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February, 2006
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Contributors
February 2006


Steven Crum is professor of Native American studies at the University of California, Davis, and is an enrolled member of the Western Shoshone tribe of the Duck Valley Indian Reservation in Nevada. He holds a Ph.D. in United States history. His specialty areas include Native American history of the 20th century, Native American history of the Great Basin region, and the history of Native Americans in higher education. He is the author of numerous articles and a book entitled The Road On Which We Came (1994) which is a comprehensive history of the Western Shoshone people of the Great Basin region.

 
Patrick Manning is professor of history and African-American studies at Northeastern University. He earned his Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His recent works include "Africa and the African Diaspora: New Directions of Study," Journal of African History (2003); The African Diaspora: A History through Culture (forthcoming 2006); and Navigating World History: Historians Create a Global Past (2003). He serves as vice president of the teaching division of the American Historical Association (2004-2006), and has participated in numerous workshops for secondary teachers of world history.

 
Jeffrey Merrick received his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1979 and joined the faculty of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 1990. He has served his department as director of undergraduate studies, director of graduate studies, and chair and has been involved in a variety of curricular initiatives and pedagogical projects. He has authored or edited six books and published forty articles and essays on André Morellet, political culture, family, gender, sexuality, and suicide in early modern France.

 
Patrick Rael is associate professor of history at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, where he has taught for eleven years. He earned his Ph.D. in American history from the University of California, Berkeley in 1995. In 2002, the University of North Carolina Press published his Black Identity and Black Protest in the Antebellum North. He is the author of several essays on African-American history in the antebellum North, and coeditor of Pamphlets of Protest: An Anthology of Early African-American Protest Literature, 1790–1860 (Routledge, 2000).  


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