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Jessica Wang is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the author of American Science in an Age of Anxiety: Scientists, Anticommunism, and the Cold War (1999). She is currently working on a study of technocratic politics under the New Deal.

Max Paul Friedman, Assistant Professor of History, Florida State University, is author of Nazis and Good Neighbors: The United States Campaign Against the Germans of Latin America in World War II (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003), winner of the Herbert Hoover Book Award and the A. B. Thomas Book Award; and, with Padraic Kenney, Partisan Histories: The Past in Contemporary Global Politics (London; Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming).

Matthew A. Sutton is a Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation Charlotte W. Newcombe fellow, and assistant professor of history at Oakland University. His dissertation, Aimee Semple McPherson, and the Remaking of American Faith, Politics and Culture is forthcoming from Harvard University Press.

Frances E. Lee is Associate Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland, College Park, author of numerous publications examining the effect of legislative institutions on the outcomes of public policy, and co-author of Sizing Up the Senate: The Unequal Consequences of Equal State Representation (University of Chicago, 2001).

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