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  • Contributors

Daniel R. Ernst is Professor of Law at the Georgetown University Law Center. He is the author of Lawyers Against Labor (1995) and "Law and the State, 1920–2000: Institutional Growth and Structural Change," in the Cambridge History of Law in America (2008). He is grateful for invitations to present "Morgan and the New Dealers" in workshops at the law schools of George Washington University, the University of Pennsylvania, New York University, and Yale University and for the comments of Laura Kalman, and an anonymous reviewer. He is writing a book on New Deal lawyers, to be published by Harvard University Press.

Mark Hendrickson received his Ph.D. in U.S. history at the University of California, Santa Barbara, in 2004. He is currently a lecturer at Colorado State University. His writing and research have been generously underwritten by the Social Science Research Council, Aspen Institute, the University of California Institute for Labor and Employment, the Rockefeller Archive Center, and Smith College.

John Thomas McGuire is an adjunct associate professor at Tompkins-Cortland Community College. In October 2005, he received the Philip S. Klein Pennsylvania History prize. His article draws upon his manuscript, "An "Extraordinary Opportunity": The Women's Division of the Democratic National Committee and Social Justice Feminism During the New Deal, 1933–1940."

Benton Williams is Assistant Professor of American Legal and Constitutional History at DePaul University in Chicago. His research focuses on the nexus among law, business, and society. He is currently researching and writing a book on Filipino immigrants and employment discrimination in the Alaskan canning industry. [End Page 569]

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