Contributors 193
gion, philanthropy, and culture. She is the author of God on the
Quad: How Religious Colleges and the Missionary Generation Are
Changing America (St. Martin’s, 2005) and e Faculty Lounges
. . . And Other Reasons at You Won’t Get the College Education
You Paid For (Rowman and Littlefi eld, 2011). Ms. Riley’s writings
have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the
Boston Globe, the L.A. Times, and the Chronicle of Higher Educa-
tion among other publications. She graduated magna cum laude
from Harvard University in English and Government. She lives in
the suburbs of New York with her husband, Jason, and their two
children.
Christine Rosen is senior editor of e New Atlantis: A Journal
of Technology & Society, where she writes about the social impact
of technology, bioethics, and the history of genetics. She is the
author of Preaching Eugenics: Religious Leaders and the American
Eugenics Movement (Oxford University Press, 2004), a history of
the ethical and religious debates surrounding the eugenics move-
ment in the United States, and My Fundamentalist Education
(PublicAff airs, 2005), which tells the story of a Christian funda-
mentalist school in Florida. Mrs. Rosen has been an adjunct scholar
at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research
since 1999. Her essays and reviews have appeared in publications
such as the New York Times Magazine, the Wall Street Journal,
the New Republic, the Washington Post, the American Histori-
cal Review, the Weekly Standard, Commentary, the New England
Journal of Medicine, the Wilson Quarterly, and Policy Review. She
earned a B.A. in History from the University of South Florida in
1993, and a Ph.D. in History from Emory University in 1999. Mrs.
Rosen lives in Washington, DC, with her husband, Jeff rey, and
their children.
Emily Esfahani Smith is managing editor of the Hoover Insti-
tution journal Defi ning Ideas and an editor at the conservative