Notes on Contributors

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Notes on Contributors Sreeram S. Chaulia (M.S., London School of Economics and Political Science) studied history at the University of Delhi, India, and modern history at the University of Oxford. He researched the BJP’s foreign policy at the London School of Economics and is currently conducting research on the impact of conflict on Afghan refugees at the Maxwell School of Citizenship. Denisa Mindruta (M.S., University of Bucharest) is a graduate student in Political Science at Stony Brook University. She has worked as a research associate in various European research teams and as an Assistant Professor at the University of Bucharest. Her research interests include institutional change and electoral behavior/political values in Eastern Europe. Alina Mungiu-Pippidi (Ph.D., University of Iasi) is Professor of Political Science at the Romanian National School of Government and Administration, Director of the Romanian Academic Society, and editor of the Romanian Journal of Political Science. She has published many articles in journals and the popular media. Recently, she co-authored a working paper for the Vienna Institute for Human Studies, entitled “In the Shadows: Survival Strategies of the Unemployed in the Transition.” Jeffrey Stevenson Murer (Ph.D., University of Illinois at Chicago) is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Swarthmore College. Before his present post, he held visiting appointments at Illinois Wesleyan University and Providence College, and he has been a guest lecturer and researcher at the Volgograd Academy for State Service in Russia, the Center for Research and Study of Psychopathology in Toulouse, France, and Central European University in Budapest, Hungary. He is currently working on a book length manuscript on the contemporary resurgence of nationalist and anti-semitic movements in Hungary. Daniel N. Nelson (Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University) is Editor-in-Chief of International Politics, Professor at the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies, and senior consultant for Global Concepts, Inc. in Alexandria, Virginia. His most recent books are Global Society in Transition, edited with Laura Neack (Kluwer), At War With Words, edited with Mirjana N. Dedaic, and Threats and Capacities (Palgrave, forthcoming). Thomas W. Smith (Ph.D., University of Virginia) is an Assistant Professor of Government and International Affairs at the University of South Florida. Previous to this post, he spent three years teaching at Koc¸ University in Istanbul. He is the author of History and International Relations (Routledge) and various articles in the

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Notes on contributors

fields of political theory and international ethics. His current research examines ethical dilemmas of international relations and Turkish politics. Andrei P. Tsygankov (Ph.D., University of Southern California) teaches at San Francisco State University. He is the author of Pathways after Empire (Rowman & Littlefield) and has had numerous articles published in various academic journals, includi