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  • Contributors

Gil Eyal is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology, Columbia University. He is the author of The Origins of Postcommunist Elites: From the Prague Spring to the Breakup of Czechoslovakia (Minneapolis, 2003).

Tom Lawson is a Lecturer in Modern History at King Alfred's College, Winchester, UK. He is currently working on a book on the Church of England and the Holocaust, based on his doctoral dissertation, "The Anglican Understanding of Nazism" (University of Southampton, 2001).

Krystyna von Henneberg is an Assistant Professor in the Department of History, the University of California, Davis. She is coeditor, with Albert Russell Ascoli, of Making and Remaking Italy: The Cultivation of National Identity around the Risorgimento (Berg Press, 2001), and author of a forthcoming volume entitled Building Fascist Libya: Colonial Architecture and Urban Planning in Italy's Nineteenth Province.

Susanna Schrafstetter is a Lecturer in the Department of History, University of Glamorgan, UK. She is the author of Die dritte Atommacht: Britische Nichtverbreitungspolitik im Dienst von Statussicherung und Deutschlandpolitik (Munich, 1999); and coauthor, with Stephen Twigge, of Avoiding Armageddon: The United States, Europe and the Struggle for Nuclear Nonproliferation (forthcoming, 2004).

Carolyn Strange is an Associate Professor of Criminology and History at the Centre of Criminology, University of Toronto, Canada. She has published on the phenomenon of "dark tourism" primarily through a joint project on prison history tourism. She is coeditor (with Alison Bashford) of Isolation: Places and Practices of Exclusion (London, 2003). [End Page 177]

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