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  • The Contributors

Lauren M. McLaren is an associate professor in the School of Politics and International Relations and director of the Centre for the Study of European Governance at University of Nottingham in the UK. She is currently researching national identity, immigration, and political trust in Europe and in the UK. Her other research interests include democatization in Southern Europe, and her publications on this topic include the research monograph, Constructing Democracy in Southern Europe: A Comparative Analysis of Democratic Consolidation in Italy, Spain and Turkey (2008 and 2010). She can be reached at lauren.mclaren@nottingham.ac.uk.

Stanislav Markus is an assistant professor of political science at the University of Chicago and an academy scholar at the Harvard Academy. He is completing a manuscript on property rights and state-business relations in Russia and Ukraine, and he has published articles on corporate governance, business associations, and legal reforms in Russia. His new projects address the informal demand for rule of law, as well as the role of the oligarchs under postcommunism. He can be reached at smarkus@uchicago.edu.

Teri L. Caraway is an associate professor of political science at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. She is the author of Assembling Women (2007) and various articles on comparative labor and gender politics. She is working on two collaborative projects, “Working through the Past,” which focuses on how authoritarian legacies shape labor movements in new democracies, and a series of papers about labor conditionality in International Monetary Fund lending. She can be reached at caraway@umn.edu.

Isabella Alcañiz is an assistant professor of government and politics at the University of Maryland and a research fellow at the Joseph H. Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies, University of Pennsylvania. She can be reached at ialcaniz@umd.edu.

Kevin Narizny is an assistant professor of international relations at Lehigh University. He is the author of The Political Economy of Grand Strategy (2007) and is currently writing a book on the relationship between capitalism and democracy in early modern England. He can be reached at knarizny@lehigh.edu. [End Page ii]

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