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  • Contributors

doron avraham is a senior lecturer in the General History Department, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel. His main field of research and instruction is modern German history, with a focus on the history of political ideas, nationalism, Judaism, minorities, and civil society. His most recent book is In der Krise der Moderne: Der preussische Konservatismus im Zeitalter gesellschaftlicher Veränderungen, 1848–1876 (Göttingen, Wallstein Verlag, 2008).
doron.avraham@biu.ac.il

olivier burtin is a graduate student in the Ph.D. program in History at Princeton University. He holds a Master’s Degree in History (cum laude, June 2011) from the University of Sciences Po in Paris as well as a Master’s Degree in History from Princeton (September 2013). His Ph.D. is expected in June 2016.
oburtin@princeton.edu

laurence m. carucci is Professor of Anthropology at Montana State University. He specializes in the study of the Pacific Islands and is a noted authority on cultural concerns and the social life of residents of the Republic of the Marshall Islands. His work focuses on issues of symbolic power in the domains of historical and cultural self-fashioning. He has co-authored The Typhoon of War and Memories of War (both University of Hawaii Press).
lamaca@.montana.edu

suzanne falgout is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Hawai’i–West Oahu. She has conducted research throughout the islands of Micronesia and co-authored The Typhoon of War and Memories of War (both University of Hawaii Press) describing Micronesian experiences during the Pacific War.
falgout@hawaii.edu

johann neem is Professor of History at Western Washington University. His book, Creating a Nation of Joiners: Democracy and Civil Society in Early National Massachusetts (Harvard, 2008), examines—at a time when many Americans remain worried about “bowling alone”—why and how Americans learned to come together in the first place. Neem writes about democracy in the early American republic. His work has appeared in the Hedgehog Review, History and Theory, Inside Higher Education, the Journal of the Early Republic, and the Journal of Interdisciplinary History.
johann.neem@wwu.edu

dennie oude nijhuis is Assistant Professor of History at Leiden University. He specializes in the development of twentieth-century labor markets and social welfare in Europe and the United States and is the author of the book Labor Divided in the Postwar European Welfare State (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
d.m.oude-nijhuis@hum.leidenuniv.nl

lin poyer is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wyoming. She has conducted ethnographic fieldwork in Micronesia, working on the Marshall Islands, [End Page 191] Pohnpei, Sapwuahfik, Truk [Chuuk], and Yap, in Madagascar, and on the Navajo Reservation. She has co-authored The Typhoon of War and Memories of War (both University of Hawaii Press).
lapoyer@uwyo.edu

paul sabin is Associate Professor of History at Yale University. He is the author of The Bet: Paul Ehrlich, Julian Simon, and Our Gamble over Earth’s Future (Yale, 2013) and Crude Politics: The California Oil Market, 1900–1940 (University of California, 2005).
paul.sabin@yale.edu [End Page 192]

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