Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles & Chapters in Edited Volumes:
“A Cold War Cold Case: What Huldah Clark Can Teach Us about Teaching Soviet History,” Slavic Review 80, 2 (Summer 2021): 299-306.
"Building a Communist Tower of Babel: Esperanto and the Language Politics of Internationalism in Revolutionary Russia," in Internationalists in European History: Rethinking the Twentieth Century, ed. Jessica Reinisch and David Brydan (London: Bloomsbury, 2021): 17-32 .
“The Woman Always Pays: The Lives of Ivy Litvinov,” The Slavonic and East European Review 97, 3 (July 2019): 501-528.
“An International Language for an Empire of Humanity: L.L. Zamenhof and the Imperial Russian Origins of Esperanto,” East European Jewish Affairs 49, 1 (2019): 1-19.
“The Racialization of Soviet Gypsies: Roma, Nationality Politics, and Socialist Transformation in Stalin’s Soviet Union,” in Ideologies of Race: Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union in Global Context, ed. David Rainbow (McGill University Press, 2019): 132-159.
“Gypsies as a litmus test for rational, tolerant rule: Fin-de-siècle Russian ethnographers confront the comparative history of Roma in Europe,” International Journal of Comparative and Applied Criminal Justice [Special Issue on Crime and Justice: Roma in Europe and North America] 38, 2 (2014): 109-131.
“Aleksandr Germano, 1893-1955,” in Russia’s People of Empire: Life Stories from Eurasia, 1500 to the Present, ed. Stephen Norris and Willard Sunderland (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2012): 265-273.
“‘Backward Gypsies,’ Soviet Citizens: The All-Russian Gypsy Union, 1925-28,” Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 11, 2 (2010): 283-312.