Accademici a Obama e Mogherini:
riportare i diritti umani in Turchia

Da Reset-Dialogues on Civilizations 

Reset-Doc è lieta di sostenere e condividere le seguenti lettere che centinaia di accademici, intellettuali e politici, da tutto il mondo, hanno mandato sia ai vertici del Governo degli Stati Uniti, Barack Obama, John Kerry e Ashton Carter, che ai vertici dell’Unione Europea, Federica Mogherini e Thorbjørn Jagland. Pur essendo contrari ad ogni tentativo di rovesciare l’ordinamento democratico attraverso colpi di stato militari, condannano duramente le purghe attuate dal Governo turco in violazione dei diritti umani e dello stato di diritto. I firmatari chiedono, quindi, che sia l’Unione Europa che gli Stati Uniti non rimangano indifferenti di fronte a questa situazione ma che critichino profondamente queste violazioni, che esaminino e monitorino la situazione, e esigano l’immediata liberazione di tutti coloro che sono stati arbitrariamente arrestati e detenuti a seguito del fallito golpe.

Lettera aperta a: Federica Mogherini, Alto Rappresentante dell’Unione per gli affari esteri e la politica di sicurezza e Vicepresidente della Commissione e Thorbjørn Jagland, Segretario generale del Consiglio d’Europa

Venerdì 15 luglio la Turchia è stata vittima di un tentativo di colpo di Stato che ha provocato più di 200 vittime, per la maggior parte civili, e più di 1400 feriti. Subito dopo, il Governo turco ha avviato un’epurazione su larga scala e del tutto sproporzionata in seno all’apparato statale. Dal giorno in cui ha avuto luogo il fallito colpo di Stato, fino al 20 luglio 2016, il numero complessivo di epurazioni (sospensione dagli incarichi e arresti) nel servizio pubblico ammonta a più di 61.000 persone. Le purghe hanno colpito in particolare i seguenti settori: ministero della Giustizia (2.875 giudici e pubblici ministeri); Ufficio del Primo ministro (257 dipendenti); ministero degli Affari interni (8.777 agenti di Polizia, Gendarmeria, governatori di distretti provinciali, governatori locali e personale); ministero dell’Istruzione nazionale (21.738 dipendenti sospesi); Consiglio dell’Educazione Superiore (116 professori, compresi 4 rettori, più 1.577 presidi di facoltà cui è stato chiesto di dimettersi); ministero della Famiglia e delle Politiche sociali (393 impiegati statali); ministero delle Finanze (1.500 dipendenti); Agenzia di Intelligence nazionale (100 dipendenti); Autorità di Regolamentazione del Mercato energetico (25 dipendenti); ministero dello Sviluppo (16 dipendenti); ministero delle Foreste e delle Risorse idriche (197 dipendenti); ministero dell’Energia e delle Risorse naturali (300 dipendenti); ministero dello Sport e della Gioventù (245 dipendenti); ministero dell’Ambiente e dell’Urbanizzazione (70 dipendenti); Consiglio supremo per Radio e Tv (29 dipendenti); Agenzia di Regolazione e Supervisione bancaria (86 dipendenti); ministero del Commercio e delle Dogane (176 dipendenti); Autorità garante della Concorrenza (8 dipendenti); Corte militare d’Appello (35 dipendenti); ministero della Difesa (7 dipendenti); Borsa di Istanbul (51 dipendenti).

È stata revocata la licenza di insegnamento a 21.000 docenti di scuole private.

È probabile che i prossimi saranno gli accademici. Migliaia di universitari erano già sotto inchiesta, con l’accusa di “dare sostegno” alle attività terroristiche, per aver difeso la popolazione curda nel Sud-Est della Turchia, sottoposta nel corso dell’ultimo anno a un attacco esteso e letale da parte delle forze regolari turche.

Secondo numerose fonti – tra queste il Commissario europeo per la Politica di vicinato e i Negoziati per l’allargamento Johannes Hahn – la lista delle persone da arrestare era già pronta prima che iniziasse il colpo di Stato. Alcune di queste fonti asseriscono che il colpo di stato è stato messo in atto come extrema ratio contro tali liste.

Il Primo ministro turco ha sospeso le ferie di più di tre milioni di dipendenti pubblici in tutto il Paese, e ai dipendenti del settore pubblico è stato vietato di viaggiare all’estero. Inoltre, secondo un’intervista rilasciata alla CNN il 18 luglio 2016, il Presidente turco Recep Tayyip Erdoğan non ha escluso la possibilità di ripristinare la pena di morte nel Paese. Nel frattempo, il Governo ha dichiarato lo stato d’emergenza e la sospensione temporanea della Convenzione europea dei Diritti umani, come consentito dall’articolo 15 CEDU. Questo articolo non permette però di venir meno al rispetto dei principi fondamentali sanciti dalla Convenzione.

Non esiste più, in conclusione, un sistema di pesi e contrappesi. Secondo alcuni resoconti, le persone messe sotto custodia non riescono a trovare avvocati difensori, perché nessuno si esporrebbe al rischio di difenderle e di entrare così a far parte della lista delle epurazioni.

La Turchia è firmataria della Convenzione europea dei Diritti dell’Uomo e del Protocollo n. 6 della CEDU riguardante l’abolizione della pena di morte. Come Paese candidato all’adesione all’UE, la Turchia si è anche impegnata al pieno rispetto dei criteri di Copenhagen, tra cui la presenza di istituzioni stabili che garantiscano la democrazia, lo stato di diritto, i diritti umani e il rispetto e la protezione delle minoranze, oltre all’abolizione della pena capitale.

Noi, firmatari di questa lettera, condanniamo ogni tentativo di rovesciare l’ordinamento democratico attraverso colpi di stato militari. Al tempo stesso, tuttavia, condanniamo le purghe attuate dal Governo turco in violazione dei diritti umani e dello stato di diritto. Il principio di indipendenza e d’imparzialità del potere giudiziario – insieme alla libertà dei media – è alla base dello stato di diritto e della democrazia. L’indipendenza politica dei corpi insegnanti fa parte delle condizioni di esistenza di una società libera.

Chiediamo all’Alto Rappresentante / Vice Presidente Federica Mogherini, così come al Segretario generale del Consiglio d’Europa Thorbjørn Jagland, di seguire da vicino la situazione in Turchia per quanto riguarda il rispetto dei diritti umani e dello stato di diritto, e chiediamo di esigere l’immediata liberazione di tutti coloro che sono stati arbitrariamente arrestati e detenuti a seguito del fallito colpo di Stato militare.

Ricordiamo il recente disegno di legge adottato dal Parlamento turco che revoca l’immunità dai procedimenti giudiziari per 138 parlamentari, appartenenti per lo più al partito di opposizione HDP e alla minoranza curda. Tutto sembra suggerire che il colpo di Stato offra al Governo turco l’occasione di limitare ulteriormente il ruolo delle opposizioni e la loro funzione di vigilanza democratica. Poco dopo il suo arrivo a Istanbul, la mattina del 16 luglio, Erdogan ha affermato: “Questa insurrezione è un dono di Allah, perché ci consentirà di ripulire le forze armate”.

Chiediamo quindi all’Alto Rappresentante / Vice Presidente Mogherini di esaminare la situazione, prestando particolare attenzione alla condizione della minoranza curda e delle altre minoranze nel Paese. Esortiamo allo stesso modo il Segretario Generale Thorbjørn Jagland, perché ricordi al Governo turco l’obbligo di rispettare la Convenzione europea dei Diritti dell’Uomo e tutti i suoi Protocolli, che comprendono il diritto alla vita, al giusto processo, alla protezione da arresti arbitrari.

Sollecitiamo inoltre l’Alto Rappresentante / Vice Presidente Mogherini affinché chieda al Consiglio europeo di sospendere immediatamente l’accordo UE-Turchia firmato il 18 marzo 2016, alla luce dei recenti sviluppi e in considerazione del fatto che già al momento della firma dell’accordo la Turchia non era un “paese sicuro” per rifugiati e richiedenti asilo.

Infine chiediamo a tutti gli Stati membri dell’UE di impegnarsi con forza presso il Governo turco affinché nel Paese siano pienamente ristabiliti lo stato di diritto e i principi democratici, come condizione essenziale per futuri rapporti diplomatici e per la continuazione dei negoziati di adesione.

Con i migliori saluti,

Barbara Spinelli – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Albena Azmanova – Professore associato in Political and Social Thought,University of Kent, Brussels School of International Studies, UK

Étienne Balibar – Filosofo, Professore Emerito presso l’Université de Paris-Ouest, Francia, e Anniversary Chair in Modern European Philosophy, Kingston University London, UK

Seyla Benhabib – Eugene Mayer Professor in Political Science and Philosophy, Yale University, USA

Sophie Bessis – Storica, ricercatrice presso l’Institut de relations internationales et stratégiques di Parigi, Francia e Tunisia

Hamit Bozarslan – Storico e politologo, Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales di Parigi, Francia

Susan Buck-Morss – Filosofa politica, CUNY Graduate Center, NYC, USA

Judith Butler – Maxine Elliot Professor in Comparative Literature and Critical Theory, University of California, Berkeley, USA

Claude Calame – Storico e antropologo, Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales di Parigi, Francia

Joseph H. Carens – FRSC Professor in Political Science, University of Toronto, Canada

Maeve Cooke – Membro della Royal Irish Academy, MRIA School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Irlanda

Vincent Duclert – Storico, Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales di Parigi, Francia

Didier Fassin – Professore in Social Sciences, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, USA

Éric Fassin – Professore in Sociologie, Université de Paris-8, Francia

Shelley Feldman – International Professor, Cornell University, USA

Peter Geschiere – Emeritus professor of anthropology, University of Amsterdam and Leiden University, NL

Michael Hardt – Professor, Duke University, USA

David Harvey – Distinguished Professor, Graduate Center of the City University of New York, USA

Marianne Hirsch – William Peterfield Trent Professor in English and Comparative Literature e Direttrice dell’Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality, Columbia University, USA

Philip Hogh – Philosophy Department, Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg, Germania

Jean E. Howard – George Delacorte Professor in Humanities, Department of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University, USA

Julia Koenig – Institute for Social Pedagogy and Adult Education, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main

Elena Loizidou – Reader in Law and Political Theory at School of Law, Birkbeck, University of London, UK

Sandro Mezzadra – Professore di Teoria politica, Università di Bologna, Italia

Jennifer Nedelsky – Faculty of Law and Political Science, University of Toronto, Canada

Rosalind Petchesky – Distinguished Professor Emerita in Political Science, Hunter College & the Graduate Center, City University of New York, USA

Ilaria Possenti – Dipartimento di Scienze umane, Università di Verona, Italia

Mary Louise Pratt – Silver Professor, Professor Emerita of Social and Cultural Analysis, Spanish & Portuguese, Comparative Literature, New York University, USA

Lynne Segal – Anniversary Professor, Psychosocial Studies, Birkbeck College, University of London, UK

Vicky Skoumbi – Caporedattore del quotidiano αληthεια (Aletheia), Grecia

Céline Spector – Professore, Department de Philosophie Université Bordeaux Montaigne e membro onorario Institut Universitaire de France, Francia

Yanis Varoufakis – Professore in Economic Theory presso l’Università di Atene, ex-ministro delle Finanze e deputato del Parlamento greco, Grecia

Frieder Otto Wolf – Freie Universität Berlin, ex-deputato del Parlamento europeo, Germania

Vladimiro Zagrebelsky – ex Giudice della Corte Europea dei Diritti Umani

François Alfonsi – Presidente dell’European Free Alliance (EFA)

Brando Benifei – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo dell’Alleanza Progressista di Socialisti e Democratici (S&D)

José Bové – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

Nicola Caputo – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo dell’Alleanza Progressista di Socialisti e Democratici (S&D)

Fabio Massimo Castaldo – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Europa della Libertà e della Democrazia Diretta (EFDD- M5S)

Fabio De Masi – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Karima Delli – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

Pascal Durand – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

José Inácio Faria – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Alleanza dei Democratici e dei Liberali per l’Europa (ALDE)

Eleonora Forenza – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

María Teresa Giménez Barbat – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Alleanza dei Democratici e dei Liberali per l’Europa (ALDE)

Ana Maria Gomes – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo dell’Alleanza Progressista di Socialisti e Democratici (S&D)

Tania González Peñas – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Yannick Jadot – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

Benedek Jávor – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

Eva Joly – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

Josu Juaristi Abaunz – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Jude Kirton-Darling – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo dell’Alleanza Progressista di Socialisti e Democratici (S&D)

Stelios Kouloglou – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Merja Kyllönen – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Patrick Le Hyaric – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Paloma López Bermejo – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Lorena Lopez de Lacalle – Tesoriere della Treasurer European Free Alliance (EFA)

Marisa Matias – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Stefano Maullu – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo del Partito Popolare Europeo (PPE)

Marlene Mizzi – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo dell’Alleanza Progressista di Socialisti e Democratici (S&D)

Ulrike Müller – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Alleanza dei Democratici e dei Liberali per l’Europa (ALDE)

Javier Nart – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Alleanza dei Democratici e dei Liberali per l’Europa (ALDE)

Carolina Punset – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Alleanza dei Democratici e dei Liberali per l’Europa (ALDE)

Michèle Rivasi – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

Sofia Sakorafa – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Elly Schlein – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo dell’Alleanza Progressista di Socialisti e Democratici (S&D)

Helmut Scholz – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Branislav Škripek – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo dei Conservatori e Riformisti Europei (ECR)

Jordi Sole – Segretario generale della European Free Alliance (EFA)

Bart Staes – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

Dario Tamburrano – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Europa della Libertà e della Democrazia Diretta (EFDD- M5S)

Miguel Urbán Crespo – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Pello Urizar – Segretario Generale di Eusko Alkartasuna (Basque political party)

Ernest Urtasun – Deputato del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

Monika Vana – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

Marie-Christine Vergiat – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Sinistra unitaria europea/Sinistra verde Nordica (GUE/NGL)

Julie Ward – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo dell’Alleanza Progressista di Socialisti e Democratici (S&D)

Tatjana Ždanoka – Deputata del Parlamento europeo, Gruppo Verdi/ALE

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Letter to US Government Officials Concerning Recent Events in Turkey

Recipients:
Barack Obama, President of the United States
John Kerry, Secretary of State
Ashton Carter, Secretary of Defense

We write as academics and concerned citizens to express our strong condemnation of the current situation in Turkey. While we disapprove of the attempt to subvert the democratic process in Turkey through the military coup of July 15, 2016, President Erdogan’s response has gone beyond measures compatible with the rule of law and human rights, using the occasion to undertake a massive dismissal or suspension from duty of judges, military personnel, civil servants, university deans, and teachers. As of the most recent news this number has reached nearly 60, 000.

In addition, the Turkish government has suspended the annual leave of more than three million civil servants nationwide, and public sector employees are also banned from traveling abroad. Academics and university researchers are asked to request special approval from their superiors to attend scholarly conferences and other professional activities abroad. During an interview with CNN on July 18, Turkish President Erdoğan did not rule out the possibility of reinstating the death penalty. We fear that justice cannot be done in this situation. There are no checks and balances left; authoritarian presidential rule has taken over and in major military and civil society institutions the ideology of one party is beginning to dominate while opposition of any kind is being crushed. There are reports that those in custody cannot find lawyers, since no one dares defend them fearing to be added to the purge lists.

All the evidence suggests that the coup provided an opportunity for the Turkish government to further restrict the role of the legitimate political opposition and its function of democratic oversight a process already underway before the coup attempt. Shortly after arriving in Istanbul, on the day after the coup attempt, President Erdogan said “This insurgency is a blessing from Allah, because it will allow us to purge the military” of mutineers. He has gone far beyond punishment of the conspirators, however, to attack any who have ever questioned his policies.

Turkey is a signatory of the European Convention on Human Rights and, as a candidate for membership in the European Union, it has committed itself to the full observance of the Copenhagen criteria, including stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law, human rights, respect for and protection of minorities, and abolition of capital punishment. The current crackdown violates all of these commitments and ought not to be tolerated by the EU, by NATO, or by the government of the United States of America which considers Turkey its strong ally.

We, the undersigned, condemn the actions taken by the Turkish government in violation of human rights and the rule of law. The principle of independence and impartiality of the judiciary—together with freedom of the media—is at the foundation of the rule of law and democracy. The political independence and the academic freedom of the educational profession is essential for free societies.

We therefore call upon President Obama, Secretary of State Kerry, and Secretary of Defense Carter to strongly criticize the Turkish government’s violation of human rights, academic freedom and the rule of law and to refuse to accept anything but a reversal of these authoritarian policies.

U.S. Signatures: name, title and affiliation.

1. Seyla Benhabib, Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science and Philosophy, Yale University

2. Joan W. Scott, Professor Emerita, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study

3. Rudy Fichtenbaum, Wright State University, President AAUP

4. Henry Reichman, California State University, East Bay, First Vice-President; Chair, Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure, American Association of University Professors

5. David L. Ransel, Indiana University

6. Prof Joan Neuberger, The University of Texas at Austin

7. Lewis H. Siegelbaum, Michigan State University

8. Eve Levin, University of Kansas

9. Stephen Greenblatt, Harvard University

10. Robert Weinberg, Swarthmore College

11. Anne Friedman, Borough of Manhattan Community College, City University of New York, Member of AAUP Executive Council

12. John Castella, Rutgers University, AAUP/AFT Vice-President PTL, AAUP Council Member

13. Michele Ganon, Western Connecticut State University
Secretary-Treasurer American Association of University Professors

14. Brian Turner, Randolph-Macon College

15. Gregory D. Loving, AAUP National Council, University of Cincinnati

16. Richard Gomes, Rutgers University, AAUP-AFT

17. Sally Dear-Healey, President, New York State American Association of University Professors (NYSAAUP)

18. Ashlee Brand, Cuyahoga Community College, AAUP National Council

19. Jonathan Rees, Colorado State University – Pueblo, Co-President, AAUP Colorado Conference, AAUP National Council member

20. Leslie Bary, University of Louisiana at Lafayette

21. Risa Lieberwitz, Cornell University, General Counsel, AAUP

22. Kevin L. Cope, Louisiana State University, President, LSU Faculty Senate

23. Philip L Cole, Idaho State University

24. Howard Bunsis, Eastern Michigan University, Chair, AAUP Collective Bargaining Congress

25. Dr. Nancy McKenney, Eastern Kentucky University; President, Kentucky Conference of the American Association of University Professors

26. Nathan (Natalio) Avani, PhD, San Francisco State University, AAUP National Council Member

27. Dr. Linda Rouillard, University of Toledo; AAUP Council Member

28. William Chase, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa 15260

29. Michael Bérubé, Director, Institute for the Arts and Humanities, Pennsylvania State University

30. Debra Nails, Michigan State University

31. James L. Turk, Director of the Centre for Free Expression, Ryerson University

32. Eve Levin, University of Kansas; editor, Russian Review

33. Rei Terada, UC Irvine

34.Anthony Grafton, Princeton University.

35. Natalie Zemon Davis, Princeton University and University of Toronto

36. Chandler Davis, University of Toronto

37. Stephen F. Cohen, Princeton University and New York University

38. Marianna Tax Choldin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

39. Julie A. Carlson, UC Santa Barbara

40. Claudio Fogu, UC Santa Barbara

41. Constance Penley, University of California-Santa Barbara

42. Eyal Amira, UC Irvine

43. Michael DeCesare, Merrimack College, Member, AAUP National Council Chair, AAUP Committee on College and University Governance

44. Katie Trumpener, Emily Sanford Professor of Comparative Literature and English, Yale

45. Katerina Clark, Yale University, Professor of Comparative Literature and Slavic Languages, Yale University

46. Emily Greenwood, Professor of Classics, Yale University

47. Maurice Samuels, Betty Jane Anlyan Professor of French, Yale University

48. Laura Wexler, Dept of History and American Civilization, Yale University

49. Inderpal Grewal, Professor of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Yale University

50. Wendy Brown, Class of 1936 Chair, University of California, Berkeley

51. Carol Bernstein, Professor Emeritus, Bryn Mawr College

52. Richard Bernstein, Department of Philosophy, New School for Social Research

53. Benjamin Foster, Laffan Professor of Assyriology, Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations, Yale University

54. Gary Tomlinson, John Hay Whitney Professor of Music and Humanities and Director, Whitney Humanities Center, Yale University

55. Christopher L. Miller, Professor of African American Studies and French, Yale University

56. Jason Stanley, Professor of Philosophy, Yale University

57. Robert Gooding-Williams, M. Moran Weston/Black Alumni Council Professor of AfricanAmerican Studies and Professor of Philosophy, Columbia University

58. Simone Chambers, Professor of Political Science, University of California at Irvine

59. Gordon Rogoff, Professor of Dramaturgy and Dramatic Criticism, Yale School of Drama

60. Susan G. Clark, Joseph F. Cullman 3rd Adjunct Professor of Wildlife Ecology and Policy Sciences, School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University

61. Tim Barringer, Chair and Paul Mellon Professor, Department of the History of Art, Yale University

62. Carol Jacobs, Birgit Baldwin Professor of Comparative Literature and of Germanic Languages and Literatures, Yale University

63. Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor in the Department of Comparative Literature and the Program of Critical Theory, University of California Berkeley

64. John Protevi, Professor of French and of Philosophy, Louisiana State University

65. Robin S. Dillon, William Wilson Selfridge Professor of Philosophy, Lehigh University

66. Shamik Dasgupta, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of California, Berkeley

67. Christopher Dole, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Amherst College

68. Edward Kazarian, Instructor in Philosophy, Rowan University

69. Denise Ferreira da Silva, Associate Professor of Social Justice, University of British Columbia

70. Adam M. Rosenfeld, Lecturer in Philosophy, University of North Carolina Greensboro

71. Ajay Singh Chaudhary, Executive Director, Brooklyn Institute for Social Research

72. Gabriel Zamosc, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Colorado Denver

73. Stephen Zunes, Professor of Politics, University of San Francisco

74. John E. Drabinski, Charles Hamilton Houston 1915 Professor of Black Studies, Amherst College

75. Bruno Gulli, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Kingsborough Community College -CUNY

76. Steven Vogel, John and Christine Warner Professor of Philosophy, Denison University

77. Maya Mikdashi, Assistant Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies, Rutgers University

78. Isaac Rivera, Department of Geography and Environmental Science, University of Colorado Denver

79. Rebecca Bamford, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Quinnipiac University

80. Sabrina L. Hom, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Georgia College

81. Bernard W. Kobes, Faculty of Philosophy, Arizona State University

82. Tom Digby, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Springfield College

83. Ron Silliman, Lecturer in English, University of Pennsylvania

84. Jennifer Schenk Sacco, Associate Professor of Political Science, Quinnipiac University

85. Anat Biletzki, Albert Schweitzer Professor of Philosophy, Quinnipiac University

86. Jason Read, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Southern Maine

87. Sean Duffy, Professor of Political Science, Quinnipiac University

88. Ellen Miller, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Rowan University

89. Gina Zavota, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Kent State University

90. Mary Paddock, Associate Dean/Associate Professor of German, Quinnipiac University

91. Selah Saterstrom, Associate Professor of Creative Writing, The University of Denver

92. Zena Hitz, Faculty, St. John’s College

93. Renee Tursi, Associate Professor of English, Quinnipiac University

94. Jeffrey Flynn, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University

95. Sarah Surak, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Salisbury University

96. Adam Hosein, Assistant Prof. of Philosophy, University of Colorado, Boulder

97. Robb Eason, Senior Affiliated Faculty in Philosophy, Emerson College

98. Jaklin Kornfilt, Professor of Linguistics, Syracuse University

99. Jason Del Gandio, Temple University

100. Gregory Patrick Garvey, Professor of Game Design & Development, Quinnipiac University

101. Heather Pool, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Denison University

102. William Haver, Associate Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature, Binghamton University

103. Lynne Huffer, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Emory University

104. Justin E. H. Smith, Professor of Philosophy, Université Paris Diderot – Paris 7, formerly Professor of Philosophy, Bogaziçi University, Istanbul

105, Jeremy R. Bell, Professor of Philosophy, Georgia Southern University

106. Eva Feder Kittay, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy Emerita, Stony Brook University, SUNY

107. John Schwenkler, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Florida State University

108. Greg Recco, Tutor, St. John’s College

109. Matthew Boyle, Professor of Philosophy, University of Chicago

110. Adam J. Graves, Associate Professor of Philosophy, MSU Denver

111. Gregory J. Seigworth, Professor of Communication & Theatre, Millersville University

112. Anna-Sara Malmgren, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Stanford University

113. Charles Bernstein, Donald T. Regan Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of Pennsylvania

114. Laury Silvers, Sessional Instructor, Department for the Study of Religion, University of Toronto

115. Michelle Kisliuk, Associate Professor, Music, University of Virginia

116. Joshua Foa Dienstag, Professor of Political Science and Law, University of California, Los Angeles

117. Sarah Dalrymple, Clinical Faculty in Biology, Boise State University

118. Holly Andersen, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Simon Fraser University [US citizen]

119. Nikhil Anand, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania

120. Nancy Eberhardt, Professor of Anthropology, Knox College

121. Michael Nair-Collins, Assistant Professor of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, Florida State University

122. William E. Scheuerman, Professor of Political Science, Indiana University, Bloomington

123. Alexander Gourevitch, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Brown University

124. Rocío Zambrana, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Oregon

125. Jean L. Cohen, Nell and Herbert Singer Professor of Political Science and Contemporary Civilization, Columbia University

126. Wendy Chun, Professor of Modern Culture and Media, Brown University

127. Alexander Livingston, Assistant Professor of Government, Cornell University

128. Erin Pineda, Provost’s Postdoctoral Scholar in Political Science, University of Chicago

129. Inder S. Marwah, Assistant Professor of Political Science, McMaster University

130. Steven Levine, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Massachusetts Boston

131. Chad Kautzer, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Lehigh University

132. Bryan McGovern, Associate Professor of History, Kennesaw State University.

133. Michael Hoffmann, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Georgia Institute of Technology.

134. Alice Crary, Chair of the Department of Philosophy, The New School for Social Research, New York

135. Frederick Neuhouser, Professor of Philosophy, Barnard College, Columbia University

136. Gabriella Coleman, Associate Professor, McGill University, Montreal

137. Michael Rodríguez-Muñz, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Northwestern University

138. Emily Nacol, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Vanderbilt University

139. Karen Ng, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Vanderbilt University

140. Christopher F. Zurn, Professor of Philosophy, University of Massachusetts Boston

141. Charlotte Karem Albrecht, Assistant Professor of American Culture and Women’s Studies, University of Michigan – Ann Arbor

142. Chris Adamo, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Centenary University, New Jersey

143. Alexander Hughes, Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, MSU Denver, Colorado

144. Teresa Irene Gonzales, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Knox College, Illinois

145. Jeffrey S. Juris, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Northeastern University

146. Brian Talbot, Washington University in St. Louis

147. Linda Martín Alcoff, Professor of Philosophy, Hunter College, CUNY

148. Adam Dahl, Assistant Professor of Politics, University of the South

149. Joshua Cherniss, Assistant Professor of Government, Georgetown University

150. Max Shue, Spanish Faculty, College of Western Idaho

151. Zeki Saritoprak, Professor of Islamic Studies, John Carroll University, Cleveland, OH. 152. Karen Bray, Assistant Professor of Religion and Philosophy, Wesleyan College, Georgia

153. Millie Wilson, Faculty Emeritus, California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, CA

154. Elaine Miller, Professor, Miami University, Oxford, OH

155. Brendan Hogan, Clinical Assistant Professor, Global Liberal Studies, New York University

156. Theodore Christov, Asst Prof, George Washington University

157. Alexei Efros, Associate Professor of Computer Science, UC Berkeley

158. Greg Felker, Associate Professor of Politics, Willamette University

159. Sharyn Clough, Professor, School of History, Philosophy, and Religion, Oregon State University

160. Alyson Cole, Associate Professor, Political Science, Queens College & the Graduate Center, City University of New York

161. Franke Wilmer, Full Professor, Political Science, Montana State University

162. Susan L. Woodward, Full Professor, Political Science, Graduate Center of the City University of New York

163. Lauren Berlant, George M. Pullman Distinguished Service Professor of English, University of Chicago

164. Jurgen Braungardt, California State University East Bay, Philosophy Department

165. Andrew I. Port, Professor of History, Wayne State University

166. Jill Frank, Associate Professor of Government, Cornell University

167. David Palumbo-Liu, Louise Hewlett Nixon Professor, Stanford University

168. John C. Franklin, Associate Professor of Classics, University of Vermont

169. Christopher Stone, Associate Professor, Arabic, Hunter College (CUNY)

170. Kevin Funk, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Spring Hill College

171. Lynne Tirrell, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Massachusetts, Boston

172. Oyku Tekten, PhD Candidate in English, The Graduate Center (CUNY)

173. Al Kagan, Professor of Library Administration Emeritus, University of Illinois, Urbana/Champaign

174. Gabriel Oak Rabin, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, New York University

175. Laurie Cosgriff, Assistant Professor of Ancient Greek, Portland State University

176. Joseph R. Slaughter, Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University

177. Howard Pflanzer, Adjunct Associate Professor, English, Bronx Community College/CUNY

178. Patricia M. Locke, Tutor, St. John’s College, Annapolis

179. Georgia Warnke, Professor, Political Science, University of California, Riverside

180. Annick T.R. Wibben, Professor of Politics & International Studies, University of San Francisco

181. Baki Tezcan, Associate Professor of History, University of California, Davis

182. Alison McQueen, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Stanford University

183. Suzanne Bergeron, Professor of Women’s Studies and Social Sciences, University of Michigan Dearborn

184. Mark Warren, Professor of Political Science, University of British Columbia

185. Joanne Meyerowitz, Arthur Unobskey Professor of History and American Studies, Yale University

186. Nicholas Mowad, Professor of Philosophy, Chandler-Gilbert Community College.

187. Rossen Djagalov, Assistant Professor of Russian and Slavic Studies, New York University 188. Linda Gordon, University Professor of History, NYU

189. Aziz Rana, Professor of Law, Cornell Law School

190. Victor Bers, Professor of Classics, Yale University

191. John Demos, Samuel Knight Professor of History Emeritus, Yale University

192. Andrew Dilts, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Loyola Marymount University

193. Davide Panagia, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of California, Los Angeles

194. Jean E. Howard, George Delacorte Professor in the Humanities, Columbia University

195. Michael Fischer, Professor of Computer Science, Yale University

196. Rosalind Petchesky, Distinguished Professor Emerita of Political Science, Hunter College and the Graduate Center, CUNY, New York

197. Zillah Eisenstein, Distinguished-Scholar-in-Residence, Professor of Political Theory and Anti-Racist Feminism, Ithaca College

198. Julie Webber, Professor, Illinois State University

199. Raymond Duvall, Professor of Political Science and Special Assistant to the Provost, University of Minnesota

200. Jay M. Bernstein, University Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, New School for Social Research

201. Zehra Kabasakal Arat, Professor of Political Science, University of Connecticut at Storrs

202. Glenda Gilmore, Peter V. and C. van Woodward Professor of History, Yale University

203. Melvin Rogers, Scott Vaugh Chair in the Division of the Social Sciences and Associate Professor of African-American Studies and Political Science, UCLA

204. Jill Campbell, Professor of English, Yale University

205. Julia Driver, Professor of Philosophy, Washington University in St. Louis

206. John Medearis, Professor of Political Science, University of California, Riverside

207. Renate Bridenthal, emerita Professor of History, Brooklyn College, CUNY

208. Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, Professor of Political Science, Northwestern University

209. Erin McGlothlin, Associate Professor of German and Jewish Studies, Washington University in St. Louis

210. Ismail K. Poonawala, Professor Emeritus of Arabic and Islamic Studies, University of California, Los Angeles

211. Alice Bullard, former Professor of History, Georgia Institute of Technology, current President and CEO, IRA – USA (www.ira-usa.org/news)

212. Bonnie H. Honig, Nancy Duke Lewis Professor of Modern Culture and Media and Political Science, Brown University

213. Barbara Weinstein, Silver Professor of History, New York University

214. Naomi Scheman, Professor Emerita of Philosophy, University of Minnesota

215. Dan Wood, PhD Candidate, Philosophy, Villanova University

216. Michael Smith, McCosh Professor of Philosophy, Princeton University

217. Lisa Guenther, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Vanderbilt University

218. Simona Sharoni, Professor of Gender and Women’s Studies, SUNY Plattsburgh

219. Indra Levy, Associate Professor of Japanese & Comparative Literature, Stanford University

220. Steve Cohn, Professor of Economics, Knox College

221. Cory Wright, Associate Professor of Philosophy, California State University Long Beach 222. Candice L. Shelby, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Colorado Denver

223. Michael Oman-Reagan, Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Anthropology, Memorial University of Newfoundland – Critical Languages Scholar (2013), U.S. Department of State

224. John Rapko, Ph.D, Lecturer in Art History, College of Marin, and Lecturer in Philosophy, California College of the Arts

225. Mauricio Suchowlansky, Postdoctoral Fellow, School of Letters & Sciences, Arizona State University

226. Muhammad Shafiq, PhD. Professor of Religious Studies and Islamics, Executive Director, Hickey Center for Interfaith Studies and Dialogue, Nazareth College, Rochester, New York

227. Elizabeth Burbridge, ABD, Medieval History, Fordham University

228. Stephen Cory, Professor of History and Comparative Religion, Cleveland State University

229. John Evelev, Associate Professor of English, University of Missouri.

230. Thomas O. Beebee, Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of German and Comparative Literature, The Pennsylvania State University

231. Mustafa Gokcek, Associate Professor of History, Niagara University

232. Shelly Silver, Associate Professor, Visual Arts, School of the Arts, Columbia University

233. Megan Gallagher, Postdoctoral Research Associate, The Pembroke Center, Brown University

234. Patchen Markell, Associate Professor, Political Science, University of Chicago

235. Jack Jackson, Assistant Professor, Politics, Whitman College

236. Reed Kurtz, PhD Candidate, Department of Political Science, The Ohio State University

237. Nefertiti Takla, Ph.D. Candidate, Department of History, University of California, Los Angeles

238. Aaron P Smith, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Moraine Valley Community College

239. Joe Lockard, Associate Professor, English Department, Arizona State University

240. Michael Kremer, Mary R. Morton Professor of Philosophy, University of Chicago

241. S.N. Nyeck, Clarkson University

242. Elizabeth Bishop, History Department, Texas State University-San Marcos

243. John Durham Peters, A. Craig Baird Professor, Communication Studies, University of Iowa

244. Alison Staudinger, Assistant Professor of Democracy and Justice Studies, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay

245. Guillermina Seri, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Union College, NY

246. Don Howard, Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Notre Dame

247. Noelle Brigden, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Marquette University

248. Anne Kane, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Houston-Downtown

249. Yair Minsky, Einar Hille Professor of Mathematics, Yale University

250. Shannon B. Lundeen, Associate Professor of Philosophy and Director of Academic Initiatives for the Residential Campus, Elon University

251. Mark Brown, Professor of Government, California State University, Sacramento

252. Jim Sleeper, Lecturer in Political Science, Yale University

253. Jann Matlock (American citizen), Senior Lecturer, School of European Languages, Cultures, and Society, University College London

254. Stephen Darwall, Andrew Downey Orrick Professor of Philosophy, Yale University, John Dewey Distinguished University Professor of Philosophy, University of Michigan

255. Richard Schmitt, Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, Worcester State University, Worcester, MA; Professor of Philosophy Emeritus, Brown University, Providence, RI.

256. Jennifer Eidum Zinchuk, Assistant Professor of English, Elon University, Elon, NC.

257. Julia Skinner, Curator of Rare Books, Kennesaw State University, Kennesaw, GA.

258. Daniel M. Haybron, Professor of Philosophy, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO.

259. Talia Shalev, PhD Candidate, CUNY Graduate Center

260. Gloria Fisk, Assistant Professor of English, Queens College, CUNY

261. Matthew Hart, Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University, New York, NY

262. Tim McGettigan, Professor of Sociology, Colorado State University – Pueblo, Pueblo, CO

263. Kim Lane Scheppele, Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Sociology and International Affairs, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ

264. Federico Finchelstein, Professor of History, New School for Social Research & Lang College, New York City

265. Roshen Hendrickson, Associate Professor of Political Science, College of Staten Island, New York City

266. Mrinalini Chakravorty, Associate Professor of English, University of Virginia

267. Andreas Huyssen, Villard Professor of German and Comparative Literature, Columbia University

268. Jeffrey C. Isaac, Rudy Professor of Political Science, Indiana University

269.Yogita Goyal, Associate Professor of English and African American Studies, UCLA

270. Robyn Marasco, Associate Professor of Political Science, Hunter College, CUNY

271. Nancy Fraser, Henry A. and Louise Loeb Professor of Philosophy and Politics, New School for Social Research

272. Julie Mostov, Professor of Politics; Senior Vice Provost for Global Initiatives, Drexel University

273. Talia Schaffer, Professor of English, Graduate Center CUNY and Queens College CUNY

274. Mihaela Czobor-Lupp, Associate Professor of Political Science, Carleton College, MN

275. Henry Theriault, Professor and Chair of Philosophy, Worcester State University

276. Rochelle Davis, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Georgetown University

277. Nico Israel, Professor of English, CUNY Graduate Center and Hunter College

278. Ronald Gregg, Programming Director and Senior Lecturer in Film and Media Studies,Yale University

279. Kim Shively, Professor of Anthropology, Department of Anthropology and Sociology, Kutztown University of Pennsylvania

280. Nicole Lopez-Jantzen, Assistant Professor of History. City University of New York, Queensborough Community College

281. Leyla J Keough, Anthropologist, University of Massachusetts – Amherst

282. Peter E. Gordon, Amabel B. James Professor of History, Harvard University

283. Jay Rajiva, Assistant Professor of Global Anglophone Literature, Department of English. Georgia State University.

284. Max Pensky, Professor of Philosophy, Binghamton University

285. Priya Kandaswamy, Associate Professor of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Mills College

286. Christopher Fox, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Newman University.

287. Patrick Anderson, Associate Professor of Communication, Ethnic Studies, and Critical Gender Studies, University of California, San Diego

288. Maureen N. McLane, Professor of English, New York University

289. Nancy Bentley, Professor of English, University of Pennsylvania

290. Morris B. Kaplan, Professor of Philosophy. Purchase College SUNY

291. Jose Casanova, Professor of Sociology, Georgetown University

292. Olga Touloumi, Assistant Professor of Art History, Bard College

293. Nataly Reed, University of Arizona

294. Laura McMahon, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Eastern Michigan University

295. Andrew Arato, Dorothy Hart Hirshon Professor of Political and Social Theory, The New School for Social Research

296. James Chamberlain, Assistant Professor of Political Science and Public Administration, Mississippi State University

297. Macartan Humphreys, Professor of Political Science, Columbia University.

298. Nalan Erbil, PhD student, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

299. Ross Poole. Adjunct Professor of Politics and Philosophy, New School for Social Research

300. Nanette Funk, Professor Emeritus, Brooklyn College, CUNY

301. Jack Woods, University Academic Fellow in Mathematical Philosophy, Leeds (previously Assistant Professor, Bilkent University, Ankara)

302. Rachel Beaty, University of Arizona

303. Sabra J. Webber, Professor, The Ohio State University

304. Whitney Dirks-Schuster, Visiting Assistant Professor of History, Grand Valley State University

305. Elizabeth R. Johnson, Visiting Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies, Hobart and William Smith Colleges

306. Martin Rocek, Professor of Physics, C.N. Yang Institute for Theoretical Physics, Stony Brook University

307. Jackson Beck, Occidental College

308. Stephen Nelson, Philosophy Instructor, Northland Community & Technical College

309. Dorothy Salinger, Professor, University of California at Irvine

310. Robert Y. Shapiro, Wallace S. Sayre Professor of Government, Columbia University

311. Darryl Li, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of

312. Bruce Ackerman, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science, Yale University Chicago

313. Miriam McCormick, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Richmond

314. Florence Dore, Associate Professor of English, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

315. Susan Buck-Morss, Distinguished Professor, CUNY Graduate Center, New York, NY

316. Paul A. Passavant, Associate Professor of Political Science, Hobart and William Smith Colleges

317. Eugene Ostashevsky, Clinical Assistant Professor, New York University, New York, NY.

318. Susan R. Ackerman, Henry Luce Professor Jurisprudence in Law and Political Science, Yale University

319. Peter J. Schwartz, Associate Professor of German and Comparative Literature, Boston University

320. Alexander Dickow, Assistant Professor of French, Virginia Tech

321. Sofian Merabet, Associate Professor of Anthropology, UT Austin

322. Vitaly Chernetsky, Associate Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Kansas

323. Jessica Sewell, Associate Professor of Urban and Environmental Planning, University of Virginia

324. Judy E. Gaughan, Associate Professor of History, Colorado State University, Pueblo.

325. Cynthia Paccacerqua, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley

326. James Owens, PhD student, UMass Amherst

327. Jennifer J. Carroll, Postdoctoral Fellow, Brown University

328. S. West Gurley, Assistant Professor, Sam Houston State University

329. Christa Salamandra, Associate Professor, City University of New York

330. Erin C. Tarver, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Oxford College of Emory University

331. Gary R. Poe, Associate Professor of History, Palm Beach Atlantic University

332. Illya Bronshteyn, Research Associate, University of Kansas Medical Center

333. Greg Carey, Professor of New Testament, Lancaster Theological Seminary

334. Michael Ting, Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, Columbia University

335. Michael Cowan, St Andrews University

336. Nina d’Alessandro, Clinical Assistant Professor, New York University, New York, N.Y.

337. Patricia Morton, Associate Professor, University of California, Riverside

338. Kathleen James-Chakraborty, Professor, University College Dublin; Visiting Professor, Yale University

339. Amy K. Drees, Composition and Literacy Faculty, Northwest State Community College, Archbold, Ohio

340. Julia Roos, Associate Professor, Department of History, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana

341. Dmitry Dubrovskiy, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Harriman Institute, Columbia University, New York.

342. Sondra Hale, Professor Emerita, University of California, Los Angeles

343. Nikolai Kitanine, Professor, Université de Bourgogne, France

344. Matthew Siegel, Professor of English and Writing, San Francisco Conservatory of Music

345. Benjamin Peters, Professor of Communication, the University of Tulsa, Tulsa, Oklahoma

346. Martin Jay, Sidney Hellman Ehrman Professor, Emeritus, U. of California, Berkeley

347. Sondra Hale, Professor Emerita, University of California, Los Angeles.

348. Karen Koehler, Levin Professor of Architectural and Art History, Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts

349. Serena Laws, Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut

350. Erin Adam, PhD Candidate, Department of Political Science, University of Washington

351. Rogers M. Smith, Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Associate Dean for Social Sciences, University of Pennsylvania

352. Jonathan Chausovsky, Associate Professor of Politics and International Affairs, The State University of New York at Fredonia

353. Stephen Loffredo, Professor of Law, City University of New York School of Law

354. Arijit Sen, Associate Professor of Architecture and Urban Studies, University of WisconsinMilwaukee

355. Richard Grusin, Professor of English and Media Studies, University of WisconsinMilwaukee

356. Matthew P. Hitt, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Colorado State University.

357. Fred Dallmayr, Professor of Philosophy and Political Science, University of Notre Dame

358. Mona El-Sherif, Assistant Professor of Arabic Cultural Studies, University of Miami

359. Tracy L. R. Lightcap, Professor of Political Science, LaGrange College

360. Jessie Clark, Assistant Professor, Geography, University of Nevada Reno

361. Kent Schull, Associate Professor, History, Binghamton University, SUNY

362. William McKeithen, Graduate Instructor, Geography, University of Washington, Seattle

363. Pamela Brandwein, Professor of Political Science, University of Michigan.

364. Julie Novkov, Professor and Chair, Department of Political Science, University at Albany, SUNY

365. Jennet Kirkpatrick, Associate Professor, School of Politics and Global Studies, Arizona State University

366. Alexander Dolinin, Professor of Russian Literature, University of Wisconsin-Madison

367. Cynthia Wu, Associate Professor of Transnational Studies, University at Buffalo (SUNY)

368. Min Song, Professor of English, Boston College

369. Maxwell Uphaus, Assistant Professor of English, Montana State University

370. David J. Vanness, Associate Professor of Population Health Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison

371. Christian P. Traeger, Assistant Professor, Environmental Economics, UC Berkeley.

372. Jonathan Skolnik, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

373. Mary K Meyer McAleese, Professor of Political Science, Eckerd College.

374. Dohra Ahmad, Associate Professor of English, St. John’s University

375. Kristie Dotson, Associate Professor of Philosophy, MSU

376. David Gutman, Assistant Professor of History, Manhattanville College, NY

377. Michael Bosia, Associate Professor of Political Science, Saint Michael’s College

378. Amy Werbel, Associate Professor of the History of Art, State University of New York – Fashion Institute of Technology

379. Joe Lockard, Associate Professor, English Department, Arizona State University

380. Sarah Lopez, Assistant Professor, School of Architecture, University of Texas at Austin

381. Daniel Lipson, Associate Professor, Political Science Department, SUNY New Paltz

382. Jamie Mayerfeld, Professor of Political Science, University of Washington

383. Hugh Miller, Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Loyola University Chicago

384. Yevgeniy Slivkin, Teaching Assistant Professor, Department of Languages and Literatures, University of Denver

385. Tamara C. Ho, Associate Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies, University of California, Riverside

386. Julian Carter, Associate Professor of Critical Studies, California College of the Arts, Oakland and San Francisco

387. Elyse Semerdjian, Associate Professor of Middle East/Islamic World History, Whitman College

388. Alison M. Jaggar, College Professor of Distinction, Philosophy and Women and Gender Studies, University of Colorado at Boulder

389. Donna Robinson Divine, Morningstar Family Professor of Jewish Studies and Professor of Government Emerita, Department of Government, Smith College

390. Alice Stek, MD, Assistant Professor, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Los Angeles, California

391. Bernard Harcourt, Professor of Law and Political Science, Columbia University

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