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271 Arash Abizadeh is associate professor of political theory at McGill University. His research focuses on democratic theory and questions of identity, nationalism, and cosmopolitanism; immigration and border control; Habermas and discourse ethics ; and seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophy, particularly Hobbes and Rousseau. His publications have appeared in journals including American Political Science Review, History of Political Thought, Journal of Political Philosophy, Nations and Nationalism, Philosophical Studies, Philosophy & Public Affairs, Political Theory, and Review of Metaphysics. Frank Brennan, SJ, is a Jesuit priest and professor of law at Australian Catholic University . His books with the University of Queensland Press include Legislating Liberty (), Tampering with Asylum (), and Acting on Conscience (). In  he was awarded the Humanitarian Overseas Service Medal for his work in East Timor and was a recipient of the Australian Centenary Medal in  for his service with refugees and for human rights work in the Asia-Pacific region. Mary M. DeLorey is strategic issues advisor for Catholic Relief Services (CRS), where she has worked for the last ten years. Her primary policy focus is on Latin American regional policy concerns, including the impact of migration and internal displacement in the region. She also has responsibility for policy coverage on trafficking in persons more globally for CRS. Prior to CRS, DeLorey worked with research, advocacy, and policy organizations on initiatives addressing migration and foreign policy. J. Bryan Hehir is the Parker Gilbert Montgomery Professor of the Practice of Religion and Public Life at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. He also serves as the secretary for health and social services in the Archdiocese of Boston. His teaching and writing focus on ethics and international relations and the role of religion in politics. His essays include “The Moral Measurement of War,” “Military Intervention and National Sovereignty,” and “Catholicism and Democracy.” Contributors 272 Contributors David Hollenbach, SJ, holds the University Chair in Human Rights and International Justice and is director of the Center for Human Rights and International Justice at Boston College, where he teaches theological ethics and Christian social ethics. His research interests are in the foundations of Christian social ethics, particularly human rights, the role of the religion in political life, and issues facing refugees. With Georgetown University Press he has published Advocating Refugee Rights: Ethics , Advocacy, and Africa () and The Global Face of Public Faith (). He is also a frequent visiting professor at Hekima College in Nairobi, Kenya. Daniel Kanstroom is the director of the International Human Rights Program and a law professor at Boston College Law School. Together with his students, he has provided counsel for hundreds of clients and argued major cases in many courts. His latest book is Deportation Nation: Outsiders in American History (Harvard University Press, ). His articles have appeared in the Harvard Law Review, the Yale Journal of International Law, the Stanford Journal of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, and the French Gazette du Palais. Christopher Llanos, SJ, obtained his doctorate in religion and society from Harvard University. As a Jesuit he has worked with Jesuit Refugee and Migration Services while holding other jobs. He currently lectures in theological ethics at two associate colleges of the University of the West Indies—St. Michael’s Theological College in Jamaica and the Regional Seminary, St. John Vianney and the Ugandan Martyrs, in Trinidad. Maryanne Loughry, RSM, is a Sister of Mercy, a psychologist, and an academic with research affiliations at Oxford University, Boston College, and Flinders University of South Australia. She is currently the associate director of Jesuit Refugee Service Australia, where she is researching the social effects of climate change on Pacific Islanders. Her publications have appeared in several locations, including the Journal of Refugee Studies and Journal of Humanitarian Assistance. M. Brinton Lykes is professor of community-cultural psychology and associate director of the Center for Human Rights and International Justice at Boston College. She works with survivors of war and gross violations of human rights using the creative arts and activist scholarship to analyze the causes and effects of violence and to develop programs to rethread social relations and transform social inequalities. Her work is widely published; she is coeditor of three books and coauthor of Voices and Images: Maya Ixil Women of Chajul (MagnaTerra, ). Susan F. Martin holds the Donald G. Herzberg Chair in International Migration and is director of the Institute for the Study of International Migration at Georgetown University. Previously she served as the executive director of the United States Commission on Immigration Reform. Her publications include Refugee Women...

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