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. 257 C O N T R I B U T O R S susan s. fainstein is professor of planning in the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University. She is completing a book, The Just City, which relates theories of justice to urban development. She is recipient of the Distinguished Educator Award of the ACSP . richard thompson ford is George E. Osborne Professor of Law at Stanford University. He writes on race and multiculturalism, combining social criticism with legal analysis. He is author of The Race Card (2008) and Racial Culture: A Critique (2005). gerald frug is Louis D. Brandeis Professor of Law at Harvard University, where he teaches local government law. He is coauthor (with David Barron ) of City Bound: How States Stifle Urban Innovation (2008) and author of City Making: Building Communities without Building Walls (1999). clarissa rile hayward is a political theorist at Washington University. She is author of Defacing Power (2000). She is currently completing a book focused on the ways democratic state actors shape identities by racializing and privatizing urban and suburban space. loren king is a political theorist atWilfrid Laurier University. His research and teaching interests are in political philosophy, with a focus on the foundations of rational choice and theories of justice and legitimacy. His current work examines problems of justice in urban and global governance. 258 . C O N T R I B U T O R S margaret kohn teaches political theory at the University of Toronto. Her primary research interests are in the areas of colonialism, democratic theory, critical theory, and urbanism. Her books include Radical Space: Building the House of the People (2003) and Brave New Neighborhoods: The Privatization of Public Space (2004). stephen macedo is Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Politics and director of the University Center for Human Values at Princeton University. He writes and teaches on political theory, ethics, American constitutionalism , and public policy, with an emphasis on liberalism, justice, and public policy in promoting citizenship. douglas w. rae is Richard Ely Professor of Political Science and Management at Yale University. He is affiliated with Yale’s Institute for Social and Policy Studies and Committee on Urban Studies and is author of City: Urbanism and Its End (2005). clarence n. stone is research professor of public policy and political science at George Washington University. He is author of Regime Politics: Governing Atlanta, 1946–1988 (2001) and coauthor (with Jeffrey Henig, Bryan Jones, and Carol Pierannunzi) of Building Civic Capacity: The Politics of Reforming Urban Schools (2001). todd swanstrom is Desmond Lee Professor in Community Collaboration and Public Policy Administration at the University of Missouri–St. Louis. He is coauthor (with Peter Dreier and John Mollenkopf) of Place Matters: Metropolitics for the Twenty-First Century (rev. ed. 2004). margaret weir is professor of sociology and political science at the University of California at Berkeley. She specializes in the politics of social policy and inequality in the United States and Europe. She is currently completing a study of metropolitan inequalities in the United States. thad williamson teaches leadership studies at the University of Richmond . He is coauthor (with David Imbroscio and Gar Alperovitz) of Making a Place for Community: Local Democracy in a Global Era (2002) and author of Sprawl, Justice, and Citizenship: The Civic Costs of the American Way of Life (2009). ...

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