“Revolution and Politics in Russia”
ANNA M. BOURGUINA is Curator of the Boris I. Nicolaevsky Collection, The Hoover Institution, Stanford University. Formerly associated with the Inter-University Project on the History of the Menshevik Movement and for many years a close collaborator of B. I. Nicolaevsky and Iraklii Tsereteli, she is the author of Russian Social Democracy, The Menshevik Movement: A Bibliography, and the editor of I. Tsereteli, Vospominaniia o fevral’skoi revoliutsii.
STEPHEN F. COHEN is Assistant Professor of Politics, Princeton University. Co-editor (with Robert C. Tucker) of The Great Purge Trial and author of several scholarly articles, his major study of Bukharin and Russian Bolshevism, 1888-1938, is to be published in 1972.
ALEXANDER DALLIN is Professor of History and Political Science, Stanford University, and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution. He is the author of German Rule in Russia, 1941-1945, The Soviet Union at the United Nations, The Soviet Union and Disarmament, and (with George W. Breslauer) Political Terror in Communist Systems, and the editor of Diversity in International Communism and Soviet Politics since Khrushchev.
GEORGE FISCHER is Professor of Social Science, Richmond College of the City University of New York, and a member of the Doctoral Program in Sociology at the City University’s Graduate Center. He is the author of Soviet Opposition to Stalin, Russian Liberalism, and The Soviet System and Modern Society, as well as The Revival of American Socialism and What’s What on Staten Island.
JONATHAN FRANKEL is a Senior Lecturer and Chairman of the Department of Russian Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is the editor of Vladimir Akimov on the Dilemmas of Russian Marxism, 1895-1903 and is now at work on a study of the Jewish socialist parties in Tsarist Russia.
ISRAEL GETZLER is Professor of History, La Trobe University, Melbourne, and the author of Martov: A Political Biography of a Russian Social Democrat and Neither Toleration nor Favour: The Australian Chapter of Jewish Emancipation. He is presently working on a study of the Russian revolution, 1917.
BRUNO KALNIŅŠ, Doctor in Law, has been associated with Stockholm University since he fled his native Latvia in 1945. He was a prominent member of the Latvian Social Democratic Workers’ Party and a one-time Secretary of its Central Committee. He is the author of Fifty Years of the Latvian Social Democratic Party (published in Latvian in Sweden) and of numerous scholarly articles on the Latvian Social Democratic movement.
JOHN L. H. KEEP, Professor of History at the University of Toronto, is the author of The Rise of Russian Social Democracy and the editor of Contemporary History in the Soviet Mirror.
LADIS K. D. KRISTOF is Associate Professor of Political Science at Portland State University. Formerly Associate Director of the Inter-University Project on the History of the Menshevik Movement, he has written articles on political theory and geopolitics and is currently working on a study of the political system of Rumania.
PHILIP E. MOSELY (1905-1972) was, at the time of his death, Professor of International Relations and Director of the European Institute, Columbia University. His published works include Russian Diplomacy and the Opening of the Eastern Question in 1838 and 1839 and The Kremlin and World Politics.
ALEXANDER RABINOWITCH is Associate Professor of History, Indiana University. He is currently finishing a two-part history of the Petrograd Bolsheviks in 1917. The first volume, Prelude to Revolution: The Petrograd Bolsheviks and the July 1917 Uprising, was published in 1968.
MARC RAEFF is professor of History, Columbia University. He is the author of M. M. Speransky: Statesman of Imperial Russia, Siberia and the Reforms of 1822, and Origins of the Russian Intelligentsia.
WALTER SABLINSKY, Assistant Professor of History, University of Virginia, is preparing a monograph on Father Gapon and Bloody Sunday.
ROBERT M. SLUSSER is Professor of History, Michigan State University. His published works include The Soviet Secret Police (with Simon Wolin), A Calendar of Soviet Treaties, 1917-1957, and Theory, Law and Policy of Soviet Treaties (both with Jan. F. Triska).
WIKTOR SUKIENNICKI received his doctorate in International Law at the University of Paris and prior to World War II was a professor at the University of Wilno. Associated with the Polish government-in-exile during the war, he later became affiliated with the Hoover Institution. His works include La Souveraineté des états en droit international moderne (Paris, 1927), Evolution of the USSR Regime (Wilno, 1938), and Facts and Documents Concerning Polish Prisoners of War (London, 1946).
ROBERT C. TUCKER is Professor of Politics and Director of the Program in Russian Studies, Princeton University. His published works include Philosophy and Myth in Karl Marx, The Soviet Political Mind, and The Marxian Revolutionary Idea. He is co-editor (with Stephen F. Cohen) of The Great Purge Trial and editor of The Marx-Engels Reader. At present he is completing a book on Stalin and Russian communism.
ALLAN K. WILDMAN is Associate Professor of History, State University of New York at Stony Brook. Author of The Making of a Workers’ Revolution: Russian Social Democracy, 1891-1903, he is currently preparing a book on the Russian army and the 1917 revolution.
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