Notes on Contributors
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Notes on Contributors Contemporary Political Theory (2005) 4, 107–108. doi:10.1057/palgrave.cpt.9300215
C. Fred Alford is Professor of Government and Distinguished Scholar-Teacher at the University of Maryland, College Park, USA. Author of a dozen books on moral psychology, his most recent book is Levinas, the Frankfurt School, and Psychoanalysis, published by Wesleyan University Press and Continuum Books in London. He is finishing up a manuscript on freedom, based on in-depth interviews.
Alison Edgley is a Lecturer in Social Sciences at the University of Nottingham, UK. She is the author of The Social and Political Thought of Noam Chomsky (Routledge, 2000).
Darren R. Walhof is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI, USA. His research interests include early modern political thought, philosophical hermeneutics, and democratic theory. His recent publications include an article on John Calvin’s conception of conscience in History of Political Thought, 2003, and a co-edited volume entitled The Invention of Religion: Rethinking Belief in Politics and History (Rutgers, 2002).
David C. Durst is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the American University in Bulgaria. He is the author of a study of Hegel and Schiller (1993) Die Politische Okonomie der Sittlichkeit be Hegel und der Asthetischen Kultur bei Schiller. Eine Studie zur Politischen vernunft (Passagen Verlap, Vienna). Recent publications include journal articles in The Germanic Review, Heidegger Studies, Continental Philosophy Review and Res Publica, on the philosophy of Hegel, Heidegger, Foucault, Derrida, and Locke. His monograph (2003) Weimar Modernism. Philosophy, Politics
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and Culture in Germany 1918–1933 is published by Lexington Books, Lanham, Maryland. His reseach focuses primarily on 19th and 20th century continental aesthetic and political thought.
Contemporary Political Theory 2005 4
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