"This exciting collection of essays explores the important issue of academics as public intellectuals and the conditions in which they have proved influential. It has a broad historical sweep, covers figures from contrasting points in the political spectrum, includes different fields of political, intellectual, and moral leadership, and examines international as well as national scales of intervention. In addition to a rich set of case studies, the contributors offer insightful general reflections on the changing nature of universities, of the public sphere, and of the tasks of academics who have acquired the status of public intellectuals."—Robert Jessop, Distinguished Professor of Sociology, Lancaster University "The national 'publics' to which 'public intellectuals' speak vary enormously. This collection of fascinating cases introduces an important comparative dimension to the study of public intellectuals, showing familiar and important figures in new light, and brings a broader and more sophisticated conceptualization of the problem of public social science".—Stephen Turner, Distinguished Research Professor in Philosophy,University of South Florida