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Michael R. Ebner is Assistant Professor of History at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University.

He is the 2000–1 recipient of the Rome Prize in Modern Italian Studies from the American Academy in Rome. From 2001 to 2002, he was a Whiting Fellow at Columbia University.


He is the author of many essays including:


The Political Police and Denunciation during Fascism: A Review of Recent Historical Literature, Journal of Modern Italian Studies 11:2 (June 2006), 209-226


The Fascist Archipelago: Political Internment, Exile, and Everyday Life in Mussolini's Italy, 1926-43, (Columbia University: Ph.D. Dissertation)


The Persecution of Homosexual Men under Fascism 1926-1943, in Perry Willson (ed.), Gender, Family, and Sexuality: The Private Sphere in Italy 1860-1945 (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004)


The Police, the Party, and Everyday Coercion in Fascist Italy, at European Social Science History Conference, Lisbon, Portugal, February 26 – March 1, 2008


Ordinary Vexations: Institutions of Coercion and Violence in Everyday Life under Fascism, September 2004, Conference on Imprisonment in Italian Culture, University of Connecticut


The Persecution of Homosexuals under Fascism, 1926-1943 November 2002, Association for the Study of Modern Italy, London


Deviance and Exile in Fascist Italy' January 2002, Institute of European Studies, University of California, Berkeley