborg holds a personal chair of political theory in the Department of
Government at the University of Sydney. For the academic year of 2000–2001 she
was a fellow at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, and is currently a visiting senior
research fellow at St. John’s College, Oxford.

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