Notes on Contributors

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Notes on Contributors Contemporary Political Theory (2006) 5, 369–370. doi:10.1057/palgrave.cpt.9300297

Nick Hewlett is Professor of French Studies at Oxford Brookes University, UK. His most recent book is Democracy in Modern France (Continuum 2003) and his book on Alain Badiou, Etienne Balibar, and Jacques Ranciere is forthcoming with Palgrave. George Crowder is Associate Professor in the School of Political and International Studies, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia. His current research interests focus on the political implications of value pluralism. He is the author of Classical Anarchism (1991), Liberalism and Value Pluralism (2002), and Isaiah Berlin: Liberty and Pluralism (2002). He is the co-editor (with Henry Hardy) of The One and the Many: Reading Isaiah Berlin, forthcoming, Prometheus Press, 2007. Jason Edwards is Lecturer in Politics in the School of Politics and Sociology, Birkbeck College, London. His research interests include the history of political thought, particularly discourses of the state and the political, and conceptions of human nature. He is author of a number of articles in these areas, including ‘Evolutionary Psychology and Politics’ in Economy and Society (May 2003), and a monograph, The Radical Attitude and the Modern State (2006). Marguerite La Caze is Australian Research Fellow at the University of Queensland, Australia. Her publications include The Analytic Imaginary (2002) and Integrity and the Fragile Self (2003), coauthored with Damian Cox and Michael Levine. Her current research projects concern the ethics and politics of respect for difference and the recent work of Miche`le Le Dœuff. Sonia Kruks is the Danforth Professor of Politics at Oberlin College, USA. She has published extensively on the political and social ideas of the French existentialists, as well as on feminist theory. Her books include Retrieving Experience: Subjectivity and Recognition in Feminist Politics (Cornell University Press), Situation and Human Existence: Freedom, Subjectivity and Society (Unwin Hyman/Routledge), and The Political Philosophy of Merleau-Ponty (Harvester Press). She is currently writing a book on the political

Notes on Contributors

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thought of Simone de Beauvoir. Her recent work on this topic include: ‘Simone de Beauvoir and the Politics of Privilege’, Hypatia, 20, 2005, and ‘‘Living on Rails’: Freedom, Constraint, and Political Judgment in Beauvoir’s ‘Moral’ Essays and The Mandarins’, in SJ Scholz and SM Musset, The Contradictions of Freedom, SUNY Press, 2005.

Contemporary Political Theory 2006 5