Radical Republicanism
Recovering the Tradition's Popular Heritage
Edited by Bruno Leipold, Karma Nabulsi, and Stuart White
Author Information
Edited by Bruno Leipold, Fellow in Political Theory, London School of Economics, Karma Nabulsi, Fellow and Tutor in Politics, St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford, and Stuart White, Fellow and Tutor in Politics, Associate Professor of Politics, Jesus College, University of Oxford
Bruno Leipold is a Fellow in Political Theory at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He completed his DPhil at the University of Oxford and has held postdoctoral positions at the European University Institute and the Justitia Amplificata Centre for Advanced Studies at the Goethe University of Frankfurt and the Free University of Berlin.
Karma Nabulsi is Fellow and Tutor in Politics at St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford. She writes and lectures on 18th and 19th century republicanism, revolutions, and democracy, as well as on Palestine, especially Palestinian refugees.
Stuart White is Fellow in Politics at Jesus College, Oxford, having formerly taught in the Department of Political Science, M.I.T. His research is focused on democracy, republican values, and the economy, with related interests in both social policy and the political process. He is the author of The Civic Minimum (2003). He blogs occasionally at openDemocracy.
Contributors:
Guy Aitchison, University of Loughborough
Alan Coffee, King's College London
Dorothea Gädeke, Utrecht University
Alex Gourevitch, Brown University
Sudhir Hazareesingh, University of Oxford
Bruno Leipold, London School of Economics and Political Science
John P. McCormick, University of Chicago
Karma Nabulsi, University of Oxford
Banu Turnaoglu, University of Cambridge
Stuart White, University of Oxford