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  • Contributors

Ken I. Kersch is Director of the Clough Center for the Study of Constitutional Democracy and Associate Professor of Political Science, History, and Law, at Boston College. kenneth.kersch.1@bc.edu

Dean J. Kotlowski is professor of history at Salisbury University. He is the author of Nixon’s Civil Rights: Politics, Principle, and Policy (Harvard University Press, 2001) and nearly twenty scholarly journal articles on the presidency, civil rights, and foreign and domestic policy, the most recent of which is “Independence or Not? Paul V. McNutt, Manuel L. Quezon, and the Reexamination of Philippine Independence, 1937–39,” International History Review (September 2010). His next book, Paul V. McNutt and the Age of F.D.R., will be published by Indiana University Press. djkotlowski@salisbury.edu

Sidney M. Milkis is the White Burkett Miller Professor of the Department of Politics and Assistant Director for Democracy and Governance Studies at the Miller of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia. His books include: The President and the Parties: The Transformation of the American Party System Since the New Deal (1993); Political Parties and Constitutional Government: Remaking American Democracy (1999); Presidential Greatness (2000), coauthored with Marc Landy; The American Presidency: Origins and Development, 1776–2011 (2011), 6th edition, coauthored with Michael Nelson; and Theodore Roosevelt, the Progressive Party, and the Transformation of American Democracy (2009). smm8e@eservices.virginia.edu

Kimberly Phillips-Fein is a historian of twentieth-century American politics at New York University. Her first book, Invisible Hands: The Making of the Conservative Movement from the New Deal to Reagan, was published in 2009 by W. W. Norton. She is currently working on a new project about New York City in the 1970s. dpf2@nyu.edu

Daniel J. Tichenor is Philip H. Knight Professor of Social Science and Senior Faculty Fellow at the Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics. His book, Dividing Lines: The Politics of Immigration Control in America (Princeton University Press), won the American Political Science Association’s Gladys M. Kammerer Award for the best book in American national policy. His forthcoming books include Faustian Bargains: The Origins and Development of America’s Illegal Immigration Dilemma (University of Michigan Press) and The Oxford Handbook on International Migration (Oxford University Press). tichenor@uoregon.edu

Daniel K. Williams is associate professor of history at the University of West Georgia and author of God’s Own Party: The Making of the Christian Right (Oxford University Press, 2010). dkw@westga.edu [End Page 594]

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