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  • Contributors

Deborah Lynn Guber is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Vermont, where she specializes in public opinion on environmental issues. In addition to numerous articles and book chapters on the subject, she is the author of The Grassroots of a Green Revolution: Polling America on the Environment (MIT Press, 2003).

Michael B. Katz is Walter H. Annenberg Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania. His most recent books are The Price of Citizenship: Redefining the American Welfare State (2001, updated edition 2008) and, with Mark J. Stern, One Nation Divisible: What America Was and What It Is Becoming (2006).

John Murphy is Associate Professor, School of Historical Studies, and Associate Dean (Research), Faculty of Arts, at the University of Melbourne, Australia. He has published widely on Australian social and political history, including the Vietnam War, the political culture of the 1950s, and aspects of the history of social policy.

Sam Rosenfeld is a Ph.D. candidate in the history department at Harvard University. His research focuses on post-1960s institutional and ideological developments within the two major U.S. political parties.

Robert P. Saldin is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Montana. From 2010 to 2012, he is a Fellow in the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholars in Health Policy Research Program at Harvard University. His book, War, the American State, and Politics Since 1898, is forthcoming from Cambridge University Press. [End Page 530]

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