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Notes on Contributors r i c h a r d a l b a is Distinguished Professor ofSociologyat the CUNYGraduate Center. His current project (with Foner) is a comparative investigation ofthe incorpo­ ration ofimmigrants and their children in North America and western Europe. DAVID a p t e r is HenryJ. Heinz II Professor Emeritus ofPolitical Science and Sociology. His recent publications include “Structure, Contingency and Choice” (in Keates and Scott 2001) and “An African Tragedy”(inDissent 2002). s o p h ie b o d y - g e n d r o t is Professor of Political Science and American Studies, founder and Director ofthe Center for Urban Studies in the English-speaking World at the Université Sorbonne-Paris IV, and a member ofthe Commission Nationale de déontologie sur la sécurité. Her books include Violence in Europe: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives (2007). ALEXANDRA DÉLANO is a postdoctoral fellow at the New School for Social Research. She is the author of “From Limited to Active Engagement: Mexico’s Emigration Policies from a Foreign Policy Perspective (2000-2006)”(inInternational Migration Review 2009). t h o m a s f a i s t is Professor of Transnational and Development Studies at the Department ofSociology, Bielefeld University. His books include “Beyond a Border: The Causes and Consequences ofContemporary Immigration”(with Kivisto 2010). v i c t o r i a h a t t a m is Professor ofPolitics at the New School for Social Research. Her publications include In the Shadow ofRace:Jews, Latinos, and Race Politics in the United States (2007). JAMES D. in g r a m is Assistant Professor of Political Science at McMasterUniversity in Hamilton, Ontario, where he teaches political theory. c o u r t n e y j u n g is Professor ofPolitical Science at University ofToronto. She is the author ofThe Moral Force ofIndigenous Politics (2008) and Then I Was Black South African Political Identities in Transition (2000). p h ilip k a s in itz , Professor ofSociology at the CUNYGraduate Center, currently serves as executive officer ofthe Doctoral Program in Sociology. He is the coauthor, most recently, o f Inheriting the City: The Children ofImmigrants Come ofAge (with Mollenkopf, Waters and Holdaway 2008). r i v a k a s t o r y a n o is Research Director at CNRA/CERI-Sciences-Po and Visiting Professor ofPolitical Science at the New School for Social Research. Her publica­ tions include Negotiating Identities: States and Immigrants in France and Germany (2002). i r a k a t z n e l s o n is Ruggles Professor of Political Science and Histoiy at Columbia University. His most recent book isLiberal Beginnings: Making a Republicfor the Modems (with Kalyvas 2008). s o n - t h i e r r y l y is a doctoral student at the Paris School ofEconomics. k e n n e t h p r e w i t t is Carnegie Professor ofPublicAffairs and the Vice President ofGlobal Centers, Columbia University. This article draws from his manuscript, CountingAmerica's Races: Do We Still Want To? Do We Still Need To? (forthcoming in 2011). m a r t i n a . s c h a i n is Professor ofPolitics at NewYorkUniversity. His many books include The Politics ofImmigration in France, Britain, and the United States: A Comparative Study(2008). r o g e r s m. s m i th is Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania. His book Still the House Divided? Racial Politics in American Politics (with King) is forthcoming in 2010. a n n s n i t o w is Director ofthe Gender Studies Program at the New School and cofounder ofthe Network ofEast-West Women. Her recent writing and political work is about the changing situation of women in Eastern Europe. JOHN to r p e y , Professor of Sociology at the CUNYGraduate Center, is the author ofThe Invention ofthe Passport: Surveillance, Citizenship, and the State (2000), and Making Whole W hat Has Been Smashed: On Reparations Politics (2006). t r ia d a f il o s t r ia d...

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