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  • Notes on Contributors

jonathan baron is professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania and founding editor of the journal Judgment and Decision Making. His current interests include the nature of individual differences in reflective and intuitive thinking, and the possible existence of naïve theories of the role of citizens in democracies.

jo becker is the children’s rights advocacy director at Human Rights Watch and an adjunct associate professor of international and public affairs at Columbia University. Her most recent book is Campaigning for Children: Strategies for Advancing Children’s Rights (2017).

cristina bicchieri is the SJP Harvie Professor of Social Thought and Comparative Ethics at the University of Pennsylvania and director of the Philosophy, Politics and Economics program. She is a foremost scholar of rational choice and philosophy of social science, and a leader in behavioral ethics.

dennis chong is chair and professor of political science at the University of Southern California, and John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of Political Science (ret.) at Northwestern University. He studies American national politics and has published extensively on issues of decision-making, public opinion, political psychology, and collective action.

alexander funcke is a postdoctoral fellow at the Philosophy, Politics and Economics Program at the University of Pennsylvania.

robert goodin is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Australian National University. He is founding editor of the Journal of Political Philosophy and, most recently, coauthor with Kai Spiekermann of An Epistemic Theory of Democracy (2018).

michael hechter is Foundation Professor of Political Science and member of the Center for the Study of Social Dynamics and Complexity at Arizona State University. He studies contentious collective action and its converse, social order. His book Alien Rule (2013) argues that this widely denigrated form of governance may, under certain conditions, attain legitimacy.

christine horne is professor of sociology at Washington State University. She studies the emergence, enforcement, and application of social norms.

morris levy is assistant professor of political science at the University of Southern California Dornsife College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences. [End Page 273]

gerry mackie is associate professor of political science and co-director of the Center on Global Justice at the University of California, San Diego. His recent books (coauthored) are Advancing Transformative Human Rights Education (2016) and Values Deliberations and Collective Action: Community Empowerment in Rural Senegal (2017).

karl-dieter opp is professor emeritus at the University of Leipzig and affiliate professor at the University of Washington. His interests include collective action, political participation, rational choice theory, philosophy of the social sciences, and social norms and institutions. His most recent English book is Theories of Political Protest and Social Movements (2009).

deborah prentice is provost and Alexander Stewart 1886 Professor of Psychology and Public Affairs at Princeton University.

wojtek przepiorka is assistant professor of sociology at Utrecht University. His research interests are in economic sociology, game theory, and quantitative methodology.

cass r. sunstein is the Robert Walmsley University Professor at Harvard University. He is the author of many books, including The Cost-Benefit Revolution (2018) and #Republic (2017).

justine tinkler is associate professor of sociology at the University of Georgia. Her research focus is on the micro-level processes that reproduce race and gender inequality. [End Page 274]

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