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  • The Contributors

Jessica Gottlieb is an assistant professor at Texas A&M University’s Bush School of Government and Public Service. She studies the failures of democratic accountability in developing countries using field experiments, behavioral games, and surveys. Gottlieb has written on analyzing a large-scale information experiment on voting and civic participation in Mali, and her current research explores bloc voting and the influence of local brokers in Senegal. She can be reached at jgottlieb@tamu.edu.

Caroline A. Hartzell is a professor of political science at Gettysburg College. She studies processes of civil war termination with a focus on their effects on the quality of the postconflict peace. Hartzell’s other publications with Matthew Hoddie include, as coauthor, Crafting Peace (2007), and as coeditor, Strengthening Peace in Post–Civil War States (2010) and Segment States in the Developing World (2014). She can be reached at chartzel@gettysburg.edu.

Matthew Hoddie is an associate professor of political science at Towson University. He studies ethnic conflict and civil war resolution. Hoddie’s other publications with Caroline Hartzell include, as coauthor, Crafting Peace (2007), and as coeditor, Strengthening Peace in Post–Civil War States (2010) and Segment States in the Developing World (2014). He can be reached at mhoddie@towson.edu.

Paul Poast is an assistant professor of political science at Rutgers University. He studies alliance politics, the political economy of international security, and political methodology. He can be reached at paul.poast@rutgers.edu.

Johannes Urpelainen is an associate professor of political science at Columbia University. He studies international cooperation and institutions, global environmental politics, and energy policy. His book, Cutting the Gordian Knot of Economic Reform, was published in 2014. He can be reached at ju2178@columbia.edu.

Margaret E. Peters is an assistant professor of political science at Yale University. Her research focuses broadly on international political economy with a special interest in the politics of migration in both receiving and sending countries. She is currently working on a book manuscript further exploring how globalization has affected immigration policy in receiving countries. She can be reached at margaret.peters@yale.edu.

Jonathan Kirshner is Stephen and Barbara Friedman Professor of International Political Economy and director of the Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies at Cornell University. His most recent books are American Power after the Financial Crisis, and, coedited with Eric Helleiner, The Great Wall of Money: Power and Politics in China’s International Monetary Relations. Kirshner was the World Politics Visiting Fellow in 2012–13. He can be reached at jdk5@cornell.edu. [End Page ii]

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