A Disquisition on Civil Society
Volume 61  No. 2 (Summer 1994)
Arien Mack, Editor

  Notes on Contributors     Ordering information
 

Table of Contents

A Disquisition on Civil Society                               G.M. Tamas                                                        205

E.P. Thompson and the
Discipline of Historical Context                               Craig Calhoun                                                    223

The Mind and Faith of Max
Lerner                                                                   Sanford Lakoff                                                    245

The Time of States                                               Charles Tilly                                                        269

Thinking Beyond the East-West
Divide: Foucault, Patocka, and
the Care of the Self                                               Arpad Szakolczai                                                297

Structural and Institutional
Aspects of Corruption                                           Joseph LaPalombara                                        325

Women After Communism: A
Bitter Freedom                                                       Elzbieta Matynia                                                351

The Free Trade Debate: A Left
Keynesian Gaze                                                   Thomas I. Palley                                                379

Poland's Seven Middle Classes                           Jacek Kurczewski                                                395

The Twisted Road to Genocide:
On the Psychological
Development of Evil During
the Holocaust                                                   Henri Zukier                                                        423

Freud and His Nephew                                   Stewart Justman                                                    457

Judith Shklar's Dystopic
Liberalism                                                       Seyla Benhabib                                                    477
 


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Notes on Contributors
(at time of publication)

Seyla Benhabib is professor of government and Senior Research Fellow in the Center for European Studies at Harvard University.  She recently published Situating the Self: Gender, Community and Postmodernism in Contemporary Ethics (1992).

Craig Calhoun is professor of sociology and history and Director of the University Center for International Studies at the Univeristy of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  He is currently writing Neither Gods Nor Emperors: Students and the Struggle for Democracy in China and Critical Social Theory: Culture, History and the Challenge of Difference, both to be published in 1995.

Stewart Justman is professor of english at the University of Montana.  He is the author of The Autonomous Male of Adam Smith (1993).

Jacek Maria Kurczewski is a professor in the Department of Sociology of Custom and Law in the Institute of Applied Social Sciences, University of Warsaw.  He recently edited (with Mavis MacLean) Family, Politics, and Law.  Perspectives for East and West Europe (1994).

Sanford Lakoff is research professor of political science at the University of California, San Diego.  He recently contributed "Between Either/Or and More or Less: Sovereignty versus Autonomy Union Federalism" to Publius, The Journal of Federalism (Winter 1994).

Joseph LaPalombara is Wolfers Professor of Political Science at Yale University.  He recently published "International Firms and National Governments: Some Dilemmas" in the Washington Quarterly (Spring 1994).

Elzbieta Matynia is Director of the East and Central Europe Program of the Graduate Faculty, New School for Social Research.  Her article is based in part on a consultant's report she prepared for the Ford Foundation.  Currently she is completing an article, "Mitteleuropa Revisited: Cracow's National Project at the End of the Last Century" and Theaters and Societies, a book on the social history of theatrical performances.

Thomas I. Palley is assistant professor of economics in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research.  He recently completed Money, Credit, and Output: Macroeconomics with Post Keynesian Foundations (forthcoming 1995).

Arpad Szakolczai is a lecturer at the European University Institute, Florence, Italy.  His most recent published work is The Dissolution of Communist Power: The Case of Hungary (with Agnes Horvath, 1992).

G.M. Tamas is Director of the Institute of Philosophy of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.  A former member of the Hungarian Parliament.  Tamas writes regularly for the British international press and is on the editiorial board of the scholarly publications Vilagrossag, Magyar Filozofiai Szemle, and Doxa, of which he is General Editor.

Charles Tilly is University Distinguished Professor at the New School for Social Research.  His most recent work is European Revolutions (1993).

Henri Zukier is associate professor of psychology and history in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research.  He is currently completing a book entitled Genocide and Identity (forthcoming).
 
 

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