Notes on Contributors

Published date01 December 2004
Date01 December 2004
DOI10.1111/j.1467-9248.2004.00511.x
Subject MatterOriginal Article
Notes on Contributors
POLITICAL STUDIES: 2004 VOL 52, 837–838
© Political Studies Association, 2004.
Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA
John Barry is Reader in Politics in the Institute of Governance, Public Policy
and Social Research, Queen’s University Belfast. His recent publications include
Rethinking Green Politics (Sage, 1999, winner of the PSA’s WJM Mackenzie prize for
best book published in political science), Environment and Social Theory (Routledge,
1999) and (with John Proops) Citizenship, Sustainability and Environmental Research
(Edward Elgar, 2000).
Andreas Bergh is Lecturer and Researcher in the Department of Economics, Lund
University, Sweden. His research interests include the measurement, consequences
and moral foundations of inequality and redistribution. His work also concerns
rational explanations of seemingly altruistic behaviour.
Gordon C. K. Cheung is Lecturer in International Relations of China in the School
of Government and International Affairs, University of Durham. His books include
Market Liberalism: American Foreign Policy toward China (Transaction, 1998) and The
Political Economy of Japan (second edition, Eastern Universities, 2003).
Sally N. Cummings is in the School of International Relations, University of
St. Andrews. Her recent publications include Power and Change in Central Asia
(Routledge, 2002) and Centre–Periphery Relations in Kazakhstan (Brookings Institu-
tion and Royal Institute of International Affairs, 2000).
Avner de-Shalit is Max Kampelman Professor of Democracy and Human Rights
in the Department of Political Science, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is
currently completing a book with Jonathan Wolff on the subject of disadvantage.
Ülkü Do anay is Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Communication, Univer-
sity of Ankara, Turkey. She holds a Ph.D. in Political Science. Her research inter-
ests are in the theories of democracy, political communication, participation and
political rhetoric.
Alexander Kaufman is Assistant Professor of Political Theory at the University
of Georgia. He is author of Welfare in the Kantian State (Oxford University Press,
1999) and has published articles on distributive justice, social contract theory,
German idealist philosophy and philosophy of law.
Yoram Levy is Junior Research Fellow in the Department of Political Science,
Faculty of Management Sciences, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Rosemary Nagy is Assistant Professor in the Department of Law, Carleton Uni-
versity, Ottawa, Canada. She works in the areas of political theory, human rights
and transitional justice.
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