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Notes on Contributors

Amy Baehr is assistant professor of Philosophy at Moravian College in


Pennsylvania and the author of “Towards a New Feminist Liberalism: Okin,
Rawls, and Habermas” Hypatia II, Winter 1996.

Rainer Bauböck is assistant professor of Political Science at the Institute for


Advanced Studies in Vienna and the author of “Liberal Justifications for Group
Rights” in Christian Joppke and Steven Lukes (eds.) Multiculturalism Questions
(1998).

Jacek Dalecki is a visiting professor at the Russian and East European Institute
at Indiana University and is currently writing a book about the evolution of Adam
Michnik’s political thinking.

Dan Diner is the Director of the Institute for German History at Tel Aviv
University. His most recent book in English is Anti-Americanism in Germany
(1996).

Helmut Dubiel is an associate at the Institut für Sozialforschung in Frankfurt


and the author of Theory and Politics: Studies in the Development of Critical
Theory.

Jeffrey C. Isaac is professor of Political Science at the University of Indiana. His


most recent book is Democracy in Dark Times (January, 1998).

Elizabeth Kiss is Director of the Kenan Ethics Program at Duke University in


Durham, North Carolina.

Percy B. Lehning is professor of Political Theory and Public Policy at Erasmus


University in Rotterdam and the author of numerous books. He most recently
edited Citizenship, Democracy and Justice in the New Europe (1997).

John McCormick is assistant professor of Political Science at the University of


New Hampshire and author of Carl Schmitt’s Critique of Liberalism: Against
Politics as Technology (1996).

Julie Mostov is associate professor of History and Politics at Drexel University


in Philadelphia and currently writing Guardians, Warriors & Traitors.
Notes on Contributors 462

Arnd Pollman teaches Political Philosophy at the Free University in Berlin and
is working on a dissertation about a formal concept of integrity.

Ulrich Preuss is professor of Law and Politics at the Free University in Berlin
and a judge on the Constitutional Court of Bremen. His most recent book is
Concepts of Citizenship in Europe (forthcoming, 1998).

Tine Stein is associate professor of Political Science at the Free University of


Berlin and the author of Demokratie und Verfassung an den Grenzen des
Wachstums. Zur ökologischen Kritik und Reform des demokratischen
Verfassungsstaates (1997).

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