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  • Contributors

Lisa Andersen is an Assistant Professor of Liberal Arts and History at The Juilliard School in New York City. She is currently revising a manuscript entitled Politics Distilled: The Prohibition Party and American Governance, 1869–1933.
landersen@juilliard.edu

Candice Bredbenner, Associate Professor of History at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, is the author of A Nationality of Her Own: Women, Marriage, and the Law of Citizenship (University of California, 1998). Her current research focuses on U.S. citizenship and political obligation in the interwar years.
bredbennerc@uncw.edu

Kevin P. Donnelly is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Bridgewater State College. His publications have appeared in Harvard Health Policy Review and Health and Medicine Rhode Island. He is also the coauthor, with David A. Rochefort, of Foreign Remedies: What the Experience of Other Nations Can Tell Us About Next Steps in Reforming U.S. Health Care (Routledge, 2012).
kevin.donnelly@bridgew.edu

Beverly Gage is Associate Professor of U.S. history at Yale University. She is the author of The Day Wall Street Exploded: A Story of America in Its First Age of Terror (Oxford, 2009). She is currently writing a political biography of former FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, titled G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the American Century.
Beverly.gage@yale.edu

David A. Rochefort is Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Public Administration at Northeastern University. He is the author of From Poorhouses to Homelessness: Policy Analysis and Mental Health Care, and coeditor, with Robert B. Hackey, of The New Politics of State Health Policy.
d.rochefort@neu.edu

Stacie Taranto is an Assistant Professor of History at Ramapo College of New Jersey. She completed a Ph.D. in history at Brown University in 2010 and is working on a book manuscript tentatively entitled “Kitchen Table Politics: Conservative Women and Family Values in the Seventies.”
staranto@ramapo.edu

Rachel Winslow is a fifth-year Ph.D. candidate in U.S. History at the University of California, Santa Barbara. This article is part of her larger dissertation project: “Colorblind Empire: International Adoption, Social Policy, and the American Family, 1945–1976.”
rewinslow@umail.ucsb.edu [End Page 350]

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