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Author Index

A      B      C      D      E      F      G      H      I      J      K      L      M      N      O      P      Q      R      S      T      U      V      W      XYZ

author bios: c
Bios as of the time of publication. Please use your browser's search function [ctrl/cmd-F] to find authors by last name. 

David Cahan

David Cahan is the Charles Bessey professor of history at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. He has edited three books by or about Hermann von Helmholtz and is writing a biography on him. His other work as an editor includes, From Natural Philosophy to the Sciences: Writing the History of Nineteenth-Century Science (2003).

Edmond Cahn

Edmond Cahn, awarded the Phillips Prize in Jurisprudence by the American Philosophical Society in 1955, is a professor of law at New York University. He is the author of The Sense of Injustice (1949) and The Moral Decision (1955)

Werner J. Cahnman

Werner J. Cahnman is the professor emeritus of sociology at Rutgers University. He is the author of Ferdinand Toennies: A New Evaluation (1973)

Craig Calhoun

Craig Calhoun is the president of the Social Science Research Council and a university professor of the social sciences at New York University. He is the author of the prizewinning Neither Gods Nor Emperors: Students and the Struggle for Democracy in China (1994) and other books, including, Lessons of Empire (2005), and he is the editor-in-chief of the Oxford Dictionary of the Social Sciences

Daniel Callahan

Daniel Callahan, a cofounder and the director of the Hastings Center, is the author of The Tyranny of Survival (1973). 

 

Agnès Callamard

Agnès Callamard is the director of Columbia University's Global Freedom of Expression initiative and a special adviser to the president of Columbia University, Lee Bollinger. She was appointed the UN Special Rapporteur on Extra-Judicial summary or arbitrary executions on August 1, 2016.

David P. Calleo

David P. Calleo of the School of Advanced International Studies at John Hopkins University is the author, with Benjamin M. Rowland, of America and the World Political Economy (1973). 

Charles Camic

Charles Camic is a professor of sociology at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He is currently studying historical changes in the conceptual vocabularies by which social thinkers have viewed the human individual, concentrating especially on the language of character. He is completing his book, The Cosmopolitan Local: Talcott Parsons, the Making of an American Social Theorist.

Carlos Oliva Campos

Carlos Oliva Campos is a professor of history at the University of Havana with a specialization in Cuba's relations with the Americas. He is also the coordinator of a research group, the Network on Regional Integration in Latin America and the Caribbean, and author and editor of numerous books, including US National Security Concerns in Latin America and the Caribbean (2014).

Aysen Candas 

Aysen Candas (Columbia University, PhD) is a political scientist. Before she resigned, she was a faculty member at Bogazici University’s Political Science and International Relations department. She is a Peace Academic and among the founders of various civil society-based initiatives that defends the rule of law, gender equality, and various minorities’ rights.

Margaret Canovan

Margaret Canovan is a professor at Keele University. Her recent publications include Nationhood and Political Theory (1996) and Hannah Arendt: A Reinterpretation of her Political Thought (1992). She is currently working on a book about the concept of the people.

Maggie Cao

Maggie M. Cao is the David G. Frey assistant professor of art history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her research focuses on the intersection of art with histories of technology, natural science, and economics in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. She is the author of The End of Landscape in Nineteenth-Century America (2018).

Arthur L. Caplan

Arthur L. Caplan is an associate director of the Hastings Center. He edited, most recently, Which Babies Shall Live? (1985)

Christopher Cappozzola

Christopher Capozzola is an associate professor of history at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is author of Uncle Sam Wants You: World War I and The Making of the Modern American Citizen (2008)

Donald Capps

Donald Capps is an assistant professor in the Divinity School at the University of Chicago. He is working on a book titled, Psychology of Religion: Basic Foundations

Alberto Caracciolo

Alberto Caracciolo is a professor of modern history at the University of Perugia. 

Enrico Carisich

Alongside Loraine Rickard-Martin, Enrico Carisich is the founding partners in CCSI, an advisory group of former UN sanctions experts, conflict resolution practitioners, and advisers in sanctions compliance, implementation training, and national capacity building projects. They have served as advisers to security council sanctions committees and on expert sanctions monitoring groups for Somalia, Liberia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Sudan, among others.

Elof Axel Carlson

Elof Axel Carlson, the distinguished teaching professor emeritus in the department of biochemistry and cell biology at Stony Brook University, is a noted geneticist and historian of science. His recent books include Times of Triumph, Times of Doubt: Science and the Battle for Public Trust (2006) and Neither Gods Nor Beasts: How Science is Changing Who We Think We Are (2008). 

Henry Carsch

Henry Carsch is an associate professor of political and social studies at Queens University in Kingston, Ontario. He has examined in great detail many of the sociological aspects of fairy tales and is writing a book on culture and personality in literature. 

Matt Cartmill

Matt Cartmill is a professor of biological anthropology and anatomy at Duke University Medical Center. He is the author of Significant Others (1995) and Reinventing Anthropology (1994).

Eric J. Cassell

Eric J. Cassell, a practicing physician, is a clinical professor of public health at Cornell University Medical College. He wrote The Healer's Art (1976). 

David C. Cassidy

David C. Cassidy is an associate professor of chemistry at Hofstra College. He wrote Uncertainty: The Life and Science of Werner Heisenberg (1991). 

Ernst Cassirer

Ernst Cassirer (1874–1945) was a German philosopher who specialized in the works of Immanuel Kant. He was a professor at Hamburg University (1919–1933). He left Germany and taught at Oxford University (1933–1935), University of Göteborg in Sweden (1935–1941), Yale University (1941–1944), and Columbia University (1944–1945). His publications include Philosophy of Symbolic Forms (3 vols., 1923–1929) and Essay on Man (1944).

Emanuele Castano

Emanuele Castano, an associate professor at the New School for Social Research, is a social and political psychologist focusing on nationalism and international relations, intergroup conflict and reconciliation, and collective responsibility. His articles have appeared in numerous journals and edited collections.

Cornelius Castoriadis

Cornelius Castoriadis is a psychoanalyst who lives in Paris. His best known book is L'institution Imaginaire de la Société (1975). He is cofounder of the journal Socialisme ou Barbarie.

Teresa Garcia Castro

Teresa Garcia Castro is pursuing an MA in US foreign policy and national security at American University, where she is a research assistant and was the recipient of the Hall of Nations Award. Originally from Cuba, she completed her BA in international relations at the Institute of International Relations in Havana.

Ralph Della Cava

Ralph Della Cava is a professor of history at Queens College of the City University of New York.

Jo Ann Cavallo

Jo Ann Cavallo, a professor of Italian at Columbia University, works primarily on Italian Renaissance literature, including Machiavelli's opus. Her publications include The World beyond Europe in the Romance Epics of Boiardo and Ariosto (2013) and "Machiavelli and Women" in Vilches and Seamen (2007).

Stanley Cavell

Stanley Cavell is the Walter M. Cabot professor of aesthetics and the general theory of value at Harvard University. His most recent book is Conditions Handsome and Unhandsome: The Constitution of Emersonian Perfectionism (1990). 

Peter Caws

Peter Caws, a university professor of philosophy at George Washington University, is the author of Sartre (1979).

Miguel Centeno

Miguel Centeno is an assistant professor of sociology at Princeton University. He recently wrote Democracy within Reason: Technocratic Revolution in Mexico (1994) and co-edited Toward a New Cuba? (with Mauricio Font, 1998).

Umberto Cerroni

Umberto Cerroni is a professor at the University of Lecce, Italy. He has published books on Kant, Marx, and Soviet Russia and is at present completing a group of essays, La Liberta dei Moderni.

Jocelyne Cesari

Jocelyne Cesari is a professor of religion and politics at University of Birmingham; visiting professor of Religion, Violence, and Peacebuilding at Harvard Divinity School; and senior fellow at the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs (Georgetown). Her books include Islam, Gender, and Democracy in Comparative Perspective (2017), and What Is Political Islam? (2018).

Ch'u Chai

Ch'u Chai was for many years a professor of jurisprudence and philosophy at Chinese universities. He is now engaged in a translation of Chinese classics, the first of which, The Works of Lao Tzu, is about to be published. 

Gregory Chaitin

Gregory Chaitin is a mathematician, the creator of algorithmic information theory, the discoverer of the remarkable Omega number, and the creator of the field of metabiology, which views evolution as a random walk in software space. Among his books are Algorithmic Information Theory (1987), Conversations with a Mathematician (2002), Meta Math! (2005), and Proving Darwin (2012).

Sumita S. Chakravarty

Sumita S. Chakravarty is an associate professor of media studies at The New School. She has published widely on Indian popular cinema, cultural studies, and globalization. 

Katayoun Chamany

Katayoun Chamany is a faculty member in the Science, Technology, and Society program of Eugene Lang College at The New School. She uses a sociopolitical approach to teach courses in the area of infectious diseases, cell biology, and genetics.

Paul Chan

Paul Chan is an artist based in New York.

James Chandler

James Chandler is William B. Ogden Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of English at the University of Chicago and interim chair of the Department of Cinema and Media Studies for 2023/24. His most recent book is Doing Criticism: Across Literary and Screen Arts (2022). He is currently at work on a book about canonicity and criticism, Figures in a Field: Wordsworth and Edgeworth.

Michael J. Chandler

Michael J. Chandler is a professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia. His recent writing includes Shifting to an Interpretive Theory of Mind in The Age of Reason and Responsibility (1996).

David L. Chappell

David L. Chappell is the Irene & Julian Rothbaum professor of history at the University of Oklahoma. His books include A Stone of Hope: Prophetic Religion and the Death of Jim Crow (2004) and Walking From the Dream: The Battle Over Martin Luther King's Legacy (forthcoming)

Partha Chatterjee

Partha Chatterjee, a professor of political science at the Center for Studies in Social Sciences in Calcutta, was a visiting professor of anthropology in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research in 1991. He is the author of Nationalist Thought and the Colonial World (1986). 

Soumya Chattopadhyay

Soumya Chattopadhyay is a senior research analyst in the Global Economy and Development and Foreign Policy programs at the Brookings Institution and a doctoral student at the School of Public Policy, University of Maryland. 

Amit Chaudhuri

Amit Chaudhuri is a novelist, critic, poet, and musician. His latest novel is Friend of My Youth (2017). Finding the Raga, about his relationship to North Indian classical music, and Ramanujan, a book of poems, appeared in 2021. He is a professor of creative writing and director of the Centre for the Creative and the Critical, Ashoka University, and fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Chaw Ei Thein

Chaw Ei Thein, a painter and conceptual and performance artist, takes a feminist approach to portray the contradictions and conflictions of her sociopolitical environment. The recipient of the Elizabeth J. McCormack and Jerome I. Aaron fellowship in connection with the Asian Cultural Council in New York, she has lectured and exhibited extensively in and outside of Myanmar.

Nick Cheeseman

Nick Cheesman is a research fellow at the Australian National University. His doctoral dissertation, which won the University Prize and the President's Prize of the Asian Studies Association of Australia, has been published as Opposing the Rule of Law: How Myanmar's Courts Make Law and Order (2015). 

Yong Chen

Yong Chen is an associate professor of history at the University of California, Irvine. He is the author of the forthcoming Chop Suey USA: The Rise of Chinese Food in America, among other publications, and a frequent commentator on such topics as food, Asian-Americans, and American immigration and higher education. 

John Cheney-Lippold

John Cheney-Lippold teaches and writes on the relationship between digital media, identity, and the concept of privacy. He is the author of We Are Data: Algorithms and the Making of our Digital Selves (2017).

Marian R. Chertow

Marian R. Chertow, the director of the Industrial Environmental Management Program at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, has worked on solid waste issues since 1978. Her most recent book is Thinking Ecologically: The Next Generation of Environmental Policy (Yale 1997).

Melissa Chiu

Melissa Chiu is the director of the Smithsonian’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. She has authored and edited several books and catalogs on contemporary art, including Contemporary Art in Asia: A Critical Reader (2010), and has lectured at Harvard, Yale, Columbia, the Museum of Modern Art, and other universities and museums

Dennis Chong

Dennis Chong is chair and professor of political science at the University of Southern California and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur professor of political science at Northwestern University. He studies American national politics and has published extensively on issues of decision-making, public opinion, political psychology, and collective action.

Nusrat Sabina Chowdhury

Nusrat Sabina Chowdhury is an associate professor of anthropology at Amherst College. She is the author of Paradoxes of the Popular: Crowd Politics in Bangladesh (2019). Her ethnographic research is informed by theoretical questions around political communication and popular sovereignty, primarily in South Asia.

Nwankwo Chukuemeka

Nwankwo Chukwuemeka, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Howard University, has worked as an industrial engineer both in the United States and on the continent of Africa. He is the author of a recent book, African Dependencies: A Challenge to Western Democracy, and has published a number of articles in American and African periodicals.

Wang Chunguang

Wang Chunguang is a research fellow at the Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. He has done extensive work on migrations, including a book on the Zhejiangcun, the Wenzhou community in Beijing. He has also studied Wenzhou groups in Europe, as well as social stratification and mobility, rural nonorganizations, and rural social development in contemporary China.

Arista Maria Cirtautas

Arista Maria Cirtautas is an instructor in the Department of Government at Claremont McKenna College.

Christopher K. Clague

Christopher K. Clague, in the Department of Government at Claremont McKenna College of Economics, University of Maryland, is the author of several articles for economic journals and is currently doing work on tariff preferences and capital utilization in less-developed countries.

Brett Clark

Brett Clark is a professor of sociology at the University of Utah. His most recent book, with Foster, is The Robbery of Nature (2020).

John Maurice Clark

John Maurice Clark (1884–1963) is a noted economist who graduated from Amherst College in 1905 and received his PhD from Columbia University in 1910. He was a professor of economics at the University of Chicago (1922–1926) and Columbia University (1926–1957). He was awarded the Francis A. Walker Medal by the American Economic Association in 1952. His books include The Costs of the World War to the American People (1931) and Economics of Planning Public Works (1935).

Lee Clarke

Lee Clarke is an associate professor of sociology at Rutgers University. He is the author of Acceptable Risk? (1989), Mission Improbable (1999), and Worst Cases: Terror & Catastrophe in the Popular Imagination (2006). He is currently writing about problems of science, warnings, and political engagement. 

Priscilla P. Clarke

Priscilla P. Clark is an associate professor of French at the University of Illinois, Chicago Circle. 

Todd R. Clear

Todd Clear is the distinguished professor of criminal justice at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York. His books are Controlling the Offender in the Community (with V. O’Leary, 2003), Harm in American Penology: The Community Justice Ideal (with David Karp, 1994) and American Corrections (with G. Cole, 2006). 

Peter Clecak

Peter Clecak is a professor of social thought at the University of California, Irvine. His most recent book is Crooked Paths: Reflections on Socialism, Conservatism, and the Welfare State.

Nico Cloete

Nico Cloete is a full-time director at the Centre for Higher Education Transformation. He served as a research director for South Africa's National Commission on Higher Education and as a coordinator of the Post-Secondary Education Report of the National Education Policy Investigation. He is widely published in the fields of psychology, sociology, and education.

Richard A. Cloward

Richard A. Cloward is a professor in the Columbia University School of Social Work and the co-author, with Frances Fox Piven, of Why Americans Don't Vote (1988).

Alfred B. Clubok

Alfred B. Clubok, who was recently a Fulbright Fellow in Japan, was associated with Dr. Wit on the Michigan study. He is now a research assistant on a new atomic-energy research project. 

Juliet Clutton-Brock

Juliet Clutton-Brock is a member of the Department of Zoology at The Natural History Museum in London. She is the editor of the Journal of Zoology and recently published "Origins of the Dog: Domestication and Early History" in James Serpell's, editor, The Domestic Dog (1995).

A. W. Coats

A. W. Coats is the emeritus professor of economic and social history at the University of Nottingham.

Joan Cocks

Joan Cocks is a professor of politics and the chair of Critical Social Thought at Mount Holyoke College. She is the author of The Oppositional Imagination: Feminism, Critique, and Political Theory (Routledge, 1989), and her recent publications include "A New Cosmopolitanism? V.S. Naipaul and Edward Said" in Constellations (2000) and "From Politics to Paralysis: Critical Intellectuals Answer the National Question" in Political Theory (24:3, August 1996). 

Lorraine B. Code

Lorraine B. Code is an assistant professor of philosophy at Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario.

Alfred Cohen

Alfred Cohen, an assistant professor of history at Trenton State College, is teaching this summer at the California State College, Hayward. 

Bruce M. Cohen

Bruce M. Cohen is the president and psychiatrist-in-chief at McLean Hospital. He is also a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and the head of the Harvard Medical School Department of Psychiatry at McLean. In addition, Dr. Cohen is the director of the McLean Brain Imaging Program, including the Brain Imaging Center and Sleep Disorders Center.

David Cohen

Dov Cohen is an associate professor at the University of Illinois.  He is interested in issues of cultural persistence and change.

Eric Cohen 

Eric Cohen is the director of the Bio-technology and American Democracy program at the Ethics and Public Policy Center and the editor of The New Atlantis

Erik Cohen 

Erik Cohen, a lecturer of sociology at Hebrew University, Jerusalem, is the author of numerous works on sociology and is currently studying social change. 

Ethan Cohen 

Ethan Cohen founded the Ethan Cohen gallery in 1987 as Art Waves/Ethan Cohen in SoHo, New York City. The first gallery to present the Chinese avant-garde of the 1980s to the United States, it introduced the works of now celebrated artists, including Ai Weiwei, Xu Bing, Gu Wenda, Wang Keping, and Qiu Zhijie.

Jean Louise Cohen

Jean L. Cohen is a professor of political science at Columbia University. She is the author of Class and Civil Society: The Limits of Marxian Critical Theory (1982) and co-author of Civil Society and Political Theory (1992). Her latest book, Sex, Privacy, and the Constitution: Dilemmas of Regulating Intimacy, was published in 2002. 

Jerome Cohen

Jerome Cohen is the senior American expert on East Asian law. He teaches courses on Chinese law and society; comparative international law, analyzing how countries with a Confucian tradition relate to international laws and traditions of the West; and international business contracts and economic cooperation with East Asia.

Julie E. Cohen

Julie E. Cohen is a professor of law at the Georgetown University Law Center and a visiting professor at Harvard Law School. She is the author of The Networked Self: Copyright, Privacy, and the Production of Networked Space (2012).

Lawrence Cohen

Lawrence Cohen is a professor of social cultural anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. His current research projects include The Other Kidney, a collaborative project with Nancy Scheper-Hughes that engages with the nature of immunosuppression and its accompanying global traffic in organs for transplant.

Marc J. Cohen

Marc J.Cohen is the special assistant to the Director General of the International Food Policy Research Institute. His publications include the Bread for the World Institute's Annual Report of the State of World Hunger, and, most recently, Hunger in a Global Economy: Hunger 1998: Eighth Annual Report.

Michael Cohen

Michael Cohen is a professor of international affairs and the director of the Studley Graduate Program in International Affairs at The New School. He is currently completing a book on Argentina’s recovery from the economic crisis of 2001. 

Steven Cohen

Steven Cohen is the executive director and chief operating officer of the Earth Institute and a professor in the practice of public affairs at Columbia University. His publications include Sustainability Policy: Hastening the Transition to a Cleaner Economy (2015) and other books. He also writes a weekly blog for the Huffington Post.

Ted Cohen

Ted Cohen is an associate professor of philosophy and general studies in the humanities at the University of Chicago. He is currently editing Essays in Kant's Aesthetics with Paul Guyer.

Jean-Marc Coicaud

Jean-Marc Coicaud, Distinguished Professor of Law and Global Affairs, Rutgers School of Law, Rutgers University, studies legal and political theory, international law, international relations, and International organizations. He previously served as a senior official with the United Nations in the United States and Asia.

David Colander

David Colander is an associate professor of economics at the University of Miami and co-author of MAP: A Market Anti-Inflation Plan (1980).

Gerhard Cole

Gerhard Colm (1897–1968), who was one of the original members of the New School's Graduate Faculty, then known as the University in Exile, was Chief Economist of the National Planning Association. Formerly, he was in the service of the United States government; during 1946–1952, he was the senior economist in the President's Council of Economic Advisers. In his many writings, he dealt especially with questions of public finance and fiscal policy. 

Jonathan Cole

Jonathan Cole is the John Mitchell Mason professor of the University at Columbia University, where he was provost and dean of faculties from 1989 to 2003. His publications in sociology of science, science policy, and higher education include The Great American University: Its Rise to Preeminence, Its Threatened Future (forthcoming 2010).

Paul Collier

Paul Collier is the director for the Center for the Study of African Economies, a professor of economics at the University of Oxford, and a fellow of St. Antony’s College. His latest book is The Plundered Planet: How to Reconcile Prosperity with Nature (2010). 

H. M. Collins

H. M. Collins is a professor of sociology and the director of the Science Studies Centre at the University of Bath. He wrote Artificial Experts (1990).

Ronald K. L. Collins

Ronald K. L. Collins is the Harold S. Shefelman Scholar at the University of Washington School of Law and a fellow at the Newseum's First Amendment Center in Washington D.C. He is the co-author of several books, including We Must Not be Afraid to be Free (2011), and the editor of The Fundamental Holmes: A Free Speech Chronicle and Reader (2010). In 2010, he was selected as a Norman Mailer fellow in fiction writing.

Juan Cole

Juan Cole is the Richard P. Mitchell collegiate professor of history at the University of Michigan.  He is author of Muhammad: Prophet of Peace Amid the Clash of Empires (2018), The New Arabs (2014), Engaging the Muslim World (2009), and Napoleon's Egypt (2007), among other books.

Rita R. Colwell

Rita R. Colwell is a chairman of Canon US Life Sciences, Inc.; a distinguished university professor at the University of Maryland, College Park; and a faculty member of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Jean Comaroff

Jean Comaroff is the Alfred North Whitehead professor of African and African American studies and anthropology at Harvard University and an honorary professor at the University of Cape Town. Her publications include Body of Power, Spirit of Resistance: The Culture and History of a South African People (1985) and The Truth About Crime: Sovereignty, Knowledge, Social Order (with John L. Comaroff, 2016).

William E. Connolly

William E. Connolly is the Krieger-Eisenhower professor of political science at John Hopkins University. His most recent books include Capitalism and Christianity, American Style (2008) and the forthcoming A World of Becoming.

Gordon Conway

Gordon Conway is the president of the Rockefeller Foundation and was previously the vice chancellor at the University of Sussex, as well as the director of the Sustainable Agriculture Programme at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED). His published works include After the Green Revolution: Sustainable Agriculture for Development (1990).

Werner Conze

Werner Conze is professor of modern and social history and the director of the Historical Seminar and of the Institut fur Sozial-und Wirtschaftsgeschichte at the University of Heidelberg. He has written extensively in the field of social history.

Lewis A. Coser

Lewis A. Coser is distinguished professor of sociology at the State University of New York—Stony Brook. His most recent book is Greedy Institutions (1974), and he is now engaged in a large-scale study of the publishing industry to be called, Gatekeepers of Ideas.

Gustavo Costa

Gustavo Costa is a professor and the chairman of the Department of Italian at the University of California, Berkeley. His most recent book is La leggenda dei secoli d'oro nella letteratura italiana (1972). 

Holland Cotter

Holland Cotter has been a staff art critic at the New York Times since 1998. In 2009, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism for coverage that included articles on art in China. His subjects range from Italian Renaissance painting to street-based communal work by artist collectives. For the Times, he has written widely about “non-Western” art and culture.

Jeff Coulter

Jeff Coulter is a professor of sociology and associate faculty of philosophy at Boston University. His most recent book is Mind in Action (1989). 

Jean Cournut

Jean Cournut, a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, is a member of the Psychoanalytic Society of Paris. 

William Cowper

Biography not available.

Richard Cox

Richard Cox, an associate professor of political science at the State University of New York, Buffalo, has published a book, Locke on War and Peace, and several essays in political philosophy. A second book, The State in International Relations, will appear later this year.

Margaret E. Crahan

Margaret E. Crahan is the director of the Cuba Program at the Institute of Latin American Studies at Columbia University. She serves on the executive committee of the Inter-American Institute of Human Rights and is a member of the Latin American Program of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. She has published over a hundred articles and books, including Religion, Culture and Society: The Case of Cuba (2003).

Robert Paul Craig

Robert Paul Craig is an assistant professor of philosophy and education at St. Mary's College. He is the editor of Issues in Philosophy and Education (1973).

Vincent Crapanzano

Vincent Crapanzano, distinguished professor of comparative literature and anthropology at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, has written extensively on trance, possession, ecstasy, and mental illness. His books include Hermes? Dilemma and Hamlet’s Desire: On the Epistemology of Interpretation (1992) and Serving the Word: From the Pulpit to the Bench (1999).

Alice Crary

Alice Crary is an assistant professor of philosophy at the Graduate Faculty, New School University. She has published articles on moral psychology, meta-ethics, philosophy and literature, feminist theory, J. L. Austin, Wittgenstein, and other issues and figures. She is a co-editor of The New Wittgenstein (2000) and is currently writing a book on ethics, entitled The Moral Life of Language.

Bernard Crick

Bernard Crick is a professor of politics at Birkbeck College, University of London. He is the author of Political Theory and Practice (1974).

Simon Critchley

Simon Critchley is the Hans Jonas Professor at the New School for Social Research. His many books include Very Little . . . Almost Nothing (1997), Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance (2007), The Book of Dead Philosophers (2008), and The Faith of the Faithless: Experiments in Political Theology (2012).

Vicki Croke

Vicki Croke is the Animal Beat columnist for The Boston Globe. She is currently writing The Modern Ark: Zoos Past, Present, and Future

Gary Cross

Gary Cross is a distinguished professor of modern history and the director of Graduate Studies at Pennsylvania State University. His research focuses on late industrial society in Western Europe, England, and the United States with respect to family, work, leisure, popular culture, and technology. His books include Time and Money: The Making of Consumer Culture (1993).

Zoë Crossland

Zoë Crossland is an associate professor of anthropology at Columbia University. She is working on a forthcoming book, entitled The Speaking Corpse, which explores the evidence of the forensic corpse, the ways in which it is explained and delineated for popular consumption, and the history that lies behind the treatment of the dead as evidence.

Michel Crozier

Michel Crozier, director of the Center for the Sociology of Organizations, Paris, is the author of The Bureaucratic Phenomenon and World of the Office Worker.

Arely Cruz-Santiago

Arely Cruz-Santiago is a doctoral researcher based at Durham University’s department of geography. A co-investigator on the ESRC (UK)-sponsored Citizen-Led Forensics project, she has been president of the Mexican NGO Gobernanza Forense Ciudadana since 2012.

Maria Csanadi

Maria Csanadi is a member of the Institute of Economic Sciences in Budapest. 

György Csepeli

György Csepeli is a professor of social psychology at the Institute of Sociology, ELTE University, Budapest. He recently contributed "The Role of Fear in Ethnic and National Conflicts" in Eastern Europe to Grappling with Democracy: Deliberations on Post-Communist Societies (1996).

Robert D. Cumming

Robert D. Cumming is the Woodbridge professor of philosophy at Columbia University. His most recent book is Starting Point: An Introduction to the Dialectic of Existence (1979). 

Paisley Currah

Paisley Currah teaches political science at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. He is co-editor of Corpus: An Interdisciplinary Reader on Bodies and Knowledge (Palgrave 2011) and Transgender Rights (Minnesota 2006). His book The United States of Gender will be published by NYU Press.

John T. Curtin

John T. Curtin is a Senior US District Judge in the Western District of New York. Among his most notable cases are the Love Canal case, the Buffalo school desegregation case, and the Donald "Sly" Green criminal drug case. He is the author of "From the Bench: A System that Works" (in Litigation, 1999) and Drug Policy Alternatives—A Response from the Bench.

Neil Curtis

Neal Curtis is an associate professor in the School of Cultures, Modern Languages, and Area Studies. He is a member of the Centre for Critical Theory and has published Against Autonomy: Lyotard, Judgement, and Action (Ashgate 2001) and War and Social Theory: World, Value, Identity (Palgrave 2006). He is currently working on two projects. The first is on capitalism and privatization to be published by Pluto Press. The second, on sovereignty and superheroes, will be published by Manchester University Press.

E. O. Czempiel

E. O. Czempiel is a professor of political science at Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main.

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