About The Author
Andrea L. Campbell
Dr. Andrea Louise Campbell is a Professor of Political Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Her interests include American politics, political behavior, public opinion, and political inequality, particularly their intersection with social welfare, health, and tax policies. She is the author of How Policies Make Citizens: Senior Citizen Activism and the American Welfare State and, with Kimberly J. Morgan, The Delegated Welfare State: Medicare, Markets, and the Governance of Social Provision. Her research has appeared in the American Political Science Review, Comparative Political Studies, Politics & Society, Political Behavior, and Health Affairs, among others. She holds an AB degree from Harvard and a PhD from UC Berkeley.
Benjamin Ginsberg
Dr. Benjamin Ginsberg is the Chair of the Center for Advanced Governmental Studies and David Bernstein Professor of Political Science at the Johns Hopkins University. He is the coauthor or author of more than 25 ebooks, including Downsizing Democracy: How America Sidelined Its Citizens and Privatized Its Public; The Consequences of Consent; Presidential Power: Unchecked and Unbalanced; The Worth of War; Politics by Other Means; and The Captive Public. Ginsberg received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1973. Before joining the Hopkins faculty in 1992, Ginsberg was Professor of Government at Cornell. His most recent ebooks are Why It Matters; What the Government Thinks of the People; and Analytics, Policy, and Governance.
Caroline J. Tolbert
Professor Caroline Tolbert is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Iowa, where she teaches the introductory American government course and was also awarded the Collegiate Scholar Award for excellence in research and teaching. Her research explores political behavior, American state politics, elections, and the Internet and politics. Professor Tolbert is coauthor of Digital Citizenship: The Internet Society and Participation; Virtual Inequality: Beyond the Digital Divide; and Why Iowa? How Caucuses and Sequential Elections Improve the Presidential Nominating Process. Digital Citizenship was ranked one of 20 best-selling titles in the social sciences by the American Library Association in 2007. Her latest co-authored scholarly book is Digital Cities: The Internet and the Geography of Opportunity. She is also the President of the State Politics and Policy Section of the American Political Science Association.
Margaret Weir
Professor Margaret Weir is a Professor of Sociology and Political Science at the UC Berkeley. She has written widely on social policy in the United States and Europe. She is the author of Politics and Jobs: The Boundaries of Employment Policy in the United States and co-author of Schooling for All: Class, Race, and the Decline of the Democratic Ideal. Professor Weir has also edited The Politics of Social Policy in the United States.
Theodore J. Lowi
Dr. Theodore J. Lowi has been John L. Senior Professor of American Institutions at Cornell University since 1972. He was elected President of the American Political Science Association in 1990 and was cited as the political scientist who made the most significant contribution to the field during the decade of the 1970s. Among his numerous ebooks are The Pursuit of Justice on which he collaborated with Robert F. Kennedy and The End of Liberalism.
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