[jw]
H-Diplo JOURNAL WATCH, A to I H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review www.h-net.org/~diplo/journals/ Second Quarter 2012 20 April 2012 Compiled by Lubna Qureshi, Södertörn University College (Södertörns högskola), Sweden
The Journal of African History, Vol. 52, Issue 3 (November 2011) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=AFH&tab=currentissue
• Bruce S. Hall, “How Slaves Used Islam: The Letters of Enslaved Muslim Commercial Agents in the Nineteenth-Century Niger Bend and Central Sahara,” 279.
• Kelly Duke Bryant, “’The Color of the Pupils’: Schooling and Race in Senegal’s Cities, 1900-10,” 299.
• Luise White, “’Normal Political Activities’: Rhodesia, the Pearce Commission, and the African National Council,” 321.
• Paul Nugent, “The Temperance Movement and Wine Farmers at the Cape: Collective Action, Racial Discourse, and Legislative Reform, c. 1890-1965,” 341.
• Emily Callaci, “Dancehall Politics: Mobility, Sexuality, and Spectacles of Racial Respectability in Late Colonial Tanganyika, 1930s-1961,” 365.
• Dmitri Van Den Bersselaar, “Who Belongs to the ‘Star People’? Negotiating Beer and Gin Advertisements in West Africa, 1949-75,” 385.
The Journal of American History, Vol. 98, No. 4 (March 2012) http://www.journalofamericanhistory.org/issues/984/
• Christine DeLucia, “The Memory Frontier: Uncommon Pursuits of Past and Place in the Northeast after King Philip’s War,” 975.
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• Jessica Wang, “Dogs and the Making of the American State: Voluntary Association, State Power, and the Politics of Animal Control in New York City, 1850- 1920,” 998.
• Kristin Hoganson, “Meat in the Middle: Converging Borderlands in the U.S. Midwest, 1865-1900,” 1025.
• Matthew Avery Sutton, “Was FDR the Antichrist? The Birth of Antiliberalism in a Global Age,” 1052.
• Tity de Vries, “The 1967 Central Intelligence Agency Scandal: Catalyst in a Transforming Relationship between State and People,” 1075.
• Scott E. Casper, “Pivotal Moments in the History Curriculum: Surveys and Snapshots of Current Practice,” 1093.
• Kathleen W. Jones, Mark V. Barrow Jr., Robert P. Stephens, and Stephen O’Hara, “Romancing the Capstone: National Trends, Local Practice, and Student Motivation in the History Curriculum,” 1095.
• Laura M. Westhoff, “Historiographic Mapping: Toward a Signature Pedagogy for the Methods Course,” 1114. ______
Journal of American Studies, Vol. 46, Issue 1 (February 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AMS&volumeId=46&is sueId=01&iid=8508563
• Ian Tyrrell, “America’s National Parks: The Transnational Creation of National Space in the Progressive Era,” 1.
• Paul S. Sutter, “The Trouble with ‘America’s National Parks’; or, Going Back to the Wrong Historiography: A Response to Ian Tyrrell,” 23.
• Thomas R. Dunlap, “Beyond the Parks, beyond the Borders: Some of the Places to Take Tyrrell’s Perspective,” 31.
• Astrid Swenson, “Response to Ian Tyrrell, ‘America’s National Parks: The Transnational Creation of National Space in the Progressive Era’,” 37.
• Ian Tyrrell, “Ian Tyrrell Replies,” 45.
• Jonathan Bell, “Building a Left Coast: The Legacy of the California Popular Front and the Challenge to Cold War Liberalism in the Post-World War II Era,” 51.
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• David Kennedy, “Here is/Where There/Is: Some Observations of Spatial Deixis in Robert Creeley’s Poetry,” 73.
• William L. Chew, “The Journée du Dix AoÛt as Witnessed by a Yankee Merchant,” 89.
• Andrea Gustavson, “From ‘Observer to Activist’: Documentary Memory, Oral History, and Studs Terkel’s ‘Essence’ Narratives,” 103.
• Alex Hobbs, “Family and the Renegotiation of Masculine Identity in Philip Roth’s The Plot Against America,” 121. ______
The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 71, Issue 1 (February 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JAS&volumeId=71&iss ueId=01&iid=8489802
• Julia Lovell, “Finding a Place: Mainland Chinese Fiction in the 2000s,” 7.
• William A. Callahan, “Sino-speak: Chinese Exceptionalism and the Politics of History,” 33.
• Christopher Lupke, “Reflections on Situating Taiwan in Modern Chinese Cultural Studies,” 57.
• Robin Jeffrey and Assa Doron, “Mobile-izing: Democracy, Organization and India’s First ‘Mass Mobile Phone’ Elections,” 63.
• John Whittier Treat, “Choosing to Collaborate: Yi Kwang-su and the Moral Subject in Colonial Korea,” 81.
• Timothy Brook, “Hesitating before the Judgment of History,” 103.
• Michael D. Shin, “Yi Kwang-su: The Collaborator as Modernist against Modernity,” 115.
• John Whittier Treat, “Seoul and Nanking, Baghdad and Kabul: A Response to Timothy Brook and Michael Shin,” 121.
• Henrietta Harrison, “Rethinking Missionaries and Medicine in China: The Miracles of Assunta Pallotta, 1905-2005,” 127.
• Manuela Ciotti, “Resurrecting Seva (Social Service): Dalit and Low-caste Women Party Activists as Producers and Consumers of Political Culture and Practice in Urban North India,” 149.
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• Joshua Hotaka Roth, “Heartfelt Driving: Discourses on Manners, Safety, and Emotion in Japan’s Era of Mass Motorization,” 171. ______
Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 14, Issue 1 (Winter 2012) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jcws/14/1
• Tony Shaw, “Nightmare on Nevsky Prospekt: The Blue Bird as a Curious Instance of U.S.-Soviet Film Collaboration during the Cold War,” 3.
• Elena Dragomir, “The Formation of the Soviet Bloc’s Council for Mutual Economic Assistance,” 34.
Forum: De Gaulle, French Foreign Policy, and the Cold War
• Irwin Wall, “Commentary on Globalizing de Gaulle,” 48.
• Andrew Moravcsik, “Charles de Gaulle and Europe: The New Revisionism,” 53.
• Edward A. Kolodziej, “Commentary on Globalizing de Gaulle,” 78.
• Marc Trachtenberg, “The de Gaulle Problem,” 81.
• Christian Nuenlist, Anna Locher, and Garret Martin, “Reply to the Commentaries,” 93.
Forum: Reassessing How the Sino-Soviet Split Unfolded
• Michael Sheng, Qiang Zhai, and Deborah Kaple, “Perspectives on Sergey Radchenko’s Two Suns in the Heavens,” 96.
• Sergey Radchenko, “Reply to the Commentaries,” 107.
Debates and Commentary
• Andrew J. Bacevich and Edwin Moïse, “Responses to Bernd Greiner on U.S. Conduct in Vietnam,” 111.
• Lubna Qureshi and Kristian Gustafson, “Exchange: Debating U.S. Involvement in Chile in the 1970s,” 114. ______
The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 55:6 (December 2011) http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/55/6.toc
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• Jacob D. Kathman, “Civil War Diffusion and Regional Motivations for Intervention,” 847. • Jeannie Annan, Christopher Blattman, Dyan Mazurana, and Khristopher Carlson, “Civil War, Reintegration, and Gender in Northern Uganda,” 877.
• Nils W. Metternich, “Expecting Elections: Interventions, Ethnic Support, and the Duration of Civil Wars,” 909.
• Thomas Zeitzoff, “Using Social Media to Measure Conflict Dynamics: An Application to the 2008-2009 Gaza Conflict,” 938.
• Andreas Flache and Michael W. Macy, “Local Convergence and Global Diversity: From Interpersonal to Social Influence,” 970.
• Dustin H. Tingley and Barbara F. Walter, “Can Cheap Talk Deter?: An Experimental Analysis,” 996.
• Emizet F. Kisangani and Jeffrey Pickering, “Democratic Accountability and Diversionary Force: Regime Types and the Use of Benevolent and Hostile Military Force,” 1021.
• Srividya Jandhyala, Witold J. Henisz, and Edward D. Mansfield, “Three Waves of BITs: The Global Diffusion of Foreign Investment Policy,” 1047.
The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 56:1 (February 2012) http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/56/1.toc
• Wendy Pearlman and Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, “Nonstate Actors, Fragmentation, and Conflict Processes,” 3.
• Paul Staniland, “Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Insurgent Fratricide, Ethnic Defection, and the Rise of Pro-State Paramilitaries,” 16.
• Theodore McLauchlin and Wendy Pearlman, “Out-Group Conflict, In-Group Unity?: Exploring the Effect of Repression on Intramovement Cooperation,” 41.
• Kathleen Gallagher Cunningham, Kristin M. Bakke, and Lee J.M. Seymour, “Shirts Today, Skins Tomorrow: Dual Contests and the Effects of Fragmentation in Self- Determination Disputes,” 67.
• Victor Asal, Mitchell Brown, and Angela Dalton, “Why Split? Organizational Splits among Ethnopolitical Organizations in the Middle East,” 94.
• Jesse Driscoll, “Commitment Problems or Bidding Wars? Rebel Fragmentation as Peace Building,” 118.
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Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 30, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjca20/30/1
• David Moore, “Progress, power, and violent accumulation in Zimbabwe,” 1.
• Norma Kriger, “ZANU PF politics under Zimbabwe’s ‘Power-Sharing’ Government,” 11.
• Ian Phimister, “Narratives of progress: Zimbabwean historiography and the end of history,” 27.
• Kirk Helliker, “Civil society and state-centred struggles,” 35.
• Martin Dawson and Tim Kelsall, “Anti-developmental patrimonialism in Zimbabwe,” 49.
• Booker Magure, “Foreign investment, black economic empowerment and militarised patronage politics in Zimbabwe,” 67.
• Tapiwa Chagonda, “Teachers’ and bank workers’ responses to Zimbabwe’s crisis: uneven effects, different strategies,” 83.
• Vusilizwe Thebe, “’New realities’ and tenure reforms: land-use in worker- peasant communities of south-western Zimbabwe (1940s-2006),” 99.
• David Moore, “Two perspectives on Zimbabwe’s National Democratic Revolution: Thabo Mbeki and Wilfred Mhanda,” 119.
• John Hoffman, “Reflections on the concept of progress – and Zimbabwe,” 139.
• Blair Rutherford, “Shifting the debate on land reform, poverty and inequality in Zimbabwe, an engagement with Zimbabwe’s Land Reform: Myths and Realities,” 147.
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Journal of Contemporary China, Vol. 21, Issue 74 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjcc20/21/74
• Yufan Hao and Weihua Liu, “Xinjiang: increasing pain in the heart of China’s borderland,” 205.
• Dingding Chen, “Domestic Politics, National Identity, and International Conflict: the case of the Koguryo controversy,” 227.
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• Jiangnan Zhu, “The Shadow of the Skyscrapers: real estate corruption in China,” 243.
• Wooyeal Paik and Kihyun Lee, “I Want To Be Expropriated!: the politics of xiaochanquanfang land development in suburban China,” 261.
• Chiew Ping Yew, “Pseudo-Urbanization? Competitive government behavior and urban sprawl in China,” 281.
• Lin Song, Jianling Wang, Shujie Yao, and Jian Chen, “Market Reactions and Corporate Philanthropy: a case study of the Wenchuan earthquake in China,” 299.
• Yusheng Yao, “Village Elections and the Rise of Capitalist Entrepreneurs,” 317.
• Jing Men, “The EU and China: mismatched partners?,” 333.
• Sigfrido Burgos and Sophal Ear, “China’s Oil Hunger in Angola: history and perspective,” 351.
Journal of Contemporary China, Vol. 21, Issue 75 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjcc20/21/75
• Suisheng Zhao, “Shaping the Regional Context of China’s Rise: how the Obama administration brought back hedge to its engagement with China,” 369.
• Wu Xinbo, “Forging Sino-US Partnership in the Twenty-First Century: opportunities and challenges,” 391.
• June Teufel Dreyer, “The Shifting Triangle: Sino-Japanese-American relations in stressful times,” 409.
• Simon Shen, “The Hidden Face of Comradeship: popular Chinese consensus of the DPRK and its implications for Beijing’s policy,” 427.
• Tim Summers, “(Re)positioning Yunnan: region and nation in contemporary provincial narratives,” 445.
• Ni Chen, “Beijing’s Political Crisis Communication: an analysis of Chinese government communication in the 2009 Xinjiang riot,” 461.
• Tal Levy and David R. Meyer, “Challenges of Network Governance at the State Banks of China,” 481.
• Titus C. Chen, “Recalibrating the Measure of Justice: Beijing’s effort to recentralize the judiciary and its mixed results,” 499.
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• Xiaowei Zang, “Group Threat and Ethnic Variation in Party Membership Attainment in China,” 519.
• Rongxing Guo, “Interprovincial Border Disputes – the case of Lake Weishan,” 531. ______
Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Vol. 19, Issue 4 (2011) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjea20/19/4
• Chris Rumford, “Editorial: New Perspectives on Turkey-EU Relations,” 459.
• Nora Fisher Onar, “Constructing Turkey Inc.: The Discursive Anatomy of a Domestic and Foreign Policy Agenda,” 463.
• Didem Buhari-Gulmez, “Ombudsmanship and Turkey’s Europeanization in ‘World Society’,” 475.
• Edward Webb, “Resisting Anamnesis: A Nietzschean Analysis of Turkey’s National History Education,” 489.
• Johanna Nykänen, “A Bakhtinian Approach to EU-Turkey Relations,” 501.
• Gulay Icoz, “Turkey’s Path to EU Membership: A Historical Institutionalist Perspective,” 511.
• Bilgin Ayata, “Kurdish Transnational Politics and Turkey’s Changing Kurdish Policy: The Journey of Kurdish Broadcasting from Europe to Turkey,” 523.
• Hasan Turunç, “The Post-westernisation of EU-Turkey Relations,” 535.
• Jeanne Fagnani and Antoine Math, “The Predicament of Childcare Policy in France: What Is at Stake?,” 547.
• F. Peter Wagner, “Review Essay: After Multiculturalism?,” 563.
Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Vol. 20, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjea20/20/1
• Cirila Toplak and Irena Sumi, “Europe(an Union): Imagined Community in the Making?,” 7.
• Tuuli Lähdesmäki, “Politics of Cultural Marking in Mini-Europe: Anchoring European Cultural Identity in a Theme Park,” 29.
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• Taras Kuzio, “Democratic Revolutions from a Different Angle: Social Populism and National Identity in Ukraine’s 2004 Orange Revolution,” 41.
• Fernando Magalhães, “Landscape and Regionalism in Portugal: The Case of the Leiria Region,” 55.
• Alex Warleigh-Lack, “Greening EU Studies: An Academic Manifesto,” 77.
• Martyn de Bruyn, “The Irish Referendums on the Lisbon Treaty: Did the Recession Save Lisbon?,” 91. ______
Journal of Contemporary History, 47:1 (January 2012) http://jch.sagepub.com/content/47/1.toc
• György Péteri, “Sites of Convergence: The USSR and Communist Eastern Europe at International Fairs Abroad and at Home,” 3.
• Danilo Udovicki-Selb, “Facing Hitler’s Pavilion: The Uses of Modernity in the Soviet Pavilion at the 1937 Paris International Exhibition,” 13.
• Mary Neuburger, “Kebabche, Caviar or Hot Dogs? Consuming the Cold War at the Plovdiv Fair 1947-72,” 48.
• Katherine Pence, “Showcasing Cold War Germany in Cairo: 1954 and 1957 Industrial Exhibitions and the Competition for Arab Partners,” 69.
• Greg Castillo, “Making a Spectacle of Restraint: The Deutschland Pavilion at the 1958 Brussels Exposition,” 97.
• Lewis Siegelbaum, “Sputnik Goes to Brussels: The Exhibition of a Soviet Technological Wonder,” 120.
• György Péteri, “Transsystemic Fantasies: Counterrevolutionary Hungary at Brussels Expo ’58,” 137.
• Vladimir Kulic, “An Avant-Garde Architecture for an Avant-Garde Socialism: Yugoslavia at EXPO ’58,” 161.
• Cathleen M. Giustino, “Industrial Design and the Czechoslovak Pavilion at EXPO ’58: Artistic Autonomy, Party Control and Cold War Common Ground,” 185.
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Journal of Contemporary History, 47:2 (April 2012) http://jch.sagepub.com/content/47/2.toc
• Eugene Michail, “Western Attitudes to War in the Balkans and the Shifting Meanings of Violence, 1912-91,” 219.
• Michael Jonas, “’Can One Go Along With This?’ German Diplomats and the Changes of 1918-19 and 1933-4,” 240.
• Graham Macklin, “Transatlantic Connections and Conspiracies: A.K. Chesterton and The New Unhappy Lords,” 270.
• Marcel Boldorf and Jonas Scherner, “France’s Occupation Costs and the War in the East: The Contribution to the German War Economy, 1940-4,” 291.
• Felicia Yap, “Prisoners of War and Civilian Internees of the Japanese in British Asia: The Similarities and Contrasts of Experience,” 317.
• Andrew Harder, “The Politics of Impartiality: The United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration in the Soviet Union, 1946-7,” 347.
• Steven R. Welch, “Commemorating ‘Heroes of a Special Kind’: Deserter Monuments in Germany,” 370.
• Vincent Lagendijk, “’To Consolidate Peace’? The International Electro-technical Community and the Grid for the United States of Europe,” 402.
• Raymond Patton, “The Communist Culture Industry: The Music Business in 1980s Poland,” 427. ______
Journal of the Early Republic, Vol. 32, No. 1 (Spring 2012) http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_early_republic/toc/jer.32.1.html
• Harry L. Watson, “The Man with the Dirty Black Beard: Race, Class, and Schools in the Antebellum South,” 1.
• Lucia McMahon, “’So Truly Afflicting and Distressing to Me His Sorrowing Mother’: Expressions of Maternal Grief in Eighteenth-Century Philadelphia,” 27.
• Will Mackintosh, “’Ticketed Through’: The Commodification of Travel in the Nineteenth Century,” 61.
• Keat Murray, “John Heckewelder’s ‘Pieces of Secrecy’: Dissimulation and Class in the Writings of a Moravian Missionary,” 91.
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The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 72, Issue 1 (March 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JEH&volumeId=72&iss ueId=01&iid=8506417
• Olivier Accominotti, “London Merchant Banks, the Central European Panic, and the Sterling Crisis of 1931,” 1.
• James Bessen, “More Machines, Better Machines…or Better Workers?,” 44.
• Carolyn M. Moehling and Melissa A. Thomasson, “The Political Economy of Saving Mothers and Babies: The Politics of State Participation in the Sheppard-Towner Program,” 75.
• Marianne Ward and John Devereux, “The Road Not Taken: Pre-Revolutionary Cuban Living Standards in Comparative Perspective,” 104.
• Sheilagh Ogilvie, Markus Küpker, and Janine Maegraith, “Household Debt in Early Modern Germany: Evidence from Personal Inventories,” 134.
• Marianne H. Wanamaker, “Industrialization and Fertility in the Nineteenth Century: Evidence from South Carolina,” 168.
• Ingrid Henriksen, Morten Hviid, and Paul Sharp, “Law and Peace: Contracts and the Success of the Danish Dairy Cooperatives,” 197.
• Carola Frydman and Raven Molloy, “Pay Cuts for the Boss: Executive Compensation in the1940s,” 225. ______
Journal of Genocide Research, Vol. 14, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjgr20/14/1
• Brian Grodsky, “When two ambiguities collide: the use of genocide in self- determination drives,” 1.
• Alex J. Bellamy, “Getting away with mass murder,” 29.
• Janine Natalya Clark, “The ‘crime of crimes’: genocide, criminal trials reconciliation,” 55.
• Eyal Mayroz, “The legal duty to ‘prevent’: after the onset of ‘genocide’,” 79.
• ______
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The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, Vol. 11, Issue 1 (January 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JGA&volumeId=11&iss ueId=01&iid=8475885
• Hasia Diner, “The Encounter between Jews and America in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era,” 3.
• Julia Guarneri, “Changing Strategies for Child Welfare, Enduring Beliefs about Childhood: The Fresh Air Fund, 1877-1926,” 27.
• Nikki Mandell, “Allies or Antagonists? Philanthropic Reformers and Business Reformers in the Progressive Era,” 71. ______
Journal of Global History, Vol. 7, Issue 1 (March 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JGH&volumeId=7&iss ueId=01&iid=8491290
• John Muse-Fisher, “Financing a new nation: a comparative study of the financial roots of the USA and Gran Colombia,” 3.
• Martina Winkler, “Another America: Russian mental discoveries of the North- west Pacific region in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries,” 27.
• Bronwen Everill, “’Destiny seems to point me to that country’: early nineteenth- century African American migration, emigration, and expansion,” 53.
• Tanja Bueltmann and Donald M. MacRaild, “Globalizing St. George: English associations in the Anglo-world to the 1930’s,” 79.
• Morten Jerven, “An unlevel playing field: national income estimates and reciprocal comparison in global economic history,” 107.
• Alan Strathern, “Strange parallels: Southeast Aisa in global context, c. 800-1830. Volume 2: mainland mirrors: Europe, Japan, China, South Asia, and the islands,” 129.
• Peer Vries, “Why the West rules – for now: the patterns of history and what they reveal about the future,” 143. ______
The Journal of the Historical Society, Vol. 12, Issue 1 (March 2012) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jhis.2011.12.issue-1/issuetoc
• Ralph R. Menning, “Dress Rehearsal for 1914? Germany, the Franco-Russian Alliance, and the Bosnian Crisis of 1909,” 1.
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• Hyrum Lewis, “Historians and the Myth of American Conservatism,” 27.
• Daniel P. Gitterman, “Making the New Deal Stick? The Minimum Wage and American Political History,” 47.
• W. Fitzhugh Brundage, “John Brown: ‘The Stone in the Historian’s Shoe’,” 79.
• Louis A. Ferleger, “Agriculture’s Last Stand: A Note on the Missing South,” 97. ______
Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 34, Issue 1 (March 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=HET&volumeId=34&is sueId=01&iid=8504242
• Jerry Evensky, “HES Presidential Address: What’s Wrong with Economics?,” 1. • Scott Carter, “C.E. Ferguson’s Lost Reply to Joan Robinson on the Theory of Capital,” 21.
• Amedeo Fossati, “Pareto’s Influence on Scholars from the Italian Tradition in Public Finance,” 43.
• François R. Velde, “The Life and Times of Nicolas Dutot,” 67.
• Y. Gingras and C. Schinckus, “The Institutionalization of Econophysics in the Shadow of Physics,” 109.
• Benoit Walraevens, “Growth and Progress in Adam Smith’s Thought,” 131. ______
Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 11, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjhr20/11/1
• Charles Anthony Smith, “Introduction to the Special Issue: Globalizing Human Rights,” 1.
• Alison Brysk and Arturo Jimenez, “The Globalization of Law: Implications for the Fulfillment of Human Rights,” 4.
• Wayne Sandholtz, “Treaties, Constitutions, Courts, and Human Rights,” 17.
• Mary Volcansek and Charles Lockhart, “Explaining Support for Human Rights Protections: A Judicial Role?,” 33.
• Heather M. Smith-Cannoy and Charles Anthony Smith, “Human Trafficking and International Cheap Talk: The Dutch Government and the Island Territories,” 51.
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• Michael C. Tolley, “Judicialization of Politics in Europe: Keeping Pace with Strasbourg,” 66.
• Royce Carroll and Lydia Tiede, “Ideological Voting on Chile’s Constitutional Tribunal: Dissent Coalitions in the Adjudication of Rights,” 85.
• Shawn Schulenberg, “The Construction and Enactment of Same-Sex Marriage in Argentina,” 106.
• Heidi Nichols Haddad, “Judicial Institution Builders: NGOs and International Human Rights Courts,” 126.
• Sarah S. Willen, “Anthropology and Human Rights: Theoretical Reconsiderations and Phenomenological Explorations,” 150. ______
The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Vol. 40, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fich20/40/1
• Kent Fedorowich and Carl Bridge, “Family Matters? The Dominion High Commissioners in Wartime Britain, 1938-42,” 1.
• John Lambert, “’To Back up the British Government’: Sidney Waterson’s Role as South African High Commissioner in Wartime Britain, 1939-42,” 25.
• David Lee, “Stanley Melbourne Bruce in London, 1938-41,” 45.
• Andrew Stewart, “At War with Bill Jordan: The New Zealand High Commission in Wartime London,” 67.
• Kent Fedorowich, “Directing the War from Trafalgar Square? Vincent Massey and the Canadian High Commission, 1939-42,” 87. ______
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 42, Issue 4 (Spring 2012) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jinh/42/4
• George C. Alter, Myron P. Gutmann, Susan Hautaniemi Leonard, and Emily R. Merchant, “Introduction: Longitudinal Analysis of the Historical-Demographic Data,” 503.
• Nora Bohnert, Hilde Leikny Jåstad, Jessica Vechbanyongratana, and Evelien Walhout, “Offspring Sex Preference in Frontier America,” 519.
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• Julia A. Jennings, Allison R. Sullivan, and J. David Hacker, “Intergenerational Transmission of Reproductive Behavior during the Demographic Transition,” 543.
• Rebecca Kippen and Sarah Walters, “Is Sibling Rivalry Fatal? Siblings and Mortality Clustering,” 571.
• Mathew Creighton, Christa Matthys, and Luciana Quaranta, “Migrants and the Diffusion of Low Marital Fertility in Belgium,” 593.
• Rosella Rettaroli and Francesco Scalone, “Reproductive Behavior during the Pre-Transitional Period: Evidence from Rural Bologna,” 615.
• Bárbara A. Revuelta Eugercios, “Releasing Mother’s Burdens: Child Abandonment and Retrieval in Madrid, 1890-1935,” 645. ______
Journal of Israeli History: Politics, Society, Culture, Vol. 31, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjih20/31/1
• Rafael Frankel, “This issue is dedicated to the memory of Professor Henry Near, 1929-2011,” 1.
• Rona Yona, “A kibbutz in the diaspora: The pioneer movement in Poland and the Klosova kibbutz,” 9.
• Aviva Halamish, “The historic leadership of Hakibbutz Ha’artzi: The power of charisma, organization and ideology,” 45.
• Alon Gan, “The romanticism of ‘what if?’ Attempts to challenge the ‘historic leaderships’ of the kibbutz movements,” 67.
• Meir Chazan, “The struggle of kibbutz women to participate in guard duties during the Arab Revolt, 1936-1939,” 83.
• Lilach Rosenberg-Friedman, “Traditional revolution: The issue of marriage on religious kibbutzim, 1929-1948 – a comparative view,” 109.
• Assaf Inbari, “The kibbutz novel as erotic melodrama,” 129.
• Shula Keshet, “Kibbutz fiction and Yishuv society on the eve of statehood: The Ma’agalot (Circles) affair of 1945,” 147.
• Galia Bar Or, “The Story of the Museum of Mediterranean Archeology at Nir David,” 167. ______
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Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 44, Issue 1 (February 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=LAS&volumeId=44&is sueId=01&iid=8488007
• Anna Cant, “’Land for Those Who Work It’: A Visual Analysis of Agrarian Reform Posters in Velasco’s Peru,” 1.
• Richard M. Chapman, “Still Looking for Liberation? Lutherans in El Salvador and Nicaragua,” 39.
• Emma-Jayne Abbots, “In the Absence of Men? Gender, Migration and Domestic Labour in the Southern Ecuadorean Andes,” 71.
• Lucy Earle, “From Insurgent to Transgressive Citizenship: Housing, Social Movements and the Politics of Rights in São Paulo,” 97.
• Santiago Basabe-Serrano, “Judges without Robes and Judicial Voting in Contexts of Institutional Instability: The Case of Ecuador’s Constitutional Court, 1999-2007,” 127. ______
The Journal of Legal History, Vol. 33, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/flgh20/33/1
• Dave De ruysscher, “From Usages of Merchants to Default Rules: Practices of Trade, Ius Commune and Urban Law in Early Modern Antwerp,” 3.
• Michael Stuckey, “Early Modern English Humanism and Antiquarianism: The Prosopographical Method and Reflections on Historico-Legal Tradition,” 31.
• David M. Doyle and Ian O’Donnell, “The Death Penalty in Post-Independence Ireland,” 65.
• Guido Rossi, “Florence and the Great Fire: New Sources on English Commerce in the Late Sixteenth Century,” 93.
• “Scottish Legal History Group Report 2011,” 101.
• Sir John Baker, “Migrations of Manuscripts 2011,” 107. ______
Journal of Military Ethics, Vol. 10, Issue 4 (2011) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/smil20/10/4
• Hanne A. Kraugerud, “Shields of Humanity – The Ethical Constraints of Professional Combatants,” 263.
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• George R. Lucas Jr., “Industrial Challenges of Military Robotics,” 274.
• Thomas E. Doyle II, “Ethics, Nuclear Terrorism, and Counter-Terrorist Nuclear Reprisals – A Response to John Mark Mattox’s ‘Nuclear Terrorism: The Other Extreme of Irregular Warfare’,” 296.
• John Mark Mattox, “The Moral Limits of a Nuclear Response to Nuclear Terrorism: A Response to Thomas E. Doyle II,” 309.
• Stephen Coleman, “The Child Soldier,” 316.
• Stephen Coleman, “The Child Soldier: Teaching Points,” 317.
• Dan Zupan, “The Child Soldier: Negligent Response to a Threat,” 320.
• Emily Kalah Gade, “The Child Soldier: The Question of Self-Defense,” 323. ______
Journal of Military History, Vol. 76, No. 1 (January 2012) http://www.smh-hq.org/jmh/jmhvols/jmhvols/761.html
• Zeynep Kocabiyikoglu Çeçen, “Two Different Views of Knighthood in the Early Fifteenth Century: Le Livre de Bouciquaut and the Works of Christine de Pizan,” 9.
• Huw J. Davies, “Diplomats as Spymasters: A Case Study of the Peninsular War, 1809-1813,” 37.
• Candice Shy Hooper, “The War That Made Hollywood: How the Spanish- American War Saved the U.S. Film Industry,” 69.
• Frank A. Anselmo, “The Battle for Hill K-9 and the Fall of Rome, 2 June 1944,” 99.
• Mark C. Jones, “Not Just Along for the Ride: The Role of Royal Navy Liaison Personnel in Multinational Naval Operations during World War II,” 127.
• Jay Lockenour, “Black and White Memories of War: Victimization and Violence in West German War Films of the 1950s,” 159.
• Joel I. Holwitt, “Reappraising the Interwar U.S. Navy,” 193.
Journal of Military History, Vol. 76, No. 2 (April 2012) http://www.smh-hq.org/jmh/jmhvols/jmhvols/762.html
The 2012 George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Andrew J. Bacevich, “The Revisionist Imperative: Rethinking Twentieth Century Wars,” 333.
Articles
• Nate Probasco, “The Role of Commoners and Print in Elizabethan England’s Acceptance of Firearms,” 343.
• Daniel McMahon, “Geomancy and Walled Fortifications in Late Eighteenth Century China,” 373.
• Frederick C. Schneid, “A Well-Coordinated Affair: Franco-Piedmontese War Planning in 1859,” 395.
• James Tyrus Seidule, “’Treason is Treason’: Civil War Memory at West Point, 1861-1902,” 427.
• Anthony R. McGinnis, “When Courage Was Not Enough: Plains Indians at War with the United States Army,” 454.
• Alexander Statiev, “Blocking Units in the Red Army,” 475.
Feature
• Timothy K. Nenninger, “’Casualties’ at Leavenworth: A Research Problem,” 497.
Historiographical Essay
• Ingo Trauschweizer, “On Militarism,” 507.
Review Essay
• Geoffrey Parker, “A Soldier of Fortune in Seventeenth Century Eastern Europe,” 545. ______
The Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 50, Issue 1 (March 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=MOA&volumeId=50&i ssueId=01&iid=8499382
• Agnes Andersson Djurfeldt, “Seasonality and farm/non-farm interactions in Western Kenya,” 1.
• Johanna Boersch-Supan, “The generational contract in flux: intergenerational tensions in post-conflict Sierra Leone,” 25.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Mirco Göpfert, “Security in Niamey: an anthropological perspective on policing and an act of terrorism in Niger,” 53.
• Amy R. Poteete, “Electoral competition, factionalism, and persistent party dominance in Botswana,” 75.
• Joanna Sadgrove, Robert M. Vanderbeck, Johan Andersson, Gill Valentine, and Kevin Ward, “Morality plays and money matters: towards a situated understanding of the politics of homosexuality in Uganda,” 103.
• Setargew Kenaw, “Cultural translations of mobile telephones: mediation of strained communication among Ethiopian married couples,” 131. ______
The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 83, No. 4 (December 2011) http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/662373
• Axel Körner, “Uncle Tom on the Ballet Stage: Italy’s Barbarous America, 1850- 1900,” 721.
• Emily J. Levine, “PanDora, or Erwin and Dora Panofsky and the Private History of Ideas,” 753.
• Mark Kramer, “The Demise of the Soviet Bloc,” 788. ______
Journal of Modern Italian Studies, Vol. 17, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmis20/17/1
• Sabino Cassese, “The Italian constitutional architecture: from unification to the present day,” 2.
• Sergio Fabbrini, “The institutional odyssey of the Italian Parliamentary Republic,” 10.
• Paolo Ricci, “Explaining standing order reforms in the Camera dei Deputati during the liberal age,” 25.
• Simona Trollo, “’A gust of cleansing wind’: Italian archaeology on Rhodes and in Libya in the early years of occupation (1911-1914),” 45.
• Stavroula Pipyrou, “Commensurable language and incommensurable claims among the Greek linguistic minority of Southern Italy,” 70.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Giacomo Lichtner, “Allegory, applicability or alibi? Historicizing intolerance in Ettore Scola’s Concorrenza sleale,” 92.
• Olindo De Napoli, “The origin of the Racist Laws under fascism. A problem of historiography,” 106.
Journal of Modern Italian Studies, Vol. 17, Issue 2 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmis20/17/2
• Nadia Urbinati, “The transformation of republicanism in modern and contemporary Italy,” 145.
• Anna Maria Rao, “Republicanism in Italy from the eighteenth century to the early Risorgimento,” 149.
• Adrian Lyttelton, “Sismondi, the republic and liberty: between Italy and England, the city and nation,” 168.
• Nadia Urbinati, “Mazzini and the making of the republican ideology,” 183.
• Michele Battini, “Carlo Rosselli, ‘Giustizia e Libertà’ and the enigma of justice,” 205.
• Mariuccia Salvati, “From the republic of antifascists to the republic of parties,” 220. ______
The Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 47, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjph20/47/1
• Jan Tent and Paul Geraghty, “Where in the World is Ulimaroa? Or, How a Pacific Island Became the Australian Continent,” 1.
• Hilary Howes, “’Shrieking Savages’ and ‘Men of Milder Customs’: Dr. Adolf Bernhard Meyer in New Guinea, 1873,” 21.
• Gregory Rawlings, “Statelessness, Human Rights and Decolonisation: Citizenship in Vanuatu, 1906-80,” 45.
• Jack Corbett, “’Two Worlds’? Interpreting Political Leadership Narratives in the 20th-Century Pacific,” 69.
• Graeme Smith, “Chinese Reactions to Anti-Asian Riots in the Pacific,” 93.
• Anthony G. Flude and WNG, “Manuscript XXIII: A Raiatean petition for American protection,” 111.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Doug Munro, “Mary Boyd, 1921-2010,” 123.
• Doug Munro, “Exhibitions,” 127. ______
Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 41, No. 2 (Winter 2012) http://www.palestine-studies.org/journals.aspx?href=issue&jid=1&iid=162
• Reem Abou-El-Fadl, “The Road to Jerusalem through Tahrir Square: Anti- Zionism and Palestine in the 2011 Egyptian Revolution,” 6.
• Helga Tawil-Souri, “Digital Occupation: Gaza’s High-Tech Enclosure,” 27.
• Linda Tabar, “The ‘Urban Redesign’ of Jenin Refugee Camp: Humanitarian Intervention and Rational Violence,” 44.
• Anaheed Al-Hardan, “The Right of Return Movement in Syria: Building a Culture of Return, Mobilizing Memories for the Return,” 62.
• Avi Shlaim, “The Iron Wall Revisited,” 80.
• Elena N. Hogan, “Fieldnotes from Jerusalem and Gaza, 2009-2011,” 99. ______
Journal of Policy History, Vol. 23, Issue 4 (October 2011) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JPH&volumeId=23&iss ueId=04&iid=8453625
• Sidney M. Milkis and Daniel J. Tichenor, “Reform’s Mating Dance: Presidents, Social Movements, and Racial Realignments,” 451.
• Kim Phillips-Fein, “’As Great an Issue as Slavery or Abolition’: Economic Populism, the Conservative Movement, and the Right-to-Work Campaigns of 1958,” 491.
• Daniel K. Williams, “The GOP’s Abortion Strategy: Why Pro-Choice Republicans Became Pro-Life in the 1970s,” 513.
• Dean J. Kotlowski, “The First Cold War Liberal? Paul V. McNutt and the Idea of Security from the 1920s to the 1940s,” 540.
Journal of Policy History, Vol. 24, Issue 1 (January 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=JPH&volumeId=24&seriesId=0&issue Id=01
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Eileen Boris, “Introduction: Intersectional Perspectives in Policy History,” 1.
• Catherine E. Rymph, “From ‘Economic Want’ to ‘Family Pathology’: Family Foster Care, the New Deal, and the Emergence of a Public Child Welfare System,” 7.
• Sarah F. Rose, “The Right to a College Education? The G.I. Bill, Public Law 16, and Disabled Veterans,” 26.
• Kevin J. Mumford, “Untangling Pathology: The Moynihan Report and Homosexual Damage, 1965-1975,” 53.
• Premilla Nadasen, “Citizenship Rights, Domestic Work, and the Fair Labor Standards Act,” 74.
• Claire Bond Potter, “Paths to Political Citizenship: Gay Rights, Feminism, and the Carter Presidency,” 95.
• Marisa Chappell, “Reagan’s ‘Gender Gap’ Strategy and the Limitations of Free- Market Feminism,” 115.
• Jennifer Mittelstadt, “Stepping Into It: Lessons Learned from Entering the History You’re Writing,” 135.
Journal of Policy History, Vol. 24, Issue 2 (April 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JPH&volumeId=24&iss ueId=02&iid=8517950
• Beverly Gage, “Deep Throat, Watergate, and the Bureaucratic Politics of the FBI,” 157.
• Kevin P. Donnelly and David A. Rochefort, “The Lessons of ‘Lesson Drawing’: How the Obama Administration Attempted to Learn from Failure of the Clinton Health Plan,” 184.
• Candice Bredbenner, “A Duty to Defend? The Evolution of Aliens’ Military Obligations to the United States, 1792 to 1946,” 224.
• Stacie Taranto, “Ellen McCormack for President: Politics and an Improbable Path to Passing Anti-abortion Policy,” 263.
• Lisa Andersen, “From Unpopular to Excluded: Prohibitionists and the Ascendancy of a Democratic-Republican System, 1888-1912,” 288.
• Rachel Winslow, “Immigration Law and Improvised Policy in the Making of International Adoption, 1948-1961,” 319.
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______
Journal of Political Science Education, Vol. 8, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/upse20/8/1
• Douglas D. Roscoe, “Comparing Student Outcomes in Blended and Face-to-Face Courses,” 1.
• Elizabeth S. Smith, “Incorporating Sustainability into an American Government Course: The Problems, the Progress, the Promise,” 20.
• Mahalley D. Allen, Sally A. Parker, and Teodora C. DeLorenzo, “Civic Engagement in the Community: Undergraduate Clinical Legal Education,” 35.
• William Gorton and Jonathan Havercroft, “Using Historical Simulations to Teach Political Theory,” 50.
• Chad Raymond, “Missing the Trees for the Forest?: Learning Environments Versus Learning Techniques in Simulations,” 69.
• Heather K. Evans, “Making Politics ‘Click’: The Costs and Benefits of Using Clickers in an Introductory Political Science Course,” 85.
• Simon Lightfoot, “’Delicious Politics’ – the Use of Social Bookmarking in Politics Teaching,” 94. ______
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. 22, Issue 1 (January 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JRA&seriesId=3&volu meId=22&issueId=01&iid=8509262
• Michael Willis and Adam Hardy, “Introduction: Medieval India and the Paramara Dynasty,” 5.
• Daud Ali, “The Historiography of the Medieval in South Asia,” 7.
• Arvind K. Singh, “Interpreting the History of the Paramaras,” 13.
• Muzaffar Ahmed Ansari, “Muratpur and the Udaypur Prasasti: New Discoveries,” 29.
• Mattia Salvini, “The Samaranganasutradhara: Themes and Context for the Science of Vastu,” 35.
• Whitney Cox, “Bhoja’s Alternate Universe,” 57.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Csaba Dezso, “The Story of the Irascible Yaksa and the King Who Nearly Beheaded Himself in Dhanapala’s Tilakamanjari,” 73.
• Dániel Balogh, “Ranasimha Revisited: A New Copper-plate Inscription of the Candravati Paramara Dynasty,” 93.
• O.P. Mishra, “Bijamandal and Carccika: Tutelary Goddess of the Paramara King Naravarman,” 107.
• Razieh Babagolzadeh, “On Becoming Muslim in the City of Swords: Bhoja and Shaykh Changal at Dhar,” 115.
• Michael Willis, “Dhar, Bhoja and Sarasvati: from Indology to Political Mythology and Back,” 129.
• Abhishek S. Amar, “Buddhist Responses to Brahmana Challenges in Medieval India: Bodhgaya and Gaya,” 155. ______
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 43, Issue 1 (February 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=SEA&volumeId=43&is sueId=01&iid=8468306
• Federico Ferrara, “The legend of King Prajadhipok: Tall tales and stubborn facts on the seventh reign in Siam,” 4.
• Michelle Tan, “Passing over in silences: Ideology, ideals and ideas in Thai translation,” 32.
• Tomomi Ito, “Questions of ordination legitimacy for newly ordained Theravada bhikkhuni in Thailand,” 55.
• John C. Schafer, “The curious memoirs of the Vietnamese composer Pham Duy,” 77.
• Patrick McAllister, “Connecting places, constructing Tet: Home, city and the making of the lunar New Year in urban Vietnam,” 111.
• Gerard Sasges, “State, enterprise and the alcohol monopoly in colonial Vietnam,” 133.
• Nicolas Weber, “The destruction and assimilation of Campa (1832-35) as seen from Cam sources,” 158. ______
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Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 34, Issue 6 (2011) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=SEA&volumeId=43&is sueId=01&iid=8468306
Roundtable on Beatrice Heuser’s The Evolution of Strategy
• Beatric Heuser, “Author’s Reply to the Round Table Review of The Evolution of Strategy: Thinking War from Antiquity to the Present,” 785.
Original Articles
• Eric Ouellet and Pierre C. Pahlavi, “Institutional Analysis and Irregular Warfare: A Case Study of the French Army in Algeria 1954-1960,” 799.
• David Brewster, “Indian Strategic Thinking about East Asia,” 825.
• Harold R. Winton, “An Imperfect Jewel: Military Theory and the Military Profession,” 853.
• Harald Hølback, “What is Doctrine?,” 879.
Review Essay
• William Philpott, “France’s Forgotten Victory,” 901.
Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 35, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjss20/35/1
Amos Perlmutter Prize Essay
• Jeffrey H. Michaels, “Managing Global Counterinsurgency: The Special Group (CI) 1962-1966,” 33.
Original Articles
• Thomas Rid, “Cyber War Will Not Take Place,” 5.
• Yoram Evron, “China’s Military Procurement Approach in the Early 21st Century and Its Operational Implications,” 63.
• Dag Henriksen, “Deterrence by Default? Israel’s Military Strategy in the 2006 War against Hizballah,” 95.
• Lazar Berman, “Capturing Contemporary Innovation: Studying IDF Innovation against Hamas and Hizballah,” 121.
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Review Essay
• T.V. Paul, “Disarmament Revisited: Is Nuclear Abolition Impossible?,” 149. ______
Journal of Transatlantic Studies, Vol. 9, Issue 4 (2011) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjts20/9/4
• Floribert Baudet, “’The ideological equivalent of the atomic bomb’. The Netherlands, Atlanticism, and human rights in the early Cold War,” 269.
• Daniel Möckli, “Neutral Switzerland and Western security governance from the Cold War to the global economic crisis,” 282.
• Kai Oppermann, “The public images of Britain, Germany, and France in the United States,” 305.
• Giles Scott-Smith, “Mutual interests? US public diplomacy in the 1980s and Nicolas Sarkozy’s first trip to the United States,” 326.
• Adam D.M. Svendsen, “Exemplary ‘friends and allies’? Unpacking UK-US relations in the early twenty-first century,” 342.
Journal of Transatlantic Studies, Vol. 10, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjts20/10/1
• David Michael Green, “Are Europeans made in America? Identity, alterity and the United States as Europe’s ‘Other’,” 1.
• Damon Coletta and Sten Rynning, “NATO from Kabul to Earth orbit: can the alliance cope?,” 26.
• Tony Jackson, Deepak Gopinath, and John Curry, “Dirigiste and Smart Growth approaches to urban sprawl: lessons from Scotland and British Columbia,” 45.
• Greg Kennedy, “Anglo-American strategic relations and maritime power today,” 68.
• Douglas J. Snyder, “’Fantastic and absurd utterances’: the Vietnam War and misperceptions of anti-Americanism in US-French relations, 1966-1967,” 84. ______
Journal of Vietnamese Studies, Vol. 7, No. 1 (Winter 2012) http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/vs.2012.7.issue-1
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Christian Henriot, “Supplying Female Bodies: Labor Migration, Sex Work, and the Commoditization of Women in Colonial Indochina and Contemporary Vietnam,” 1.
• Isabelle Tracol-Huynh, “The Shadow Theater of Prostitution in French Colonial Tonkin: Faceless Prostitutes under the Colonial Gaze,” 10.
• Frédéric Roustan, “Mousmés and French Colonial Culture: Making Japanese Women’s Bodies Available in Indochina,” 52.
• Caroline Grillot, “Between Bitterness and Sweetness, When Bodies Say it All: Chinese Perspectives on Vietnamese Women in a Border Space,” 106.
• Nicolas Lainez, “Commodified Sexuality and Mother-Daughter Power Dynamics in the Mekong Delta,” 149. ______
The Middle East Journal, Vol. 66, No. 1 (Winter 2012) http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/mei/mei/2012/00000066/00000001;jsessionid= 1tcch9f4al9gc.alice
• Dov Waxman, “A Dangerous Divide: The Deterioration of Jewish-palestinian Relations in Israel,” 11.
• Craig Larkin and Michael Dumper, “In Defense of Al-Aqsa: The Islamic Movement inside Israel and the Battle for Jerusalem,” 30.
• Sean E. Duggan, “Redefining the Relationship: Reclaiming American public Diplomacy from the US Military in Iraq,” 52.
• Krista E. Wiegand, “Bahrain, Qatar, and the hawar islands: Resolution of a gulf Territorial Dispute,” 78.
• Hakan Köni, “Saudi Influence on Islamic Institutions in Turkey Beginning in the 1970s,” 96. ______
Middle East Policy, Vol. 19, Issue 1 (Spring 2012) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mepo.2012.19.issue-1/issuetoc
A Shifting Balance of Power
• Robert Malley, Karim Sadjadpour, and Ömer Taspinar, “Symposium – Israel, Turkey and Iran in the Changing Arab World,” 1.
• Jahangir Amuzegar, “The Islamic Republic of Iran: Facts and Fiction,” 25.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Aylin G. Gürzel and Eyüp Ersoy, “Turkey and Iran’s Nuclear Program,” 37.
• Dalia Dassa Kaye and Eric Lorber, “Containing Iran: What Does It Mean?,” 51.
• Timo Kivimäki, “Democracy, Autocrats and U.S. Policies in the Middle East,” 64.
Spring in the Levant
• Joshua Landis, “The Syrian Uprising of 2011: Why the Asad Regime is Likely to Survive to 2013,” 72.
• Bassam Haddad, “Syria’s Stalemate: The Limits of Regime Resilience,” 85.
• Sarah A. Tobin, “Jordan’s Arab Spring: The Middle Class and Anti-Revolution,” 96.
Building Political Infrastructure
• Denise Natali, “The Politics of Kurdish Crude,” 110.
• Michael M. Gunter, “Turkey: The Politics of a New Democratic Constitution,” 119.
• Raed Abdulaziz Alhargan, “Saudi Arabia: Civil Rights and Local Actors,” 126.
• David M. Faris, “Constituting Institutions: The Electoral System in Egypt,” 140. ______
Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 47, Issue 6 (2011) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fmes20/47/6
• Yechiam Weitz, “The Founding Father and the General: David Ben-Gurion and Moshe Dayan,” 845.
• Jerzy Zdanowski, “The Manumission Movement in the Gulf in the First Half of the Twentieth Century,” 863.
• Catherine S. Woodward, “The Discourse and Experience of the Arabian Mission’s Medical Missionaries: Part II 1939-1960,” 885.
• Nuray Ozaslan and Aysu Akalin, “Architecture and Image: The Example of Turkey,” 911.
• Devrim Dumludag and Bülent Durgun, “An Economy in Transition: Izmir (1918- 38),” 923.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Umut Koldas, “The Nakba in Palestinian Memory in Israel,” 947.
Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 48, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fmes20/48/1
• Michael Eppel, “The Arab States and the 1948 War in Palestine: The Socio- Political Struggles, the Compelling Nationalist Discourse and the Regional Context of Involvement,” 1.
• Mordechai Bar-on, “The Generals’ ‘Revolt’: Civil-Military Relations in Israel on the Eve of the Six Day War,” 33.
• Miroslav Sedivy, “Austria’s Role in the Constantinople Armenian Catholics Affair in 1828-31,” 51.
• Fruma Zachs, “Transformations of a Memory of Tyranny in Syria: From Jamal Pasha to ‘Id al-Shuhada’, 1914-2000,” 73.
• Polat Safi, “History in the Trench: The Ottoman Special Organization – Teskilat – i Mahsusa Literature.” 89.
• Hootan Shambayati and Güliz Sütçü, “The Turkish Constitutional Court and the Justice and Development Party (2002-09),” 107.
• Josep Lluís Mateo Dieste, “Are there ‘Mestizos’ in the Arab World? A Comparative Survey of Classification Categories and Kinship Systems,” 125.
Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 48, Issue 2 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fmes20/48/2
• Stephanie Cronin, “Deserters, Converts, Cossacks and Revolutionaries: Russians in Iranian Military Service 1800-1920,” 147.
• Yehuda (UDI) Blanga, “The Path that Led to the Cease-Fire Ending the War of Attrition and the Stationing of Missiles at the Suez Canal,” 183.
• Yücel Yanikdag, “From Cowardice to Illness: Diagnosing Malingering in the Ottoman Great War,” 205.
• Frank W. Brecher, “US Secretary of State George C. Marshall’s Losing Battles against President Harry S. Truman’s Palestine Policy, January-June 1948,” 227.
• Masha Halevi, “Between Faith and Science: Franciscan Archaeology in the Service of the Holy Places,” 249.
• Zeki Sarigil, “Ethnic Groups at ‘Critical Junctures’: The Laz vs. Kurds,” 269.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Seda Demiralp, “The Odd Tango of the Islamic Right and Kurdish Left in Turkey: A Peripheral Alliance to Redesign the Centre?,” 287.
• F. Michael Wuthrich, “The Kurdish Question in Turkey, Iraq and Beyond,” 303. ______
Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 46, Issue 2 (March 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=ASS&volumeId=46&is sueId=02&iid=8518558
• Tim Harper and Sunil S. Amrith, “Sites of Asian Interaction: An introduction,” 249.
• Jacqueline H. Fewkes, “Living in the Material World: Cosmopolitanism and trade in early twentieth century Ladakh,” 259.
• Chua Ai Lin, “Nation, Race and Language: Discussing transnational identities in colonial Singapore, circa 1930,” 283.
• Kirsty Walker, “Intimate Interactions: Eurasian family histories in colonial Penang,” 303.
• Ronit Ricci, “Citing as a Site: Translation and circulation in Muslim South and Southeast Asia,” 331.
• Sumit K. Mandal, “Popular Sites of Prayer, Transoceanic Migration, and Cultural Diversity: Exploring the significance of keramat in Southeast Asia,” 355.
• Lale Can, “Connecting People: A Central Asian Sufi network in turn-of-the- century Istanbul,” 373.
• Carolien Stolte, “’Enough of the Great Napoleons!’ Raja Mahendra Pratap’s Pan- Asian projects (1929-1939),” 403.
• Evelyn Hu-Dehart, “Chinatowns and Borderlands: Inter-Asian encounters in the diaspora,” 425.
• Teresa S. Encarnacion Tadem, “Creating Spaces for Asian Interaction Through the Anti-Globalization Campaigns in the Region,” 453.
Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 46, Issue 3 (May 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=ASS&volumeId=46&is sueId=03&iid=8525858
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• David Ludden, “Spatial Inequity and National Territory: Remapping 1905 in Bengal and Assam,” 483.
• Jason Cons, “Histories of Belonging(s): Narrating Territory, Possession, and Dispossession at the India-Bangladesh Border,” 527.
• Sara Dickey, “The Pleasures and Anxieties of Being in the Middle: Emerging Middle-Class Identities in Urban South India,” 559.
• Anne Waldrop, “Grandmother, Mother and Daughter: Changing agency of Indian, middle-class women, 1908-2008,” 601.
• Ronki Ram, “Beyond Conversion and Sanskritisation: Articulating an Alternative Dalit Agenda in East Punjab,” 639.
• Utsa Ray, “Eating ‘Modernity’: Changing dietary practices in colonial Bengal,” 703.
• Rochona Majumdar, “Debating Radical Cinema: A History of the Film Society Movement in India,” 731. ______
Modern & Contemporary France, Vol. 20, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cmcf20/20/1
• Margaret A. Majumdar, “’Une Francophonie à l’offensive’? Recent Developments in Francophonie,” 1.
• Jan Windebank, “Social Policy and Gender Divisions of Domestic and Care Work in France,” 21.
• Mariène Coulomb-Gully, “Les femmes politiques au miroir des fictions télévisuelles. Commander in Chief et L’État de Grâce: une comparaison France/États- Unis,” 37.
• Claire Boyle, “An Ethical Queer Cinema? Hypervisibility and the Alienated Gay Gaze in Ducastel and Martineau’s Ma vraie vie à Rouen,” 53.
• Jean-Marc Lemonnier and Michaël Attali, “La presse jeunesse face au sport. Le développement en France d’une culture entre tradition et modernité dans les années 1960,” 71.
• Fabien Beyria, “Les relations franco-algériennes dans la presse écrite nationale française: l’exemple du traitement du match de football France-Algérie du 6 octobre 2001,” 87.
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• John Strachan, “Camus in Context,” 105. ______
Modern Italy, Vol. 17, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cmit20/17/1
• David Lebovitch Dahl, “The antisemitism of the Italian Catholics and nationalism: ‘the Jew’ and ‘the honest Italy’ in the rhetoric of La Civiltà Cattolica during he Risorgimento,” 1. • Federica Falchi, “Democracy and the rights of women in the thinking of Giuseppe Mazzini,” 15.
• Massimo Vittorio, “Reflections on the Croce-Dewey exchange,” 31.
• Zana Vathi, “Local identities, identification and incorporation of Albanian immigrants in Florence,” 51.
• Jomarie Alano, “Anti-fascism for children: Ada Gobetti’s story of Sebastiano the rooster,” 69.
• Alan R. Perry, “’lo sono qui muto e solitario’: Giovannino Guareschi’s prison writings, 1954-1955,” 85.
• Martin J. Bull, “The Italian transition that never was,” 103.
• Gillian Ania, “11 September 2001: the Italian writers’ response,” 119. ______
Le Monde Diplomatique (February 2012) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2012/02/
• Editorial, Serge Halimi, “Après Tobin,” 1.
• Joseph Sassoon, “Comment les tyrans prennent leurs decisions,” 1.
• Marie Kostrz, “Le Sinaï, épine dans le pied de l’Egypte,”
• G.M. Tamas, “Hongrie, laboratoire d’une nouvelle droite,” 3.
• Martine Bulard, “A Taïwan, trêve diplomatique et fièvre commerciale,” 4.
• Martine Bulard, “Se forger une identité nationale.”
• “Eléments chronologiques sur Taiwan.”
• “Taïwan en chiffres.” 32 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Bruce Cumings, “La dynastie Kim ou les deux corps du roi,” 6.
• Anne-Cécile Robert, “Qui veut étrangler l’ONU,” 7.
• Anne-Cécile Robert, “Ramification onusienne.”
• Jean Ziegler, “Quand le riz devient un produit financier,” 8.
• Aurélien Barrau, “Trois hypothèses pour un Big Bang,” 14.
• Sanou Mbaye, “Décollage africain, marasme sénégalais,” 17.
• Sanou Mbaye, “En Afrique, une conjoncture favorable malgré la crise.”
• Olivier Quarante, “Résistance obstinée des Sahraouis,” 18.
• Olivier Quarante, “Un territoire disputé.”
• Rémi Carayol, “Un pêcheur somalien dans le filet judiciaire,” 19.
• Anne Vigna, “Dans les télécollèges mexicains,” 20.
• Alexander Cockburn, “Le manifeste qui a failli changer l’Amérique,” 21.
• “Nos consciences chahutées.”
• Felix Stalder, “Anonymous, de l’humour potache à l’action politique,” 22.
• Navid Hassanpour, “Révolte égyptienne, avec ou sans Twitter,” 22.
• Smaïn Laacher and Cédric Terzi, “Au Maghreb, les blogueurs sont fatigués,” 23.
• John Berger, “Ballerines,” 27.
• Maurizio Lazzarato, “La dette ou le vol du temps,” 28.
Dossier
• “Main basse sur les salaires,” 9.
• Sam Pizzigati, “Plafonner les revenus, une idée américaine,” 1.
• Anne Dufresne, “Le consensus de Berlin,” 9.
• Anne Dufresne, “Difficile riposte des syndicats européens,” 10. 33 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Julien Brygo, “’Il est parti où, cet argent?’,” 12.
• Bernard Friot, “La cotisation, levier d’émancipation,” 12.
• “Combativité payante.”
• “Mots-clés.”
• “Causes et conséquences.”
Le Monde Diplomatique (March 2012) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2012/03/
• Editorial, Serge Halimi, “Impunité saoudienne,” 1.
• Jean-Arnault Dérens, “Balkans, la fin du rêve européen,” 1.
• Jean-Arnault Dérens, “Voyages dans les Balkans, 1857-1870.”
• Renaud Lambert, “Les économistes à gages sur la sellette,” 1.
• Renaud Lambert, “De bon conseil.”
• Renaud Lambert, “Une prédilection pour la saignée.”
• Pierre Rimbert, “A l’OCDE, je pense donc je fuis.”
• Mona Chollet, “Aux sources morales de l’austérité,” 3.
• Philippe Descamps, “La longue marche parlementaire des maoïstes népalais,” 4.
• Philippe Descamps, “L’Inde, un voisin encombrant.”
• “Soixante ans de révolutions.”
• Michael T. Klare, “Quand le Pentagone met le cap sur le Pacifique,” 6.
• Gary Sick, “Contre l’Iran, une stratégie perdante,” 6.
• Thomas Deltombe, “Les fantômes de Madagascar,” 8.
• Thomas Deltombe, “La France, acteur-clé de la crise malgache.”
• Eddy Khaldi, “Laïcité, le triomphe de l’équivoque,” 10. 34 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Hernando Calvo Ospina, “Au Salvador, la gauche gouverne-t-elle?,” 11.
• Patrick Herman, “Victoire historique au procès de l’amiante,” 11.
• Philippe Rekacewicz, “Un Vieux Continent à géographie variable,” 14.
• Alain Gresh and Philippe Rekacewicz, “Atlas 2012: ‘Ne pas reproduire le visible, mais rendre visible.’”
• Philippe Rekacewicz, “Les fronts orientaux d’une Europe à géographie variable.”
• Philippe Rekacewicz, “Crise de la dette ou dette due à la crise?”
• Philippe Rekacewicz, “Le deux visages de l’espace Schengen.”
• Natsuki Ikezawa, “La catastrophe comme occasion,” 16.
• Michel Imbert, “Le roman policier chinois entre Mao et tao,” 27.
• Jean-Pierre Garnier, “Le dernier nouveau philosophe,” 28.
Dossier
• “Retour à l’usine,” 17.
• Laurent Carroué, “Industrie, socle de la puissance,” 17.
• Gérard Duménil and Dominque Lévy, “Que cache l’engouement pour les relocalisations?,” 18.
• Benoît Bréville and Anaëlle Verzaux, “La Seine-Saint-Denis entre deux mondes.,” 20.
• Itoyama Akiko, “Le Jour de la gratitude au travail.”
• Studs Terkel, “Working.”
• Rémy De Vos, “Cassé.”
Le Monde Diplomatique (April 2012) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2012/04/
• Editorial, Serge Halimi, “L’audace ou l’enlisement,” 1.
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• Alain Gresh, “Onde de choc syrienne,” 1.
• Jean-Pierre Filiu, “Tout commence, tout finit à Gaza,” 10.
• Jean Radvanyi, “Continuité de façade en Russie,” 1.
• Pierre Rimbert, “L’histoire ne repasse pas les plats,” 3.
• Maurice Lemoine, “Face aux créanciers, effronterie argentine et frolisité grecque,” 4.
• “De nombreux précédents.”
• Xavier Monthéard, “Etre étudiant au Vietnam,” 6.
• Xavier Monthéard, “Un enseignement supérieur fractionné.”
• Xavier Monthéard, “Très chères prestations étrangères.”
• Philippe Leymarie, “Comment le Sahel est devenu une poudrière,” 8.
• Alain Vicky, “Aux origines de la secte Boko Haram,” 8.
• Christophe Hélou, “Des enseignants notés triple A,” 12.
• Cédric Gouverneur, “Microcrédit, le commerce de la misère,” 12.
• Owen Jones, “Le petit monde du libéralisme portugais,” 13.
• Owen Jones, “Un banc de’essai.”
• Olivier Cyran, “Dans le Mississippi, les fractures de l’Amérique profonde,” 14.
• Irena Wiszniewska, “Odessa ou les charmes du superflu,”16.
• Julien Brygo, “Carnets de campagne,” 18.
• Eric Dupin, “Acrobaties doctrinales au Front national,” 20.
• Marc Endeweld, “Télévision publique, la mal-aimée du pouvoir,” 22.
• Marc Endeweld, “L’ORTF est supprimé.”
• Marc Endeweld, “Projets et programmes.”
• Max Dorra, “Une souvenir d’incendie,” 27. 36 | Page
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• Evelyne Pieillier, “Le mur de la discorde,” 28.
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Le Monde Diplomatique – Manière de voir (February-March 2012) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/121/
Algérie, 1954-2011. Histoire et espérances
• Alain Gresh, “Utopie.”
I. Rêves, espoirs et mirages
• Jean-Pierre Séréni, “Un printemps qui se fait attendre.”
• Robert Gauthier, “Vocation socialiste et autogestion ouvrière.”
• Sid-Ahmed Ghozali, “En 1971, la reconquête du pétrole.”
• Claude Deffarge and Gordian Troeller, “Alger, capitale des révolutionnaires en exil.”
• François Bouchardeau, “Shéhérazade, une femme à part.”
• Mouloud Mimoun, “Le cinéma, miroir de la société.”
• Mohammed Bedjaoui, “Enfin, le tiers-monde…”
• Marc Raffinot, “A marche forcée, l’industrialisation.”
II. Douloureux réveil
• Ignacio Ramonet, “Révolte d’une jeunesse sacrifiée.”
• Lahouari Addi, “Poussée islamiste.”
• Thierry Parisot, “Folies exterminatrices.”
• Isabelle Avran, “L’embellie créative.”
• Thierry Michalon, “Au pays des cousins.”
• Francis Ghilès, “Divisé, le Maghreb se marginalise.”
• Eric Rouleau, “Analyse de la contestation islamiste.” 37 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Gilbert Grandguillaume, “Arabisation et démagogie.”
• Allan Popelard and Paul Vannier, “Une capitale se défait.”
• Jean-Pierre Séréni, “Jours tranquilles à Tlemcen la dévote.”
III. Le poids de la mémoire
• Maurice T. Maschino, “La colonisation telle qu’on l’enseigne.”
• Mohammed Harbi, “La guerre a commencé à Sétif.”
• Marina Da Silva, “Pourchassés par le malheur.”
• Nicolas Bancel, Pascal Blanchard, and Sandrine Lemaire, “La torture en miroir.”
• Claude Liauzu, “17 octobre 1961, la fin de l’oubli.”
• “Pour le droit à l’insoumission,’Manifeste des 121.’”
• Anne Mathieu, “Jean-Paul Sartre et la guerre d’Algérie.”
• Ghania Mouffok, “Une amnésie morbide.”
• Dominique Le Guilledoux, “Des footballeurs entre Paris et Alger.”
Le Monde Diplomatique – Manière de voir (April-May 2012) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/122/
Où se cachent les pouvoirs
• Benoît Bréville and Renaud Lambert, “Un nom et une adresse.”
I. Monde du travail
• Stephen Hymer, “Tout a commencé sur l’île de Robinson.”
• Paul Lagneau-Ymonet and Angelo Riva, “La Bourse, là où tout se noue.”
• François Ruffin, “Intrusion ouvrière dans le cénacle des actionnaires.”
• Gilles Balbastre and Stéphane Binhas, “Sur les chaînes de montage des ces ‘usines à vivre.’”
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• Amnon Kapeliouk, “Israël, un pays possédé par son armée.”
• Serge Halimi, “Le poumon du capitalisme américain.”
• Ibrahim Warde, “Règne des agences de notation.”
II. Univers politique
• François Denord, Paul Lagneau-Ymonet, and Sylvain Thine, “Aux dîners du Siècle, l’élite se renforce en babillant.”
• Alexander Zevin, “Terra Nova, ‘boîte à idées’ pour faire carrière.”
• Bernard Cassen, “Une école de tortionnaires dans les Amériques.”
• Olivier Boiral, “La Trilatérale, antichambre des évidences planétaires.”
• Hua Cai, “Mue chinoise dans les couloirs de l’OMC.”
III. Sphère sociale
• Alexis Spire, “La vie de l’immigré débute au guichet.”
• Julien Brygo, “’Bonnes à tout faire’ made in Philipppines.”
• Alain Bihr and Roland Pfefferkorn, “Ombres de l’intimité.”
• Gilles Balbastre, “Scène ordinaire d’un tribunal scolaire.”
• Ali Kazancigil, “L’armée turque au secours des milieux d’affaires.”
• Michel Pinçon and Monique Pinçon-Charlot, “Balade chez les grands bourgeois.”
IV. Cercles intellectuels
• Alain Garrigou, “Sciences Po, laminoir des élites françaises.”
• Jérôme Anciberro, “Tentaculaire et doctrinaire, l’Opus Dei.”
• Eric Alterman, “Et maintenant, les étoiles!”
• Maurice Lemoine, “Coup d’État médiatique au Venezuela.”
• Serge Halimi, “Internet, entre émancipation et marchandisation.”
• Charles Wright Mills, “Anatomie du pouvoir.” 39 | Page
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Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, Vol. 18, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fnep20/18/1
• Matt Qvortrup, “Introduction: Referendums, Democracy, and Nationalism,” 1.
• Peter Radan, “Secessionist Referenda in International and Domestic Law,” 8.
• Zoran Oklopcic, “Independence Referendums and Democratic Theory in Quebec and Montenegro,” 22.
• Sung Yong Lee and Roger Mac Ginty, “Context and Postconflict Referendums,” 43.
• Dahlia Scheindlin, “Phantom Referendums in Phantom States: Meaningless Farce or a Bridge to Reality?,” 65.
• Erol Kaymak, “If At First You Don’t Succeed, Try, Try Again: (Re)Designing Referenda to Ratify a Peace Treaty in Cyprus,” 88.
• Jean Laponce, “Language and Sovereignty Referendums: The Convergence Effect,” 113.
• Matt Qvortrup, “The History of Ethno-National Referendums 1791-2011,” 129.
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The Nonproliferation Review, Vol. 19, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rnpr20/19/1
• Gigi Kwik Gronvall, Kelsey Gregg, and Kirk C. Bansak, “Correspondence: Trust in the Age of Bioweapons,” 7.
• Paolo Foradori, “Tactical Nuclear Weapons in Italy: Striking a Balance between Disarmament Aspirations and Alliance Obligations,” 13.
• Clifton W. Sherrill, “Why Iran Wants the Bomb and What It Means for US Policy,” 31.
• Jeffrey W. Knopf, “The Concept of Nuclear Planning,” 79.
• Jane Esberg and Scott D. Sagan, “Negotiating Nonproliferation: Scholarship, Pedagogy, and Nuclear Weapons Policy,” 95.
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• John R. Walker, “Potential Proliferation Pointers from the Past: Lessons from the British Nuclear Weapons Program, 1952-69,” 109.
• Alexander Glaser, “Facilitating Nuclear Disarmament: Verified Declarations of Fissile Material Stocks and Production,” 125.
A Three-Part Debate
• Derrin Culp, “Part I: A Critical Examination of ‘The Myth of Nuclear Deterrence’,” 51.
• Ward Wilson, “Part II: Continuing to Question the Reliability of Nuclear Deterrence,” 69.
• Derrin Culp, “Part III: Challenging the Unconventional Wisdom on Deterrence,” 75.
______
Orbis, Vol. 56, Issue 2 (2012) http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00304387/56/2
• David W. Barno, Nora Bensahel, and Travis Sharp, “Pivot but Hedge: A Strategy for Pivoting to Asia While Hedging in the Middle East,” 158.
• Benjamin H. Friedman and Justin Logan, “Why the US Military Budget is ‘Foolish and Sustainable’,” 177.
• Audrey Kurth Cronin, “U.S. Grand Strategy and Counterterrorism,” 192.
• Joshua Rovner, “The Heroes of COIN,” 215.
• Robert Killebrew, Matthew Irvine, and David Glaser, “A New U.S.- Colombian Relationship: Transnational Crime and U.S. National Security,” 233.
• Stephen Blank, “The End of Russian Power in Asia?,” 249.
• Jennifer Dabbs Sciubba, “Demography and Instability in the Developing World,” 267.
• Adrian A. Basora, “Do the Post-Communist Transitions Offer Useful Lessons for the Arab Uprisings?,” 278.
• Kenneth B. Moss, “War Powers and the Atlantic Divide,” 289.
• David J. Karl, “U.S. – India Relations: The Way Forward,”308.
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• Arthur I. Cyr, “The World According to Mentor and Student,” 328. ______
Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 81, No. 1 (February 2012) http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/phr.2012.81.issue-1
• Janet Fireman, “Between Horizons: Traveling the Great Central Valley,” 1.
• Martin Meeker, “The Queerly Disadvantaged and the Making of San Francisco’s War on Poverty, 1964-1967,” 21.
• William Benjamin Piggot, “Globalization from the Bottom Up: Irvine, California, and the Birth of Suburban Cosmopolitanism,” 60. ______
Pakistaniaat: A Journal of Pakistan Studies, Vol. 3, No. 3 (2011) http://www.pakistaniaat.org/issue/view/781/showToc
• Nasim Yousaf, “Khaksar Movement Weekly ‘Al-Islah’s’ Role Toward Freedom,” 1.
• Lillie Anne Brown, “Suited Up in the Compositional Realm of ‘The Artist Formerly Known as Prince’: Identity, Belonging, and Acceptance in Hanif Kureishi’s The Black Album,” 22.
• Amit Ranjan, “India-Pakistan: Failed in Field and Across the Table,” 34.
• Muhammad Iqbal, Falak Sher, Rehmat Ullah Awan, and Khalid Javed, “Economic and Cultural Relations Between Pakistan and the Soviet Union During Ayub Khan’s Period,” 60.
• Piar Karim, “Light Verbs and Noun Verb Agreement in Hunza Burushaski,” 73. ______
Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice, Vol. 24, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cper20/24/1
Symposium: Human Rights Education Praxis
• Monisha Bajaj, “Human Rights Education in Small Schools in India,” 6.
• Ana Laura Pauchulo, “Encountering Breakdowns in Human Rights Education,” 14.
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• Tracey Holland and Moisa Morrison Saidu, “Post-War Challenges Facing Women and Girls in Sierre Leone,” 22.
• Andrea McEvoy Spero, “Human Rights Education and the Performing Arts,” 28.
• Maria Hantzopoulos, “Considering Human Rights Education as U.S. Public School Reform,” 36.
• Jennifer Bronson, “Human Rights Education for Underprivileged High School Students,” 46.
• Sara Ramey, “Fighting for a Society That Respects Each Person’s Dignity,” 54.
• Mike Klein, “Online Partnerships for Human Rights Education Praxis,” 61.
• Rebecca Joy Norlander, “A Digital Approach to Human Rights Education?,” 70.
• Lindsey N. Kingston, “Creating a ‘Human Rights Campus’,” 78.
Other Features
• Salvatore Babones, “The Revival of Militarist Language in the United States,” 84.
• Linda Heidenreich, “Vampires Among Us,” 92.
• Bishnu Raj Upreti, “Nepal From War to Peace,” 102.
• Mary Zweifel, “Taking Up Arms,” 108.
• Emma Fuentes, Shabnam Koiraia-Azad, and Susan Roberta Katz, “Peace Profile: Graduate Studies in Human Rights Education,” 114. ______
Politique étrangère (2011/4) http://www.cairn.info/revue-politique-etrangere-2011-4.htm
La Déconstruction Européenne?
• Alain Richard, “Europe Politique: Un Espoir est-il Raisonnable?,” 731.
• Maxime Lefebvre, “Réenchanter le Rêve Européen?,” 742.
• Patrick Artus, “Zone Euro: Les Responsables de la Crise de la Dette,” 755.
• Jacques Mistral, “Enfin une Gouvernance Économique de la Zone Euro?,” 763.
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• Virginie Guiraudon, “Schengen: Une Crise en Trompe l’Oeil,” 773.
• Cécile Leconte, “Opinions et Partis Européens Face à la Crise de l’Union Monétaire,” 785.
Démocratie, Démocratisation
• Guy Hermet, “Dynamiques et Stratégies de Démocratisation,” 801.
• Dario Battistella, “L’Occident, Exportateur de Démocratie,” 813.
• Bichara Khader, “’Printemps Arabe’: Entre Autoritarisme et Démocratie,” 825.
• Vincent Darracq and Victor Magnani, “Les Élections en Afrique: Un Mirage Démocratique?,” 839.
• Émilie Frenkiel, “Une Démocratisation aux Couleurs de la Chine,” 851.
Repères
• Denis Flory, “Coopération Internationale et Sûreté Nucléaire,” 879.
• Thomas Pierret, “Syrie: L’Islam dans la Révolution,” 879. ______
Raisons Politiques (2011/4) http://www.cairn.info/revue-raisons-politiques-2011-4.htm
• Jean-Marie Donegani, “Le Paternalisme, Maladie Sénile du Libéralisme?,” 5.
• Roberto Merrill, “Comment un État Libéral Peut-il être à la Fois Neutre et Paternaliste?,” 15.
• Christophe Béal, “Le Paternalisme Peut-il être ‘Doux’? Paternalisme et Justice Pénale,” 41.
• Alicia-Dorothy Mornington, “Vendre ses Organes: Un Cas de Préjudice Consenti?,” 57.
• Marcela Iacub, “Protection Légale des Animaux ou Paternalisme?,” 79.
• Denis Ramond, “Liberté d’Expression: De Quoi Parle-t-on?,” 97.
• Janie Pélabay, “Former le ‘Bon Citoyen’ Libéral,” 117.
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• Raul Magni-Berton, “Care, Paternalisme et Vertu dans une Perspective Libérale,” 139.
• Laurent Godmer and David Smadja, “Pierre Rosanvallon: Un Penseur Critique Paradoxal?,” 163.
• Laurent Godmer and David Smadja, “Entretien avec Pierre Rosanvallon,” 173.
• Rosa Sanchez Salgado, “La Société Civile Européenne: Les Usages d’une Fiction,” 201. ______
Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice, Vol. 16, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rrhi20/16/1
• Mark S. Weiner, “A history of the common law,” 3.
• Kenneth Lockridge, “Remembering Rhys Isaac,” 17.
• Simon Doubleday, “Looking for María Pérez,” 27.
• Edward Eigen, “Madame de Pompadour and Le Havre-de-Grâce: An unnatural history,” 41.
• Marjorie Becker, “Though it seemed to be a lie, the women (even the shy one) danced on the pulpit that night: What Mexicans made of the revolutionaries among them, 1934-1940 The most languid, untold pleasure,” 59.
• Shane Minkin, “Simone’s funeral: Egyptian lives, Jewish deaths in twenty-first- century Cairo,” 71.
• Laura Troiano, “Slippery when wet: A young historian’s journey into the world of creative non-fiction,” 91.
• Caroline Marris, “’As glad a father as ever was King’: The Reformation counterfactuals of Henry VIII’s children,” 109.
Why we write: A History Slam
• Amy Kohout, “There is a Witchery in Kodakery…,” 125.
• Josi Ward, “Chasing traces,” 130.
• Christine M. DeLucia, “Border crossings: Telling Indian histories at the frontière,” 134.
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• Daegan Miller, “Drifting,” 140. ______
The Review of Faith & International Affairs, Vol. 10, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rfia20/10/1
• R. Drew Smith, “Beginnings and Legacies of African American Global Service: An Introduction to the Spring 2012 Issue,” 1.
• R. Drew Smith, “Religion, Race, and the Making of American Global Citizens,” 5.
• James A. Joseph, “A New Paradigm of Foreign Engagement: The Legacy of Dr. James H. Robinson,” 15.
• Peter J. Paris, “Formation of Moral Character through Global Community Service,” 25.
• Jacqueline S. Mattis, Meredith O. Hope, Ryan M. Sutton, Michael S. Udoh, and Fabienne Doucet, “Researching and Facilitating African American Global Volunteerism,” 29.
• Marsha Snulligan Haney, “Equipping Theological Students for Global Faith- Based Service,” 37.
Reflections from Former Africa-Based American Volunteers
• J. Oscar McCloud, “Frontiers of Friendship and Mid-Twentieth-Century Global Service,” 43.
• John Richard Bryant, “The Peace Corps: Gateway to a New Life,” 45.
• Kristen J. Leslie, “A Legacy of Faith and Service,” 47.
• Lynn MacMichael, “Volunteering and Inter-Being,” 49.
• Gerald L. Durley, “A Faith that Forced my Footsteps,” 51.
• Katie G. Cannon, “Cross-Cultural Service as a Source for Intellectual Bridge- Building,” 53.
• Harold T. Lewis, “A Ministry of Bridge-Building: My Debt to Dr. James H. Robinson,” 57.
• Jonathan Weaver, “My Mutual Callings to Christian Ministry and Global Service,” 61.
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• Angelique Walker-Smith, “Experiencing Unity in the Diversity of Global Service,” 65.
• R. Drew Smith, “African Pilgrimage and American Social Identity,” 67. ______
Review of International Studies, Vol. 38, Issue 1 (January 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=RIS&volumeId=38&iss ueId=01&iid=8474432
• Morten Valbjørn and André Bank, “The New Arab Cold War: rediscovering the Arab dimension of Middle East regional politics,” 3.
• Michael Dumper and Craig Larkin, “The politics of heritage and the limitations of international agency in contested cities: a study of the role of UNESCO in Jerusalem’s Old City,” 25.
• Thomas S. Wilkins, “’Alignment', not ‘alliance’ – the shifting paradigm of international security cooperation: toward a conceptual taxonomy of alignment,” 53.
• Jennifer M. Brinkerhoff, “Digital diasporas’ challenge to traditional power: the case of TibetBoard,” 77.
• Tina Managhan, “Highways, heroes, and secular martyrs: the symbolics of power and sacrifice,” 97.
• Wooseon Choi, “Structural realism and Dulles’s China policy,” 119.
• Alina Sajed, “The post always rings twice? The Algerian War, poststructuralism and the postcolonial in IR theory,” 141.
• Hikaru Yamashita, “Peacekeeping cooperation between the United Nations and regional organisations,” 165.
Forum: Critical Realism
• Badredine Arfi, “Khôra as the condition of possibility of the ontological without ontology,” 191.
• Torsten Michel, “In Heidegger’s shadow: a phenomenological critique of Critical Realism,” 209.
• Martin Weber, “Ontologies, depth, and otherwise: critical notes on Wight’s meta-theoretical proposal of a scientist realist IR,” 223.
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• Benjamin Herborth, “Theorising theorising: Critical Realism and the quest for certainty,” 235.
• Oliver Kessler, “On logic, intersubjectivity, and meaning: is reality an assumption we just don’t need?,” 253.
• Colin Wight, “Critical Realism: some responses,” 267.
Review of International Studies, Vol. 38, Issue 2 (April 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=RIS&volumeId=38&iss ueId=02&iid=8527342
• Oliver Kessler, “Sleeping with the enemy? On Hayek, constructivist thought, and the current economic crisis,” 275.
• Enrique Palazuelos, “Current oil (dis)order: players, scenarios, and mechanisms,” 301.
• Johan Karlsson Schaffer, “The boundaries of transnational democracy: alternatives to the all-affected principle,” 321.
• Marlies Glasius, “Dissident writings as political theory on civil society and democracy,” 343.
• Mona Kanwal Sheikh, “How does religion matter? Pathways to religion in International Relations,” 365.
• Ben D. Mor, “Credibility talk in public diplomacy,” 393.
• Pak K. Lee, Gerald Chan, and Lai-Ha Chan, “China in Darfur: humanitarian rule- maker or rule-taker?,” 423.
• Stephen Shulman and Stephen Bloom, “The legitimacy of foreign intervention in elections: the Ukrainian response,” 445.
Forum: Critical Realism
• Maria Malksoo, “The challenge of liminality for International Relations theory,” 481.
• Bahar Rumelili, “Liminal identities and processes of domestication and subversion in International Relations,” 495.
• Maria-Ruxandra Stoicescu, “Communitas and forms without foundations: Romania’s case of interlocking liminalities,” 509.
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Revista de Historia Económica, Vol. 30, Issue 1 (March 2012) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=RHE&seriesId=2&volu meId=30&issueId=01&iid=8515737
• Michael A. Clemens and Jeffrey G. Williamson, “Why were Latin America’s tariffs so much higher than Asia’s before 1950?,” 11.
• Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Joan R. Rosés, and Isabel Sanz-Villarroya, “Economic reforms and growth in Franco’s Spain,” 45.
• Sigfrido Vázquez Cienfuegos and Antonio Santamaría García, “Cuba económica en tiempos de las independencias Americanas. La hacienda y la consolidación de los vales reales en comparación con el caso de México – Economic Cuba in the days of American independences. Public finances and the Consolidación de los Vales Reales in comparison with the case of Mexico,” 91.
• Paola Azar and Sebastián Fleitas, “Gasto Público Total y Social: El Caso De Uruguay En El Siglo XX – Total and social public expenditure: the Uruguayan case in the 20th century,” 125.
• Roberto Frenkel and Martín Rapetti, “Exchange rate regimes in the major Latin American countries since the 1950s: lessons from history,” 157.
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Revue d’histoire modern et contemporaine (2011/4) http://www.cairn.info/revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2011-4.htm
• Héloïse Hermant, “Guerres de Plumes et Contestation Politique: Un Espace Public dans l’Espagne de la Fin du XVIIe Siècle?,” 7.
• Benoît Agnès, “Le ‘Pétitionnaire Universel’: Les Normes de la Pétition en France et au Royaume-Uni Pendant la Première Moitié du XIXe Siècle,” 45.
• Vanessa R. Caru, “Où se Loge le Politque?: Mouvements de Locataires et Politisation des Subalternes: Bombay, 1920-1940,” 71.
• Benoît Trépied, “Des Conduites d’Eau pour les Tribus. Action Municipale, Colonisation et Citoyenneté en Nouvelle-Calédonie,” 93. ______
Revue française de science politique (2012/1) http://www.cairn.info/revue-francaise-de-science-politique-2012-1.htm
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• Alexandre Jaunait and Sébastien Chauvin, “Représenter l’Intersection: Les théories de l’intersectionnalité à l’épreuve des sciences sociales,” 5.
• Denis-Constant Martin, “’Auprès de Ma Blonde…’ Musique et identité,” 21.
• Sylvain Parasie and Jean-Philippe Cointet, “La Presse en Ligne au Service de la Démocratie Locale: Une analyse morphologique de forums politiques,” 45.
• Vincent Tiberj, “La Politique des Deux Axes: Variables sociologiques, valeurs et votes en France (1988-2007),” 71. ______
Revue internationale et stratégique (2011/4) http://www.cairn.info/revue-francaise-de-science-politique-2012-1.htm
• “De l’Union Soviétique à la Russie: Changer de Regard. Entretien avec Marek Halter,” 7.
• Bastien Nivet, “Union Européenne: Une Dépolitisation Propice au Populisme,” 16.
• Renaud Dorlhiac, “Chronique de l’Albanie Bicéphale ou les Affres d’un État Paradoxal,” 28.
• Pim Verschuuren, “Géopolitique Spatiale: Vers une Course à l’Espace Multipolaire?,” 40.
Dossier. Matières Premières et Relations Internationales
• Bastien Alex and Sylvie Matelly, “Pourquoi les Matières Premières sont-elles Stratégiques?,” 53.
• Yves Jégourel, “La Sécurisation des Approvisionnements en Métaux Stratégiqes: Entre Économie et Géopolitique,” 61.
• Jacques Percebois, “Le Gaz Non Conventionnel, Facteur d’Indépendance Énergétique?,” 69.
• Didier Julienne, “Quand l’Afrique s’Éveillera, La Chine Tremblera,” 77.
• Christophe-Alexandre Paillard, “Russie, Ukraine, Union Européenne: Faux- Semblants et Perspectives,” 85.
• Catherine Locatelli, “Interdépendances et Conflictualités Russo-Européennes en Matière de Gaz Naturel,” 95.
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• Valérie Niquet, “La Chine et l’Arme des Terres Rares,” 105.
• Richard Labévière, “Grand Nord: Le Réchauffement Armé,” 115.
• Francis Perrin, “L’Impact du Printemps Arabe Sur l’Industrie des Hydrocarbures et Sur Marchés Pétroliers,” 125. ______
Royal United Services Institute Journal, Vol. 157, No. 1 (February 2012) http://www.rusi.org/publications/journal/issue:I4F43D0C157564/
• Thomas Rid and Peter McBurney, “Cyber-Weapons.”
• Paul Meyer, “Diplomatic Alternatives to Cyber-Warfare: A Near-Term Agenda.”
• Mungo Melvin, “Soldiers, Strategy and Statesmen.”
• Mark Phillips, “Policy-Making in Defence and Security: Lessons from the Strategic Defence and Security Review.”
• Alexander Alderson, “Influence, the Indirect Approach and Manoeuvre.”
• Jonathan Eyal, “The EU’s Alternative Futures.”
• Mark Laity, “The Latest Test for NATO.”
• Bjoern H. Seibert, “A Quiet Revolution: The Reform of the German Armed Forces.”
• Josip Glaurdic, “In Pursuit of Unity: The West and the Breakup of Yugoslavia.”
• Brock Millman, “Not Lawrence, but Lawrance: Transition in Afghanistan and After.” ______Scandinavian Journal of History, Vol. 37, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/shis20/37/1
• Marien Ferrer, “State Formation and Courtly Culture in the Scandinavian Kingdoms in the High Middle Ages,” 1.
• Kimmo Katajala, “Drawing Borders or Dividing Lands?: the peace treaty of 1323 between Sweden and Novgorod in a European context,” 23.
• Gabriela Bjarne Larsson, “Wives or Widows and their Representatives,” 49.
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• Niels Kayser Nielsen and John Bale, “Associations and Democracy: sport and popular mobilization in Nordic societies c. 1850-1900,” 69.
• Per H. Hansen, “Cooperate or Free Ride?: the Scandinavian central banks, Bank for International Settlements and the Austrian financial crisis of 1931,” 87.
• Chris Reid and Morten Karnøe Søndergaard, “Bilateral Trade and Fisheries Development: the Anglo-Danish Trade Agreement, 1933,” 108. ______
Security Studies, Vol. 21, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fsst20/21/1
• Marc Trachtenberg, “Audience Costs: An Historical Analysis,” 3.
• John Gledhill, “Competing for Change: Regime Transition, Intrastate Competition, and Violence,” 43.
• Ryan Grauer and Michael C. Horowitz, “What Determines Military Victory? Testing the Modern System,” 83.
• Mark Z. Taylor, “Toward an International Relations Theory of National Innovation Rates,” 113. ______
Small Wars & Insurgencies, Vol. 23, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fswi20/23/1
• J.N.C. Hill, “Remembering the war of liberation: legitimacy and conflict in contemporary Algeria,” 4. • Pierre C. Pahlavi and Eric Ouellet, “Institutional analysis and irregular warfare: Israel Defense Forces during the 33-Day War of 2006,” 32.
• Niccolò Petrelli, “The missing dimension: IDF special operations forces and strategy in the Second Lebanon War,” 56.
• Benjamin Hughes and Simon Jones, “Convoys to combat Somali piracy,” 74.
• Martijn Kitzen, “Between treaty and treason: Dutch collaboration with warlord Teuku Uma during the Aceh War, a case study on the collaboration with indigenous power-holders in colonial warfare,” 93.
• Thijs Brocades Zaalberg and Arthur ten Cate, “A gentle occupation: unraveling the Dutch approach in Iraq, 2003-2005,” 117.
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• Marc R. DeVore, “A more complex and conventional victory: revisiting the Dhofar counterinsurgency, 1963-1975,” 144.
Report from the Field
• Bruce “Ossie” Oswald, “Dealing with disputes in Afghanistan: principles and rules for the tactical level,” 174. ______
Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 93, Issue 1 (March 2012) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ssqu.2012.93.issue-1/issuetoc
• Todd Shields and Ka Zeng, “The Reverse Environmental Gender Gap in China: Evidence from ‘The China Survey’,” 1.
• David Lowery, Virginia Gray, Justin Kirkland, and Jeffrey J. Harden, “Generalist Interest Organizations and Interest System Density: A Test of the Competitive Exclusion Hypothesis,” 21.
• Chris Girard, Guillermo J. Grenier, and Hugh Gladwin, “Exile Politics and Republican Party Affiliation: The Case of Cuban Americans in Miami,” 42.
• Christopher A. Cooper and H. Gibbs Knotts, “Love ‘Em or Hate ‘Em? Changing Racial and Regional Differences in Opinions Toward Southerners, 1964-2008,” 58.
• M.V. Hood III and William Gillespie, “They Just Do Not Vote Like They Used To: A Methodology to Empirically Assess Election Fraud,” 76.
• R. Todd Jewell and Michael A. McPherson, “Instructor-Specific Grade Inflation: Incentives, Gender, and Ethncity,” 95.
• Kathryn E. Rouse, “The Impact of High School Leadership on Subsequent Educational Attainment,” 110.
• Melissa J. Marschall, Paru R. Shah, and Katharine Donato, “Parent Involvement Policy in Established and New Immigrant Destinations,” 130.
• Jocelyn E. Crowley, Radha Jagannathan, and Galo Falchettore, “The Effect of Child Support Enforcement on Abortion in the United States,” 152.
• Stephanie Potochnick, Krista M. Perreira, and Andrew Fuligni, “Fitting In: The Roles of Social Acceptance and Discrimination in Shaping the Daily Psychological Well- Being of Latino Youth,” 173.
• Rodney V. Hissong and Robert F. Hawley, “Analyzing the Residential Property Appraisal and Outcomes to Determine if a Property Tax Revolt is Imminent,” 191.
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• Alec C. Ewald, “Collateral Consequences in the American States,” 211.
• David Aadland, Bistra Anatchkova, Burke D. Grandjean, Jason F. Shogren, Benjamin Simon, and Patricia A. Taylor, “Valuing Access to U.S. Public Lands: A Pricing Experiment to Inform Federal Policy,” 248.
• Valerie A. Lewis, “Social Energy and Racial Segregation in the University Context,” 270. ______
South African Historical Journal, Vol. 64, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rshj20/64/1
• Shireen Ally and Arianna Lissoni, “’Let’s Talk About Bantustans’,” 1.
• William Beinart, “Beyond ‘Homelands’: Some Ideas about the History of African Rural Areas in South Africa,” 5.
• Elizabeth Hull, “The Renewal of Community Health under the KwaZulu ‘Homeland’ Government,” 22.
• Isak Niehaus, “Witchcraft and the South African Bantustans: Evidence form Bushbuckridge,” 41.
• Sekibakiba Peter Lekgoathi, “Ethnic Separatism or Cultural Preservation? Ndebele Radio under Apartheid, 1983-1994,” 59.
• Fraser G. McNeill, “Rural Reggae: The Politics of Performance in the Former ‘Homeland’ of Venda,” 81.
• Andrew Manson and Bernard Mbenga, “Bophuthatswana and the North-West Province: From Pan-Tswanaism to Mineral-Based Ethnic Assertiveness,” 96.
• Laura Evans, “South Africa’s Bantustans and the Dynamics of ‘Decolonisation’: Reflections on Writing Histories of the Homelands,” 117.
Memoirs
• Vha-Musanda Vho-Shandukani Mudzunga (Manapule), “Autobiography of an Underground Political Activist,” 138.
• Mabhuza Simeon Ginindza, “KaNgwane: A Life in and Beyond,” 144.
• Tebogo Job Mokgoro, “Bophuthatswana and the North-West Province: The Role of the Joint Administrators,” 152.
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South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, Vol. 35, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/csas20/35/1
• Ranjan Ghosh, “Introducing a Surplus,” 7.
• Ranjan Ghosh, “A Poet’s School: Rabindranath Tagore and the Politics of Aesthetic Education,” 13.
• Sumana Roy, “On Eating: Rabindranath Tagore’s Dis(h)courses,” 33.
• Patrick Hogan, “Rabindranath Tagore, Implied Painter: On the Narratology of Visual Art,” 48.
• Lalita Pandit Hogan, “Empathy, Liminality, and Narrative Imagination: Rabindranath Tagore’s ‘The Living and the Dead’,” 73.
• Supriya Chaudhuri, “The Nation and Its Fictions: History and Allegory in Tagore’s Gora,” 97.
• Michael Collins, “Rabindranath Tagore and the Politics of Friendship,” 118.
• Chandak Sengoopta, “The Contours of Affinity: Satyajit Ray and the Tagorean Legacy,” 143.
• Tapan Basu, “Caste Matters: Rabindranath Tagore’s Engagement with India’s Ancient Social Hierarchies,” 162.
• Rini Bhattacharya Mehta, “In the Shadow of the Nations: Dissent as Discourse in Rabindranath Tagore’s Political Writings, 1914-1941,” 172.
• Mridula Nath Chakraborty, “Spivak for Connoisseurs,” 192. ______
Strategic Analysis, Vol. 36, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsan20/36/1
Commentary
• Zorawar Daulet Singh, “Should India ‘Be East’ or Be Eurasian?,” 1.
• Hari Bansh Jha, “India’s Economic Miracle and its Impact on Nepal,” 6.
• Shebonti Ray Dadwal, “India’s Overseas Assets: Do They Contribute to Energy Security?,” 12.
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• Richard Rousseau, “China’s Growing Economic Presence in Ukraine and Belarus,” 18.
• Joe Thomas Karackattu, “’Social Capital’ and its Significance in Reimagining Chindia,” 23.
• Ramesh Thakur, “Comment on ‘The Global Nuclear Non-Proliferation Paradigm and India,” 30.
Policy
• P.K. Gautam, “Climate Change and Conflict in South Asia,” 32.
Articles
• Uttam Kumar Sinha, “Examining China’s Hydro-Behavior: Peaceful or Assertive?,” 41.
• Medha Bisht, “Bhutan’s Foreign Policy Determinants: An Assessment,” 57.
• Pushpita Das, “Managing India’s Land Borders: Lessons from the US Experience,” 73.
• Rajiv Nayan, “The Emerging Nuclear Security Regime: Challenges Ahead,” 87.
• Nehginpao Kipgen, “Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN): Cooperation Problems on Human Rights,” 100.
• M. Mahtab Alam Rizvi, “Velayat-e-Faqih (Supreme Leader) and Iranian Foreign Policy: An Historical Analysis,” 112.
• S. Samuel C. Rajiv, “The Delicate Balance: Israel and India’s Foreign Policy Practice,” 128.
• Neeladri Chatterjee, “A Time Series Forecast of Geopolitical Market Concentration (GMC) Risk: An Analysis of the Crude Oil Diversification Portfolio of India,” 145.
Strategic Analysis, Vol. 36, Issue 2 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsan20/36/2
Commentary
• S. Kalyanaraman, “Asymmetric Warfare: A View from India,” 193.
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• Saurabh Mishra, “India amidst Increased Activity in the Security Council: A Few Observations,” 198.
Focus Pakistan
• Robert Boggs, “Pakistan’s Pashtun Challenge: Moving from Confrontation to Integration,” 206.
• Moonis Ahmar, “Vision for a Secular Pakistan?,” 217.
Articles
• Ashok K. Behuria, Smruti S. Pattanaik, and Arvind Gupta, “Does India Have a Neighbourhood Policy?,” 229.
• Shebonti Ray Dadwal, “Can Unconventional Gas Be a Game-Changer for India?,” 247.
• Nigel Singh, “The Role of the National Solar Mission in Climate Change Mitigation and the Twin Objective of Energy Security,” 260.
• Anand Kumar, “Chinese Engagement with the Maldives: Impact on Security Environment in the Indian Ocean Region,” 276.
• Sarabjeet Singh Parmar, “Somali Piracy: A Form of Economic Terrorism,” 290.
• Thongkholal Haokip, “Political Integration of Northeast India: A Historical Analysis,” 304.
• S. Thangboi Zou, “Emergent Micro-National Communities: The Logic of Kuki- Chin Armed Struggle in Manipur,” 315.
Policy
• Ramesh Thakur, “To Stop Iran Getting the Bomb, Must We Learn to Live with Its Nuclear Capability?,” 328. ______
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 35, Issue 2 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/35/2
• Stephen Pampinella, “Hegemonic Competition in Intrastate War: The Social Construction of Insurgency and Counterinsurgency in Iraq’s al-Anbar Province,” 95.
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• Matthew Charles Ford, “Finding the Target, Fixing the Method: Methodological Tensions in Insurgent Identification,” 113.
• Leslie Bayless, “Who is Muqtada al-Sadr?,” 135.
• Assaf Moghadam, “Failure and Disengagement in the Red Army Faction,” 156.
• Cale Horne and John Horgan, “Methodological Triangulation in the Analysis of Terrorist Networks,” 182.
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 35, Issue 3 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/35/3
• William Costanza, “Hizballah and Its Mission in Latin America,” 193.
• Clarke R. Jones and Resurrecion S. Morales, “Integration versus Segregation: A Preliminary Examination of Philippine Correctional Facilities for De-Radicalization,” 211.
• Victor H. Asal, Gary A. Ackerman, and R. Kari Rethemeyer, “Connections Can Be Toxic: Terrorist Organizational Factors and the Pursuit of CBRN Weapons,” 229.
• Shmuel C. Shapira and Ophir Falk, “Terror Medicine: Source and Evolution,” 255.
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 35, Issue 4 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/35/4
• Manuel R. Torres Soriano, “The Vulnerabilities of Online Terrorism,” 263.
• Scott Matthew Kleinmann, “Radicalization of Homegrown Sunni Militants in the United States: Comparing Converts and Non-Converts,” 278.
• Shandon Harris-Hogan, “Australian Neo-Jihadist Terrorism: Mapping the Network and Cell Analysis Using Wiretap Evidence,” 298.
• Alexander Knysh, “Islam and Arabic as the Rhetoric of Insurgency: The Case of the Caucasus Emirate,” 315. ______
Terrorism and Political Violence, Vol. 24, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ftpv20/24/1
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• Jamie Bartlett and Carl Miller, “The Edge of Violence: Towards Telling the Difference Between Violent and Non-Violent Radicalization,” 1.
• Sara McDowell, “Symbolic Warfare in the Ethnocratic State: Conceptualising Memorialisation and Territoriality in Sri Lanka,” 22.
• Peter S. Henne, “The Ancient Fire: Religion and Suicide Terrorism,” 38.
• Jocelyn Evans and Jonathan Tonge, “Menace Without Mandate? Is There Any Sympathy for ‘Dissident’ Irish Republicanism in Northern Ireland?,” 61.
• Aurélle Campana and Luc Lapointe, “The Structural ‘Root’ Causes of Non-Suicide Terrorism: A Systematic Scoping Review,” 79.
• Jonathan B. Tucker, “The Role of the Chemical Weapons Convention in Countering Chemical Terrorism,” 105.
• Oliver P. Richmond and Ioannis Tellidis, “The Complex Relationship Between Peacebuilding and Terrorism Approaches: Towards Post-Terrorism and a Post-Liberal Peace?,” 120.
Terrorism and Political Violence, Vol. 24, Issue 2 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ftpv20/24/2
• Guest Editor James J.F. Forest, “Criminals and Terrorists: An Introduction to the Special Issue,” 171.
• John T. Picarelli, “Osama bin Corleone? Vito the Jackal? Framing Threat Convergence Through an Examination of Transnational Organized Crime and International Terrorism,” 180.
• Victor Asal, Kathleen Deloughery, and Brian J. Phillips, “When Politicians Sell Drugs: Examining Why Middle East Ethnopolitical Organizations Are Involved in the Drug Trade,” 199.
• James A. Piazza, “The Opium Trade and Patterns of Terrorism in the Provinces of Afghanistan: An Empirical Analysis,” 213.
• Vera Eccarius-Kelly, “Surreptitious Lifelines: A Structural Analysis of the FARC and the PKK,” 235.
• Phil Williams, “The Terrorism Debate Over Mexican Drug Trafficking Violence,” 259.
• Shawn Teresa Flanigan, “Terrorists Next Door? A Comparison of Mexican Drug Cartels and Middle Eastern Terrorist Organizations,” 279.
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• Jennifer Varriale Carson, Gary LaFree, and Laura Dugan, “Terrorist and Non- Terrorist Criminal Attacks by Radical Environmental and Animal Rights Groups in the United States, 1970-2007,” 295.
• McKenzie O’Brien, “Fluctuations Between Crime and Terror: The Case of Abu Sayyaf’s Kidnapping Activities,” 320.
• Thomas J. Holt, “Exploring the Intersections of Technology, Crime, and Terror,” 337. ______
Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 23, Issue 1 (March 2012) http://tcbh.oxfordjournals.org/content/23/1.toc
The Documentary Film Movement and the Spaces of British Identity
• Scott Anthony and James G. Mansell, “Introduction: The Documentary Film Movement and the Spaces of British Identity,” 1.
• Marc Matera, “An Empire of Development: Afria and the Caribbean in God’s Chillun,” 12.
• Amy Sargeant, “GPO Films: American and European models of Advertising in the Projection of Nation,” 38.
• David Matless, “Accents of Landscape in GPO Country: The Horsey Mail, 1938,” 57.
• Charlotte Wildman, “A City Speaks: The Projection of Civic Identity in Manchester,” 80.
Articles
• Sarah Browne, “’A Veritable Hotbed of Feminism’: Women’s Liberation in St Andrews, Scotland, c. 1968-1979,” 100.
• Richard J. Reed, “Rebels without Applause: History, Resistance, and Recognition in the Ulster Defence Association,” 124. ______
Vingtième Siècle (2012/1) http://www.cairn.info/revue-vingtieme-siecle-revue-d-histoire-2012-1.htm
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• Stéphane Frioux, “Pour une Histoire Politique de l’Environnement au 20e Siècle,” 3.
• “Repères Chronologiques,” 13.
• Charles-François Mathis, “Étapes: Mobiliser pour l’Environnement en Europe et aux États-Unis: Un état des lieux à l’aube du 20e siècle,” 15.
• Johann Chapoutot, “Les Nazis et la ‘Nature’: Protection ou prédation?,” 29.
• Chris Pearson and Bruno Poncharal, “La Politique Environnementale de Vichy,” 41.
• Robert Poujade, “Le Premier Ministère de l’Environnement (1971-1974): L’invention d’un possible,” 51.
• Christian Delporte, “’N’Abîmons pas la France!’ L’environnement à la télévision dans les années 1970,” 55.
• Jean-François Mouhot et al., “Le Greenrush: Essai d’interprétation de la ‘bulle verte’ au Royaume-Uni dans les années 1980,” 67.
• Florian Charvolin, “Échelles: L’Affaire de la Vanoise et son Analyste. Le document, le bouquetin et le parc national,” 82.
• Pablo Corral Broto, “De la Plainte Légale à la Subversion Environnementale: L’aménagement des rivières dans l’Espagne franquiste (Aragon, 1945-1979),” 95.
• Marie-Hélène Mandrillon, “L’Expertise d’État, Creuset de l’Environnement en URSS,” 107.
• Jan-Henrik Meyer and Bruno Poncharal, “L’Européanisation de la Politique Environnementale dans les Années 1970,” 117.
• Yannick Mahrane et al., “De la Nature à la Biosphère: L’invention politique de l’environnement global, 1945-1972,” 127.
• Michel Letté, “Acteurs: Le Tournant Environnemental de la Société Industrielle au Prisme d’une Histoire des Débordements et de Leurs Conflits,” 142.
• Daniel Boullet, “La Politique de l’Environnement Industriel en France (1960- 1990): Pouvoirs publics et patronat face à une diversification des enjeux et des acteurs,” 155.
• Renaud Bécot, “L’Invention Syndicale de l’Environnement dans la France des Années 1960,” 169.
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• Alexis Vrignon, “Écologie et Politique dans les Années 1970: Les Amis de la Terre en France,” 179.
• Philippe Buton, “L’Extrême Gauche Française et l’Écologie: Une rencontre difficile (1968-1978),” 191.
• Geneviève Massard-Guilbaud, “La France, une ‘Société Vert Clair’? Enjeu – Retour sur The Light Green Society: Ecology and Technological Modernity in France, 1960- 2000,” 205. ______
The Washington Quarterly, Vol. 35, Issue 2 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwaq20/35/2
Provocations
• James Stavridis and Evelyn N. Farkas, “The 21st Century Force Multiplier: Public- Private Collaboration,” 7.
• Matthew Kroenig and Barry Pavel, “Hot to Deter Terrorism,” 21.
• James M. Acton, “Bombs Away? Being Realistic about Deep Nuclear Reductions,” 37.
• Michael Singh, “To Keep the Peace with Iran, Threaten to Strike,” 55.
• Dov Waxman, “The Real Problem in U.S.-Israeli Relations,” 71.
• Khaled Elgindy, “Egypt’s Troubled Transition: Elections without Democracy,” 89.
Assessing the Asia Pivot
• Zalmay Khalilzad, “A Strategy of ‘Congagement’ toward Pakistan,” 107.
• William H. Overholt, “Reassessing China: Awaiting Xi Jinping,” 121.
• Leszek Buszynski, “The South China Sea: Oil, Maritime Claims, and U.S.-China Strategic Rivalry,” 139.
• Xenia Dormandy, “Reversing Pakistan’s Descent: Empowering its Middle Class,” 157.
• Michael J. Green and Andrew Shearer, “Defining U.S. Indian Ocean Strategy,” 175.
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Washington Watch
• Charles E. Cook Jr., “Have President Obama’s Re-Election Prospects Brightened?,” 193. ______
The William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 69, No. 1 (January 2012) http://oieahc.wm.edu/wmq/index.cfm?issue_num=69_1
• Steve Pincus, “Rethinking Mercantilism: Political Economy, the British Empire, and the Atlantic World in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries,” 3.
• Cathy Matson, “Imperial Political Economy: An Ideological Debate and Shifting Practices,” 35.
• Christian J. Koot, “Balancing Center and Periphery,” 41.
• Susan D. Amussen, “Political Economy and Imperial Practice,” 47.
• Trevor Burnard, “Making a Whig Empire Work: Transatlantic Politics and the Imperial Economy in Britain and British America,” 51.
• Margaret Ellen Newell, “Putting the ‘Political’ Back in Political Economy (This Is Not Your Parents’ Mercantilism,” 57.
• Steve Pincus, “Reconfiguring the British Empire,” 63.
• Chris Evans, “The Plantation Hoe: The Rise and Fall of an Atlantic Commodity, 1650-1850,” 71.
• David E. Narrett, “Geopolitics and Intrigue: James Wilkinson, the Spanish Borderlands, and Mexican Independence,” 101.
• Farley Grubb, “State Redemption of the Continental Dollar, 1779-90,” 147. ______
Women’s History Review, Vol. 21, Issue 1 (2012) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwhr20/21/1
• Marilyn J. Boxer, “Linking Socialism, Feminism, and Social Darwinism in Belle Epoque France: the maternalist politics and journalism of Aline Valette,” 1.
• Jolein De Ridder and Marianne Van Remoortel, “From Fashion Colours to Spectrum Analysis: negotiating femininities in mid-Victorian women’s magazines,” 21.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Sara Deutch Schotland, “Women on Trial: representation of women in the courtroom in Elizabethan and Jacobean drama,” 37.
• Judith Smart and Marian Quartly, “Mainstream Women’s Organisations in Australia: the challenges of national and international co-operation after the Great War,” 61.
• Deborah Bernstein, “Gender, Nationalism and Colonial Policy: prostitution in the Jewish settlement of Mandate Palestine, 1918-1948,” 81.
• Margaret Mehl, “A Man’s Job? The Kôda Sisters, Violin Playing, and Gender Stereotypes in the Introduction of Western Music in Japan,” 101.
• Helen Jones, “National, Community and Personal Priorities: British women’s responses to refugees from the Nazis, from the mid-1930s to early 1940s,” 121.
• Alex Bamji, “Katrina Honeyman (1950-2011): an appreciation,” 153. ______
World Policy Journal, 29:1 (March 2012) http://wpj.sagepub.com/content/29/1.toc
Editor’s Note
• “Speaking in Tongues,” 1.
Upfront
• Mahmoud Salem, Anatoly Liberman, Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Saksith Saiyasombut, Lee Bollinger, Adewale Maja-Pearce, and Nazifullah Salarzai, “The Big Question: Abusing Language: When Should Language be Restricted?,” 3.
• Susan Benesch, “Words as Weapons,” 7.
• “Anatomy of a Character,” 14.
• Outspoken and Verity Norman, “The Freedom Train,” 16.
• “Map Room: Russia’s Vanishing Languages,” 20.
Language
• James Angelos, “Passing the Test,” 22.
• Marco Aponte-Moreno and Lance Lattig, “Chávez: Rhetoric Made in Havana,” 33.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Second Quarter 2012
• Miguel Jiron, “L’Immortelle: A Conversation with Assia Djebar, A guardian of the French language,” 43.
Portfolio
• Diana Markosian and Judith Matloff, “Portfolio: Islam and Chechnya,’ 48.
Features
• Stanley Pignal, “Europe in the Throes,” 61.
• Peter Marber, “Brave New Math,” 72.
• Christa Hasenkopf, “Clearing the Air,” 82.
• Forrest D. Colburn, “Nicaragua, Forlorn,” 91.
• David C. Unger, “A Better Internationalism,” 101.
Coda
• David A. Andelman, “Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory…,” 112.
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