[jw]
H-Diplo JOURNAL WATCH, J to Z H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review Third Quarter 2015 20 July 2015
Compiled by Lubna Qureshi, Stockholm University
The Journal of African History, Vol. 56, Issue 2 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AFH&volumeId=56 &issueId=02&iid=9768037
New Economic Histories
• Johan Fourie and Erik Green, “The Missing People: Accounting for the Productivity of Indigenous Populations in Cape Colonial History,” 195.
• Jutta Bolt and Erik Green, “Was the Wage Burden Too Heavy? Settler Farming, Profitability, and Wage Shares of Settler Agriculture in Nyasaland, c. 1900-60,” 217.
Crafting Political Identities in the Era of Decolonization
• Elizabeth Foster, “’Entirely Christian and Entirely African’: Catholic African Students in France in the Era of Independence,” 239.
• Jill Rosenthal, “From ‘Migrants’ to ‘Refugees’: Identity, Aid, and Decolonization in Ngara District, Tanzania,” 261.
• Justin Willis, “The Southern Problem: Representing Sudan’s Southern Provinces to c. 1970,” 281.
Enduring Violence
• David Crawford Jones, “Wielding the Epokolo: Corporal Punishment and Traditional Authority in Colonial Ovamboland,” 301.
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc- nd/3.0/us/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA. H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
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Journal of American-East Asian Relations, Vol. 22, Issue 1 (2015) http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18765610/22/1
• Michael A. Schneider, “Mr. Moto: Improbable International Man of Mystery,” 7.
• Yanqiu Zheng, “A Specter of Extraterritoriality,” 17.
• Nguyet Nguyen, “Which Mirror is ‘Truer’?,” 45. ______
The Journal of American History, Vol. 102, No. 1 (June 2015) http://www.journalofamericanhistory.org/issues/1021/
• Kelly Lytle Hernández, Khalil Gibran Muhammad, and Heather Ann Thompson, “Introduction: Constructing the Carceral State,” 18.
• Kali Nicole Gross, “African American Women, Mass Incarceration, and the Politics of Protection,” 25.
• Jeffrey S. Adler, “Less Crime, More Punishment: Violence, Race, and Criminal Justice in Early Twentieth-Century America,” 34.
• Miroslava Chávez-García, “Youth of Color and California’s Carceral State: The Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility,” 47.
• Timothy Stewart-Winter, “Queer Law and Order: Sex, Criminality, and Policing in the Late Twentieth-Century United States,” 61.
• Robert T. Chase, “We Are Not Slaves: Rethinking the Rise of Carceral States through the Lens of the Prisoners’ Rights Movement,” 73.
• Julilly Kohler-Hausmann, “Guns and Butter: The Welfare State, the Carceral State, and the Politics of Exclusion in the Postwar United States,” 87.
• Elizabeth Hinton, “’A War within Our Own Boundaries’: Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society and the Rise of the Carceral State,” 100.
• Alex Lichtenstein, “Flocatex and the Fiscal Limits of Mass Incarceration: Toward a New Political Economy of the Postwar Carceral State,” 113.
• Matthew D. Lassiter, “Impossible Criminals: The Suburban Imperatives of America’s War on Drugs,” 126.
• Torrie Hester, “Deportability and the Carceral State,” 141. 2 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Micol Seigel, “Objects of Police History,” 152.
• Donna Murch, “Crack in Los Angeles: Crisis, Militarization, and Black Response to the Late Twentieth-Century War on Drugs,” 162.
• Edward J. Escobar, “The Unintended Consequences of the Carceral State: Chicana/o Political Mobilization in Post-World War II America,” 174. ______
Journal of American Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 2 (May 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AMS&volumeId=4 9&issueId=02&iid=9703932
• Fionnghuala Sweeney, “’It Will Come at Last’: Acts of Emancipation in the Art, Culture and Politics of the Black Diaspora,” 225.
• H. Adlai Murdoch, “Locating History within Fiction’s Frame: Re-presenting the Epopée Delgrès in Maximin and Lara,” 241.
• Karen N. Salt, “Ecological Chains of Unfreedom: Contours of Black Sovereignty in the Atlantic World,” 267.
• P. Gabrielle Foreman, “New England’s Fortune: An Inheritance of Black Bodies and Bones,” 287.
• Zoe Trodd, “John Brown’s Spirit: The Abolitionist Aesthetic of Emancipatory Martyrdom in Early Antilynching Protest Literature,” 305.
• Celeste-Marie Bernier, “A Visual Call to Arms against the ‘Caracature [sic] of My Own Face’: From Fugitive Slave to Fugitive Image in Frederick Douglass’s Theory of Portraiture,” 323.
• Candace Ward, “’In the Free’: The Work of Emancipation in the Anglo-Caribbean Historical Novel,” 359.
• Marcus Wood, “Slavery and Syncretic Performance in the Noite do Tambores Silenciosos: Or How Batuque and the Calunga Dance around with the Memory of Slavery,” 383.
• Harvey G. Cohen, “Recent Music History Scholarship: Pleasures and Drawbacks,” 405.
Journal of American Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 3 (August 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=AMS&volumeId=49&seriesId=0&i ssueId=03
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• David A. Davis, “The Irony of Southern Modernism,” 457.
• Tao Zhang, “The Start of American Accommodation of the Chinese: Afong Moy’s Experience from 1834 to 1850,” 475.
• Jay Garcia, “Richard Wright and the Americanism of Lawd Today!,” 505.
• Stephanie Fuller, “’The Most Notorious Sucker-Trap in the Western Hemisphere’: The Tijuana Story (Leslie Kardos, 1957) and Mythologies of Tijuana in American Cinema,” 523.
• Nathan Abrams, “A Jewish American Monster: Stanley Kubrick, Anti-Semitism and Lolita (1962),” 541.
• Say Burgin, “’The Most Progressive and Forward Looking Race Relations Experiment in Existence’: Race ‘Militancy’, Whiteness, and DRRI in the Early 1970s,” 557.
• Martin Paul Eve, “’Too many goddamn echoes’: Historicizing the Iraq War in Don DeLillo’s Point Omega,” 575.
• Kun Jong Lee, “The Making of an Asian American Short-Story Cycle: Don Lee’s Yellow: Stories,” 593.
• Tom Adam Davies, “The Economics of the Black Freedom Struggle,” 615. ______
The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 74, Issue 2 (May 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JAS&volumeId=74 &issueId=02&iid=9720665
• Adriana Erthal Abdenur, “China in Africa, Viewed from Brazil,” 257.
• Kiri Paramore, “’Civil Religion’ and Confucianism: Japan’s Past, China’s Present, and the Current Boom in Scholarship on Confucianism,” 269.
• Vicente L. Rafael, “The War of Translation: Colonial Education, American English, and Tagalog Slang in the Philippines,” 283.
• Doreen Lee, “A Troubled Vernacular: Legibility and Presence in Indonesian Activist Art,” 303.
• Karin Zitzewitz, “Life in Ruins: Materiality, the City, and the Production of Critique in the Art of Naiza Khan,” 323.
• Faridah Zaman, “Colonizing the Sacred: Allahabad and the Company State, 1797-1857,” 347. 4 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Benjamin D. Hopkins, “The Frontier Crimes Regulation and Frontier Governmentality,” 369.
• Margherita Zanasi, “Frugal Modernity: Livelihood and Consumption in Republican China,” 391.
• Tessa Morris-Suzuki, “Prisoner Number 600,001: Rethinking Japan, China, and the Korean War 1950-1953,” 411. ______
Journal of British Studies, Vol. 54, Issue 2 (April 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JBR&volumeId=54 &issueId=02&iid=9651096
• Peter Lake, “The ‘Political Thought’ of the ‘Monarchical Republic of Elizabeth I,’ Discovered and Anatomized,” 257.
• Beverly Lemire, “’Men of the World’: British Mariners, Consumer Practice, and Material Culture in an Era of Global Trade, c. 1660-1800,” 288.
• Maria Zytaruk, “Artifacts of Elegy: The Foundling Hospital Tokens,” 320.
• David G. Barrie, “Naming and Shaming: Trial by Media in Nineteenth-Century Scotland,” 349.
• Daniel C.S. Wilson, “J.A. Hobson and the Machinery Question,” 377.
• Tom Hulme, “’A Nation Depends on Its Children’: School Buildings and Citizenship in England and Wales, 1900-1939,” 406.
• Deanne van Tol, “The Women of Kenya Speak: Imperial Activism and Settler Society, c. 1930,” 433.
• Erika Hanna, “Photographs and ‘Truth’ during the Northern Ireland Troubles, 1969- 72,” 457.
Journal of British Studies, Vol. 54, Issue 3 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=JBR&volumeId=54&seriesId=0&is sueId=03
• Eleanor Hubbard, “Reading, Writing, and Initialing: Female Literacy in Early Modern London,” 553.
• Jacob Selwood, “Left Behind: Subjecthood, Nationality, and the Status of Jews after the Loss of English Surinam,” 578. 5 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Tristan Stein, “Passes and Protection in the Making of a British Mediterranean,” 602.
• Thomas Waters, “Magic and the British Middle Classes, 1750-1900,” 632.
• Nicola Bishop, “Ruralism, Masculinity, and National Identity: The Rambling Clerk in Fiction, 1900-1940,” 654.
• Selina Todd, “Phoenix Rising: Working-Class Life and Urban Reconstruction, c. 1945- 1967,” 679.
• David Matthew Doyle, “Republicans, Martyrology, and the Death Penalty in Britain and Ireland, 1939-1990,” 703. ______
Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 17, Issue 2 (Spring 2015) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jcws/17/2
• Robert P. Hager, Jr. and Robert S. Snyder, “The United States and Nicaragua: Understanding the Breakdown in Relations,” 3.
• James Stocker, “Accepting Regional Zero: Nuclear Weapon Free Zones, U.S. Nonproliferation Policy and Global Security, 1957-1968,” 36.
• Michelle Denise Getchell, “Revisiting the 1954 Coup in Guatemala: The Soviet Union, the United Nations, and ‘Hemispheric Solidarity’,” 73.
• Christopher Gunn, “The 1960 Coup in Turkey: A U.S. Intelligence Failure or a Successful Intervention?,” 103. ______
The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 59:4 (June 2015) http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/59/4.toc
• Pieter Serneels and Marijke Verpoorten, “The Impact of Armed Conflict on Economic Performance: Evidence from Rwanda,” 555.
• Judith M. Bretthauer, “Conditions for Peace and Conflict: Applying a Fuzzy-Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis to Cases of Resource Scarcity,” 593.
• Leonardo Baccini and Andreas Dür, “Investment Discrimination and the Proliferation of Preferential Trade Agreements,” 617.
• Arzu Kibris, “The Conflict Trap Revisited: Civil Conflict and Educational Achievement,” 645.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Edy Glozman, Netta Barak-Corren, and Ilan Yaniv, “False Negotiations: The Art and Science of Not Reaching an Agreement,” 671.
• Timothy M. Peterson, “Insiders versus Outsiders: Preferential Trade Agreements, Trade Distortions, and Militarized Conflict,” 698.
• Benjamin E. Bagozzi, Daniel W. Hill, Jr., Will H. Moore, and Bumba Mukherjee, “Modeling Two Types of Peace: The Zero-inflated Ordered Probit (ZiOP) Model in Conflict Research,” 728. ______
Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 33, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjca20/33/1#.VaLFOygujGo
• Nivedita Menon, “Fighting patriarchy and capitalism,” 3.
• Ayo A. Coly, “Un/clothing African womanhood: colonial statements and postcolonial discourses of the African female body,” 12.
• Ramola Ramtohul, “Intersectionality and women’s political citizenship: the case of Mauritius,” 27.
• Francis B. Nyamnjoh, “Beyond an evangelizing public anthropology: science, theory, and commitment,” 48.
• Rosabelle Boswell, “Falling out of love? A response to Francis Nyamnjoh’s ‘Beyond an evangelizing public anthropology: science, theory, and commitment’,” 64.
• Browne Onuoha, “Peace and security concerns in the Niger Delta: a persisting struggle for autonomy and self-determination,” 69.
• Samuel Adams and Joseph Taabazuing, “The promises and realities of Ghana’s decentralization: a case study from the Wenchi district of Ghana,” 88.
• Monageng Mogalakwe, “An assessment of Botswana’s electoral management body to deliver fair elections,” 105.
• Elisa Van Waeyenberge and Hanna Bargawi, “Moving beyond the paradox of macroeconomic stability in Uganda?,” 121.
• Adam Sneyd, Alexander Fomin Legwegoh, and Lauren Q. Sneyd, “Food politics: perspectives on food security in Central Africa,” 141. ______
Journal of Contemporary Asia, Vol. 45, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjoc20/45/3#.VaLMoigujGo 7 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Paul K. Gellert, “Optimism and Education: The New Ideology of Development in Indonesia,” 371.
• Eduardo Climaco Tadem, “Technocracy and the Peasantry: Martial Law Development Paradigms and Philippine Agrarian Reform,” 394.
• Duncan McCargo and Peeradej Tanruangporn, “Branding Dissent: Nitirat, Thailand’s Enlightened Jurists,” 419.
• Yoonkyung Lee, “Sky Protest: New Forms of Labour Resistance in Neo-Liberal Korea,” 443.
• Devin K. Joshi and Kathleen McGrath, “Political Ideology, Public Policy and Human Development in India: Explaining the Gap Between Gujarat and Tamil Nadu,”465.
• Vlado Vivoda and Geordan Graetz, “Nuclear Policy and Regulation in Japan after Fukushima: Navigating the Crisis,” 490.
• Hiroaki Richard Watanabe, “The Struggle for Revitalisation by Japanese Labour Unions: Worker Organising after Labour-Market Deregulation,” 510.
• Tom Brass, “Free Markets, Unfree Labour: Old Questions Answered, New Answers Questioned,” 531. ______
Journal of Contemporary China, Vol. 24, Issue 94 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjcc20/24/94#.VaLTUygujGo
Local Elites in the People’s Republic of China Guest Editor: David S.G. Goodman
• Linda Chelan Li and Zhenjie Yang, “What Causes the Local Fiscal Crisis in China: the role of intermediaries,” 573.
• Graeme Smith, “Getting Ahead in Rural China: the elite-cadre divide and its implications for rural governance,” 594.
• Minglu Chen, “From Economic Elites to Political Elites: private entrepreneurs in the People’s Political Consultative Conference,” 613.
• Xiaowei Zang and Nabo Chen, “How Do Rural Elites Reproduce Privileges in Post-1978 China? Local corporatism, informal bargaining and opportunistic parasitism,” 628.
Research Articles
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Zhang Han, “Party Building in Urban Business Districts: organizational adaptation of the Chinese Communist Party,” 644.
• Xiaoyi Wen and Kevin Lin, “Restructuring China’s State Corporatist Industrial Relations System: the Wenling experience,” 665.
• Ting Gong, “Managing Government integrity under Hierarchy: anti-corruption efforts in local China,” 684.
• Mikael Mattlin and Matti Nojonen, “Conditionality and Path Dependence in Chinese Lending,” 701.
• Qin Gao, Qianwei Ying, and Danglun Luo, “Hidden Income and Occupational Background: evidence from Guangzhou,” 721.
Provocation
• Rui Pan, “China’s WTO Membership and the Non-Market Economy Status: discrimination and impediment to China’s foreign trade,” 742. ______
Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Vol. 23, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjea20/23/2#.VaLYmCgujGo
• Didem Buhari-Gulmez and Chris Rumford, “Locating ‘World Society’ in European Studies,” 169.
• Barrie Axford, “Macro-lite: Ways to Understand Europe-Making in the Global Era,” 176.
• Sebastian M. Büttner, “The ‘World-Cultural’ Constitution of Regions: Sub-national Regional Mobilization from a World Society Perspective,” 193.
• Simona Szakács, “Europeanization qua Institutionalization of World Culture: Examples from Post-1989 Romanian Education,” 208.
• Shushanik Makaryan, “Construction of Migration Policies in the Eastern Neighbourhood of the European Union,” 222.
• Philomena Murray, “Europe and the World: The Problem of the Fourth Wall in EU- ASEAN Norms Promotion,” 238.
• Ulrike Zschache, “Reflecting the Global? The Common Agricultural Policy and Its Perception in Public Media Discourse,” 253.
• Vassilis Petsinis, “The ‘New’ Far Right in Hungary: A Political Psychologist’s Perspective,” 272. 9 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Derek Hawes, “Cohesion or Incompetence? The Brussels Policy Machine Exposed,” 288.
• Branislav Radeljic, “Accommodating Diversity in Europe: Expectations and Possible Outcomes,” 292. ______
Journal of the Early Republic, Vol. 35, No. 2 (Summer 2015) http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_early_republic/toc/jer.35.2.html
• François Furstenberg and David Waldstreicher, “Re-reintroducing the Republican Court,” 165.
• David S. Shields and Fredrika J. Teute, “The Republican Court and the Historiography of a Women’s Domain in the Public Sphere,” 169.
• David S. Shields and Fredrika J. Teute, “The Meschianza: Sum of All Fêtes,” 185.
• Fredrika J. Teute and David S. Shields, “The Confederation Court,” 215.
• David S. Shields and Fredrika J. Teute, “The Court of Abigail Adams,” 227.
• Fredrika J. Teute and David S. Shields, “Jefferson in Washington: Domesticating Manners in the Republican Court,” 237.
Reflections
• Toby L. Ditz, “Masculine Republics and ‘Female Politicians’ in the Age of Revolution,” 263.
• Sophia Rosenfeld, “’Europe’, Women, and the American Political Imaginary: The 1790s and the 1990s,” 271.
• Jason Shaffer, “The Arts of War and Peace: Theatricality and Sexuality in the Early Republic,” 279.
• Amy Hudson Henderson, “Material Matters: Reading the Chairs of the Republican Court,” 287.
• Andrew Cayton, “The ‘Rights of Woman’ and the Problem of Power,” 295. ______
Journal of Genocide Research, Vol. 17, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjgr20/17/2#.VaOFQygujGo
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Susan I. Blackbeard, “Acts of severity: colonial settler massacre of amaXhosa and abaThembu on the eastern frontier of the Cape Colony, c. 1826-47,” 107.
• André Brett, “’The miserable remnant of this ill-used people’: colonial genocide and the Moriori of New Zealand’s Chatham Islands,” 133.
• Gerhard Wolf, “The Wannsee Conference in 1942 and the National Socialist living space dystopia,” 153.
• Adam Tyson, “Genocide documentary as intervention,” 177.
• Hamza Karcic, “Remembering by resolution: the case of Srebrenica,” 201.
• Surabhi Chopra, “The International Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh: silencing fair comment,” 211. ______
The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, Vol. 14, Issue 2 (April 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JGA&volumeId=14 &issueId=02&iid=9645256
• Joe Creech, “The Tolerant Populists and the Legacy of Walter Nugent,” 141.
• Ernest G. Rigney and Timothy C. Lundy, “George Herbert Mead on Terrorism, Immigrants, and Social Settlements: A 1908 Letter to the Chicago Record Herald,” 160.
• David Monod, “Double-Voiced: Music, Gender, and Nature in Performance,” 173.
• Carolyn Strange, “The Battlefields of Personal and Public Memory: Commemorating the Battle of Saratoga (1777) in the Late Nineteenth Century,” 194.
• Mary R. Block and John P. Dunn, “The Mini-Beast – George H. Butler (1838-1886),” 222.
• Dorothea Browder, “Working Out Their Economic Problems Together: World War I, Working Women, and Civil Rights in the YWCA,” 243. ______
Journal of Global Ethics, Vol. 11, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjge20/11/1#.VaOKSSgujGo
Forum: The Sustainable Development Goals
• Eric Palmer, “Introduction: The Sustainable Development Goals Forum,” 3.
• Sakiko Fukuda-Parr and Desmond McNeill, “Post 2015: a new era of accountability?,” 10. 11 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Luis Camacho, “Sustainable Development Goals: kinds, connections and expectations,” 18.
• Shashi Motilal, “Sustainable development goals and human moral obligations: the ends and means relation,” 24.
• Clara Brandi, “Safeguarding the earth system as a priority for sustainable development and global ethics: the need for an earth system SDG,” 32.
• Francesca Pongiglione, “The need for a priority structure for the Sustainable Development Goals,” 37.
• Merata Kawharu, “Aotearoa: shine or shame? A critical examination of the Sustainable Development Goals and the question of poverty and young Maori in New Zealand,” 43.
• Krushil Watene and Mandy Yap, “Culture and sustainable development: indigenous contributions,” 51.
• Thomas Pogge and Mitu Sengupta, “The Sustainable Development Goals: a plan for building a better world?,” 56.
Guest Edited Section: Global Ethics as Theory and Practice
• Matti Hayry and Tuija Takala, “Introduction: The theory and practice of global justice,” 65.
• Martha C. Nussbaum, “Political liberalism and global justice,” 68.
• Sirkku K. Hellsten, “Ethics: universal or global? The trends of studies in ethics in the context of globalization,” 80.
• Matti Hayry and Simo Vehmas, “Disability as a test of justice in a globalizing world,” 90.
• Jukka Mäkinen and Eero Kasanen, “In defense of a regulated market economy,” 99.
• Claudia Garduño García, “Good design as design for good: exploring how design can be ethically and environmentally sustainable by co-designing an eco-hostel within a Mayan community,” 110.
Article
• Anke Graness, “Is the debate on ‘global justice’ an global one? Some considerations in view of modern philosophy in Africa,” 126.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
Journal of Global History, Vol. 10, Issue 2 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JGH&volumeId=10 &issueId=02&iid=9792192
• Heidi J.S. Tworek and Simone M. Müller, “Editorial – communicating global capitalism,” 203.
• Peter A. Shulman, “Ben Franklin’s ghost: world peace, American slavery, and the global politics of information before the Universal Postal Union,” 212.
• Léonard Laborie, “Global commerce in small boxes: parcel post, 1878-1913,” 235.
• Simone M. Müller and Heidi J.S. Tworek, “’The telegraph and the bank’: on the interdependence of global communications and capitalism, 1866-1914,” 259.
• Alexander Engel, “Buying time: futures trading and telegraphy in nineteenth-century global commodity markets,” 284.
• Quinn Slobodian, “How to see the world economy: statistics, maps, and Schumpeter’s camera in the first age of globalization,” 307.
• James R. Brennan, “The Cold War battle over global news in East Africa: decolonization, the free flow of information, and the media business, 1960-1980,” 333. ______
Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 37, Issue 2 ( June 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=HET&volumeId=37 &issueId=02&iid=9732270
• Stephen Meardon, “Introduction to the Symposium: American Political Economy from the Age of Jackson to the Civil War,” 161.
• Steven G. Medema, “Remarks of the General Discussant: A Distinctively American Economics? What We Know, What We Don’t Know, and Why It Matters,” 163.
• Harro Maas, “Olmsted, De Bow, and the Weight of Evidence on the American Slave South,” 171.
• Phillip W. Magness, “The American System and the Political Economy of Black Colonization,” 187.
• Brian Schoen, “The Political Economies of Secession,” 203.
• James A. Morrison, “This Means (Bank) War! Corruption and Credible Commitments in the Collapse of the Second Bank of the United States,” 221. 13 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Joseph Persky, “American Political Economy and the Common School Movement: 1820- 1850,” 247.
• Ariel Ron, “Henry Carey’s Rural Roots, ‘Scientific Agriculture’, and Economic Development in the Antebellum South,” 263.
• William S. Belko, “’A Tax on the Many, To Enrich a Few’: Jacksonian Democracy vs. the Protective Tariff,” 277.
• Marc-William Palen, “Free-Trade Ideology and Transatlantic Abolitionism: A Historiography,” 291.
• Stephen Meardon, “Henry C. Carey’s ‘Zone Theory’ and American Sectional Conflict,” 305. ______
Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 14, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjhr20/14/2#.VaOzKygujGo
• Michael A. Santoro, “Introduction: Business and Human Rights in Historical Perspective,” 155.
• Florian Wettstein, “Normativity, Ethics, and the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: A Critical Assessment,” 162.
• Toby Whitney, “Conflict Minerals, Black Markets, and Transparency: The Legislative Background of Dodd-Frank Section 1502 and Its Historical Lessons,” 183.
• Celia R. Taylor, “Using Securities Disclosures to Advance Human Rights: A Consideration of Dodd-Frank Section 1502 and the Securities and Exchange Commission Conflict Minerals Rule,” 201.
• Nien-hê Hsieh, “Should Business Have Human Rights Obligations?,” 218.
• Anita Ramasastry, “Corporate Social Responsibility Versus Business and Human Rights: Bridging the Gap Between Responsibility and Accountability,” 237.
• Jennifer N. Costanza, “Indigenous Peoples’ Rights to Prior Consultation: Transforming Human Rights From the Grassroots in Guatemala,” 260. ______
The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Vol. 43, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fich20/43/2#.VaO80ygujGo
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Robert J. Bennett, “Collective Action when Needed: The Kingston Chamber of Commerce in Jamaica, 1778-85,” 165.
• Kate Lowe and Eugene McLaughlin, “’Caution! The Bread is Poisoned’: The Hong Kong Mass Poisoning of January 1857,” 189.
• J.E. Lewis, “Empires of Sentiment; Intimacies from Death: David Livingstone and African Slavery ‘at the Heart of the Nation’,” 210.
• Festus Cole, “Sanitation, Disease and Public Health in Sierra Leone, West Africa, 1895- 1922: Case Failure of British Colonial Health Policy,” 238.
• Lize-Marié van der Watt and Sandra Swart, “Falling off the Map: South Africa, Antarctica, c. 1919-59,” 267.
• Roger Arditti and Philip H.J. Davies, “Rethinking the Rise and Fall of the Malayan Security Service, 1946-48,” 292.
• Ichiro Maekawa, “Neo-Colonialism Reconsidered: A Case Study of East Africa in the 1960s and 1970s,” 317.
The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Vol. 43, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fich20/43/3#.VaO-3CgujGo
• Paul Moon, “The Influence of ‘Benthamite’ Philosophies on British Colonial Policy on New Zealand in the Era of the Treaty of Waitangi,” 367.
• Alexander Morrison, “Peasant Settlers on the ‘Civilising Mission’ in Russian Turkestan, 1865-1917,” 387.
• Hiroaki Osawa, “Wesleyan Methodists, Humanitarianism and the Zulu Question, 1878- 87,” 418.
• T.W. Roberts, “The Trans-Saharan Railway and the Politics of Imperial Expansion, 1890-1900,” 438.
• Chris Madsen, “The Long Goodbye: British Agency in the Creation of Navies for India and Pakistan,” 463.
• Daniel Owen Spence, “Beyond Talwar: A Cultural Reappraisal of the 1946 Royal Indian Navy Mutiny,” 489.
• Leslie E. James, “’Playing the Russian Game’: Black Radicalism, the Press, and Colonial Office Attempts to Control Anti-Colonialism in the Early Cold War, 1946-50,” 509.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
• Joseph M. Fernando, “Special Rights in the Malaysian Constitution and the Framers’ Dilemma, 1956-57,” 535. ______
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 46, Issue 1 (Summer 2015) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jinh/46/1
• Timothy P. Newfield, “Human-Bovine Plagues in the Early Middle Ages,” 1.
• Hui-wen Koo, “Weather, Harvests, and Taxes: A Chinese Revolt in Colonial Taiwan,” 39.
• Tinni Sen, Turk McCleskey, and Atin Basuchoudhary, “When Good Little Debts Went Bad: Civil Litigation on the Virginia Frontier, 1745-1755,” 60.
• Joseph Margulies, “Moral Legitimacy, Creedal Narratives, and National Identity,” 90. ______
Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 47, Issue 3 (August 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=LAS&volumeId=47 &issueId=03&iid=9808810
• Stephan Ruderer, “Between Religion and Politics: The Military Clergy During the Late Twentieth-Century Dictatorships in Argentina and Chile,” 463.
• Victor Figueroa Clark, “The Forgotten History of the Chilean Transition: Armed Resistance against Pinochet and US Policy towards Chile in the 1980s,” 491.
• Natalia Cosacov and Mariano D. Perelman, “Struggles over the Use of Public Space: Exploring Moralities and Narratives of Inequality. Cartoneros and Vecinos in Buenos Aires,” 521.
• Regnar Albaek Kristensen, “La Santa Muerte in Mexico City: The Cult and its Ambiguities,” 543.
• Hernán F. Gómez Bruera, “Securing Social Governability: Party-Movement Relationships in Lula’s Brazil,” 567. ______
The Journal of Legal History, Vol. 36, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/flgh20/36/2#.VaPFHigujGo
• Constantin Willems, “Coke, Collusion, and Conveyances: Unearthing the Roots of Twyne’s Case,” 129.
• Kellen Funk, “Equity without Chancery: The Fusion of Law and Equity in the Field Code of Civil Procedure, New York 1846-76,” 152. 16 | Page
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• Jonathan Silberstein-Loeb, “The Transatlantic Origins of the Business Trust,” 192. ______
Journal of Military Ethics, Vol. 14, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/smil20/14/1#.VaPGTygujGo
Special Issue: The American Revolution 240 Years Later: Was It a Just War?
• Henrik Syse and Martin L. Cook, “Editors’ Introduction: Whose Justice?,” 1.
• Glenn Moots, “Guest Editor’s Introduction: The American Revolution 240 Years Later: Was It a Just War?,” 3.
• Eric Patterson and Nathan Gill, “The Declaration of the United Colonies: America’s First Just War Statement,” 7.
• Gregg Frazer, “The American Revolution: Not a Just War,” 35.
• James Kirby Martin, “A Contagion of Violence: The Ideal of Jus in Bello versus the Realities of Fighting on the New York Frontier during the Revolutionary War,” 57.
• Holger Hoock, “Jus in bello, Rape and the British Army in the American Revolutionary War,” 74. ______
Journal of Military History, Vol. 79, No. 3 (July 2015) http://www.smh-hq.org/jmh/jmhvols/793.html
• Kenneth M. Swope, “Manifesting Awe: Grand Strategy and Imperial Leadership in the Ming Dynasty,” 597.
• Wayne E. Richenbacher, “The Demise of Stonewall Jackson: A Civil War Medical Case Study,” 635.
• Daniel T. Canfield, “Opportunity Lost: Combined Operations and the Development of Union Military Strategy, April 1861-April 1862,” 657.
• Christopher M. Bell, “Air Power and the Battle of the Atlantic: Very Long Range Aircraft and the Delay in Closing the Atlantic ‘Air Gap’,” 691.
• Adam R. Seipp, “Buchenwald Stories: Testimony, Military History, and the American Encounter with the Holocaust,” 721.
• Ian Phimister, “Developing and Defending Britain and Her Empire: Montgomery’s 1947 Tour of Africa,” 745. 17 | Page
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• Jeffrey Stamp, “Aero-Static Warfare: A Brief Survey of Ballooning in Mid-nineteenth- century Siege Warfare,” 767.
• Mark Grimsley, “The American Military History Master Narrative: Three Textbooks on the American Military Experience,” 783. ______
The Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 53, Issue 2 (June 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=MOA&volumeId=5 3&issueId=02&iid=9700074
• Marie Müller-Koné, “Débrouillardise: certifying ‘conflict-free’ minerals in a context of regulatory pluralism in South Kivu, DR Congo,” 145.
• Julia Grauvogel, “Regional sanctions against Burundi: the regime’s argumentative self- entrapment,” 169.
• Randi Kaarhus and Stefaan Dondeyne, “Formalising land rights based on customary tenure: community delimitation and women’s access to land in central Mozambique,” 193.
• Johan Pottier, “Coping with urban food insecurity: findings from Kampala, Uganda,” 217. ______
Journal of Modern Chinese History, Vol. 9, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmoh20/9/1#.VaPrQCgujGo
• Zhihua Shen, “On the Eighty-Eighth Brigade and the Sino-Soviet-Korean triangular relationship – A glimpse at the international antifascist united front during the war of resistance against Japan,” 3.
• Min Luo, “Chiang Kai-shek and Vietnam’s post-World War II status,” 26.
• Wei Song, “Seeking new allies in Africa: China’s policy towards Africa during the Cold War as reflected in the construction of the Tanzania-Zambia railway,” 46.
• Yuji Sasagawa, “Characteristics of and changes in wartime mobilization in China: A comparison of the Second Sino-Japanese War and the Chinese Civil War,” 66.
• Lifeng Li, “Rural mobilization in the Chinese Communist Revolution: From the Anti- Japanese War to the Chinese Civil War,” 95.
• Ping Bu, “Dialogues on historical issues concerning East Asia,” 117.
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• Yingying Gao, “A survey of twenty-first-century studies of the Japanese-occupied areas in China,” 130. ______
The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 87, No. 1 (March 2015) http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/680316
• “The Chester Penn Higby Prize for 2014,” ix.
• Jonathan Beecher, “The Making and Unmaking of a French Christian Bolshevik: The Soviet Years of Pierre Pascal,” 1.
• Maxine Berg, “East-West Dialogues: Economic Historians, the Cold War, and Détente,” 36.
• Leo Lucassen and Jan Lucassen, “The Strange Death of Dutch Tolerance: The Timing and Nature of the Pessimist Turn in the Dutch Migration Debate,” 72.
• Michael Meng, “Silences about Sarrazin’s Racism in Contemporary Germany,” 102.
The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 87, No. 2 (June 2015) http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/681157
• Gabriel Glickman, “Empire, ‘Popery’, and the Fall of English Tangier, 1662-1684,” 247.
• Elizabeth A. Foster, “’Theologies of Colonization’: The Catholic Church and the Future of the French Empire in the 1950s,” 281.
• Larry Frohman, “Population Registration, Social Planning, and the Discourse on Privacy Protection in West Germany,” 316.
• Matthew Hilton, “Ken Loach and the Save the Children Film: Humanitarianism, Imperialism, and the Changing Role of Charity in Postwar Britain,” 357. ______
Journal of Modern Italian Studies, Vol. 20, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmis20/20/3#.VaPxxigujGo
• Mark Gilbert and Antonio Varsori, “Italy in European and world politics: new approaches,” 291.
Italy in European and World Politics: New Approaches
• Antonio Varsori, “The foreign policy of First Republic Italy: new approaches,” 292.
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• Lucia Bonfreschi, “Interpreting foreign institutions. How the Italian academic culture dealt with the French Fifth Republic, 1958-1998,” 298.
• Daniele Caviglia, “Arguing for a worldwide perspective: Italy and the reform of the international monetary system between transatlantic cooperation and European integration (1971-73),” 315.
• Gabriele D’Ottavio, “Under special surveillance: Italy through German eyes, 1975-76,” 330.
• Valentine Lomellini, “The PCI and the USA: rehearsal of a difficult dialogue in the era of détente,” 346.
Non-special section articles
• Vittorio Coco, “Conspiracy theories in Republican Italy: the Pellegrino Report to the Parliamentary Commission on Terrorism,” 361.
• Elif Cetin, “The Italian left and Italy’s (evolving) foreign policy of immigration controls,” 377. ______
The Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 50, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjph20/50/2#.VaP0xCgujGo
• John Gascoigne, “From Science to Religion: Justifying French Pacific Voyaging and Expansion in the Period of the Restoration and the July Monarchy,” 109.
• Stephanie Mawson, “Rebellion and Mutiny in the Mariana Islands, 1680-1690,” 128.
• Kirstie Close-Barry, “The Reverend Setareki Tuilovoni: Mobile Pacific Leader in the Decolonisation Era,” 149.
• Nic Maclellan, “The 2014 Elections in New Caledonia: A Precursor to Self- determination?,” 168.
• Gregory Rawlings, “Lost Files, Forgotten Papers and Colonial Disclosures: The ‘Migrated Archives’ and the Pacific, 1963-2013,” 189.
• Francis X. Hezel, “From the Archives: Resources on Micronesia,” 213.
• Bronwen Douglas, “Pasts, Presents and Possibilities of Pacific History and Pacific Studies: As Seen by a Historian from Canberra,” 224.
• Adrian Muckle, Colin Newbury, Tony Ballantyne, Rob Borofsky, David Armitage, and Alison Bashford, “Pacific Histories: ocean, land, people,” 229. 20 | Page
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• Alan Ward, “Land is the Price,” 241. ______
Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 44, No. 3 (Spring 2015) http://www.palestine-studies.org/jps/issue/175
• Glenn Bowman, “Encystation: Containment and Control in Israeli Ideology and Practice,” 6. • Gabriel Piterberg, “Israeli Sociology’s Young Hegelian: Gershon Shafir and the Settler- Colonial Framework,” 17.
• Interview with Ramadan Shallah (Part II), “The Palestinian Resistance – A Reexamination,” 39.
• Fouad Moughrabi with Elaine Hagoplan, “In Honor of Naseer H. Aruri (1934-2015),” 49. ______
Journal of Policy History, Vol. 27, Special Issue 3 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JPH&volumeId=27 &issueId=03&iid=9760080
The Governance of International Communications: Business, Politics, and Standard- Setting in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
• Richard R. John, “Projecting Power Overseas: U.S. Postal Policy and International Standard-Setting at the 1863 Paris Postal Conference,” 416.
• Simone M. Müller, “Beyond the Means of 99 Percent of the Population: Business Interests, State Intervention, and Submarine Telegraphy,” 439.
• Heidi J.S. Tworek, “The Savior of the Nation? Regulating Radio in the Interwar Period,” 465.
• Frank Beyersdorf, “Freedom of Communication: Visions and Realities of Postwar Telecommunication Orders in the 1940s,” 492.
• Hugh Richard Slotten, “International Governance, Organizational Standards, and the First Global Satellite Communication System,” 521.
• Craig N. Murphy and JoAnne Yates, “Afterword: The Globalizing Governance of International Communications: Market Creation and Voluntary Consensus Standard Setting,” 550.
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Journal of Political Science Education, Vol. 11, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/upse20/11/2#.VaQM0CgujGo
• Robert E. Botsch and Carol S. Botsch, “The Advantages of Teaching American Government,” 113.
• Linda Murstedt, Jonas R. Trostek, and Max Scheja, “Values in Political Science Students’ Contextualizations of Nationalism,” 126.
• Vesa Koskimaa and Lauri Rapeli, “Political Socialization and Political Interest: The Role of School Reassessed,” 141.
• Stephanie Bell and J.P. Lewis, “The Place of Civic Engagement in Introductory Canadian Politics and Government Courses in Canadian Universities,” 157.
• Alasdair Blair, “Similar or Different?: A Comparative Analysis of Higher Education Research in Political Science and International Relations between the United States of America and the United Kingdom,” 174.
• Philip Cowley and Mark Stuart, “Whipping Them in: Role-Playing Party Cohesion with a Chief Whip,” 190.
• Roxanna Sjöstedt, “Assessing a Broad Teaching Approach: The Impact of Combining Active Learning Methods on Student Performance in Undergraduate Peace and Conflict Studies,” 204.
• Matthijs Bogaards and Franziska Deutsch, “Deliberation by, with, and for University Students,” 221.
• Samer Abboud, “Teaching the Arab World and the West…As an Arab in the West,” 233. ______
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. 25, Issue 3 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JRA&seriesId=3&v olumeId=25&issueId=03&iid=9767835
• Patrick Wing, “Submission, Defiance, and the Rules of Politics on the Mamluk Sultanate’s Anatolian Frontier,” 377.
• Muhammad Qasim Zaman, “The Sovereignty of God in Modern Islamic Thought,” 389.
• Sarah Allan, “’When Red Pigeons Gathered on Tang’s House’: A Warring States Period Tale of Shamanic Possession and Building Construction set at the turn of the Xia and Shang Dynasties,” 419.
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• Liang Cai, “The Hermeneutics of Omens: The Bankruptcy of Moral Cosmology in Western Han China (206 BCE-8 CE),” 439.
• Kaori Abe, “Intermediary Elites in the Treaty Port World: Tong Mow-chee and His Collaborators in Shanghai, 1873-1897,” 461.
• Roger Parsons, “A Brief Description of the Collection of Rawlinson Papers at the Royal Asiatic Society,” 481.
• Roger Parsons, “An Additional Note on the Rawlinson Papers,” 499. ______
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 46, Issue 2 (June 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=SEA&volumeId=46 &issueId=02&iid=9682272
• Nile Green, “Buddhism, Islam and the religious economy of colonial Burma,” 175.
• John Ingleson, “Race, class and the deserving poor: Charities and the 1930s Depression in Java,” 205.
• Upik Djalins, “Becoming Indonesian citizens: Subjects, citizens, and land ownership in the Netherlands Indies, 1930-37,” 227.
• Shin’ya Ueda, “On the financial structure and personnel organization of the Trinh Lords in seventeenth to eighteenth-century North Vietnam,” 246.
• Tam T.T. Ngo, “Protestant conversion and social conflict: The case of the Hmong in contemporary Vietnam,” 274.
• James Ockey, “Benedict Anderson and Siam Studies,” 293. ______
Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 38, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjss20/38/4#.VaQVMygujGo
• Eric Sangar, “The Weight of the Past(s): The Impact of the Bundeswehr’s Use of Historical Experience on Strategy-Making in Afghanistan,” 411.
• Bart Van Bezooijen and Eric-Hans Kramer, “Mission Command in the Information Age: A Normal Accidents Perspective on Networked Military Operations,” 445.
• Adam M. Jungdahl and Julia M. Macdonald, “Innovation Inhibitors in War: Overcoming Obstacles in the Pursuit of Military Effectiveness,” 467.
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• Raphael D. Marcus, “Military Innovation and Tactical Adaptation in the Israeli- Hizballah Conflict: The Institutionalization of Lesson-Learning in the IDF,” 500.
• Nina A. Kollars, “War’s Horizon: Soldier-Led Adaptation in Iraq and Vietnam,” 529.
• Lawrence Freedman, “Social Science and the Cold War,” 554. ______
Journal of Transatlantic Studies, Vol. 13, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjts20/13/2#.VaQYVCgujGo
• Frank Groome, “Harry S. Truman and the errand of sacrifice: 1945-1953,” 107.
• Peter Viggo Jakobsen and Jens Ringsmose, “Size and reputation – why the USA has valued its ‘special relationships’ with Denmark and the UK differently since 9/11,” 135.
• Peter O’Connor, “The Anglo-American synecdoche? Thomas Jefferson’s British legacy 1800-1865,” 154.
• Pjer Simunovic, “Making of an Ally – NATO membership conditionality implemented on Croatia,” 175.
• Andrew N. Wegmann, “The vitriolic blood of a Negro: the development of racial identity and Creole elitism in New Spain and Spanish Louisiana, 1763-1803,” 204. ______
Labor Studies Journal, 40:1 (March 2015) http://lsj.sagepub.com/content/40/1.toc
• Robert Bruno, “New Models of Worker Representation,” 5.
• Victor Silverman, “Victory at Pomona College: Union Strategy and Immigrant Labor,” 8.
• Xóchitl Bada and Shannon Gleeson, “A New Approach to Migrant Labor Rights Enforcement: The Crisis of Undocumented Worker Abuse and Mexican Consular Advocacy in the United States,” 32.
• Linda Delp and Kevin Riley, “Worker Engagement in the Health and Safety Regulatory Arena under Changing Models of Worker Representation,” 54.
• Bruce Nissen and Rick Smith, “A Novel Way to Represent and Reframe the Interests of Workers: The People’s Budge Review in St. Petersburg, Florida,” 84. ______
The Middle East Journal, Vol. 69, No. 2 (Spring 2015) https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_middle_east_journal/toc/mej.69.2.html 24 | Page
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Spotlight: Libya After Qadhafi
• Jason Pack and Haley Cook, “The July 2012 Libyan Election and the Origin of Post- Qadhafi Appeasement,” 171.
• Edward Randall, “After Qadhafi: Development and Democratization in Libya,” 199.
• W. Andrew Terrill, “Iran’s Strategy for Saving Asad,” 222.
• Efrat Ben-Ze’ev, “Blurring the Geo-Body: Mental Maps of Israel/Palestine,” 237.
• Kjetil Selvik, Jon Nordenson, Tewodros Aragie Kebede, “Print Media Liberalization and Electoral Coverage Bias in Kuwait,” 255. ______
Middle East Policy, Vol. 22, Issue 2 (Summer 2015) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mepo.2015.22.issue-2/issuetoc
Symposium: The Syrian Humanitarian Crisis
• Karen AbuZayd, Denis J. Sullivan, Susan M. Akram, and Sara Roy, “The Syrian Humanitarian Crisis: What Is to Be Done?,” 1.
Geopolitics
• Chas W. Freeman, Jr., “Responding to Failure: Reorganizing U.S. Policies in the Middle East,” 30.
• Michael B. Bishku, “The South Caucasus Republics: Relations with the U.S. and the E.U.,” 40.
• Matteo Legrenzi and Fred H. Lawson, “China’s Gulf Policy: Existing Theories, New Perspectives,” 58.
• Gaess Roger, “Interview: Grahame Morris,” 72.
Regional Dynamics
• Stephen Ellis and Andrew Futter, “Iranian Nuclear Aspirations and Strategic Balancing in the Middle East,” 80.
• Stephan Rosiny, “The Rise and Demise of the IS Caliphate,” 94.
• Rashed Lekhraibani, Emilie Rutledge, and Ingo Forstenlechner, “Securing a Dynamic and Open Economy: The UAE’s Quest for Stability,” 108. 25 | Page
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Social Change
• Samar El-Masri, “Tunisian Women at a Crossroads: Cooptation or Autonomy?,” 125.
• Marc Morjé Howard and Meir R. Walters, “Mass Mobilization and the Democracy Bias,” 145.
• Albert B. Wolf, “The Arab Street: Effects of the Six-Day War,” 156. ______
Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 51, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fmes20/51/4#.VaQxZSgujGo
• Serap Kavas, “’Wardrobe Modernity’: Western Attire as a Tool of Modernization in Turkey,” 515.
• Kamala Imranli-Lowe, “Reconstruction of the ‘Armenian Homeland’ Notion,” 540.
• Jens Heibach, “Contesting the Monopoly of Interpretation: The Uneasy Relationship between Ulama and Sunni Parties in Yemen,” 563.
• Shaul Bartal, “Sheikh Qaradawi and the Internal Palestinian Struggle Issues Preventing Reconciliation Between Fatah and Hamas and the Influence of the Qaradawi Era over the Struggle Between the Organizations,” 585.
• Uriya Shavit, “The Muslim Brothers’ Conception of Armed Insurrection against an Unjust Regime,” 600.
• Aziz Çelik, “Turkey’s New Labour Regime Under the Justice and Development Party in the First Decade of the Twenty-First Century: Authoritarian Flexibilization,” 618.
• Yinon Shlomo, “The Israeli-Syrian Disengagement Negotiations of 1973-74,” 636.
• Netanel Avneri, “The Iraqi Coups of July 1968 and the American Connection,” 649. ______
Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 3 (May 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=ASS&volumeId=49 &issueId=03&iid=9688184
• Sandeep Banerjee and Subho Basu, “Secularizing the Sacred, Imagining the Nation- Space: The Himalaya in Bengali travelogues, 1856-1901,” 609.
• Richard S. Weiss, “Print, Religion, and Canon in Colonial India: The publication of Ramalinga Adigal’s Tiruvarutpa,” 650. 26 | Page
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• Rizwan Ahmad, “Polyphony of Urdu in Post-colonial North India,” 678.
• Medha Kudaisya, “Developmental Planning in ‘Retreat’: Ideas, instruments, and contestations of planning in India, 1967-1971,” 711.
• Indira Arumugam, “’The Old Gods Are Losing Power!’: Theologies of power and rituals of productivity in a Tamil Nadu village,” 753.
• Paul M. McGarr, “’The Viceroys are Disappearing from the Roundabouts in Delhi’: British symbols of power in post-colonial India,” 787.
Forum: Communications Networks in Modern China
• Wook Yoon, “Dashed Expectations: Limitations of the telegraphic service in the late Qing,” 832.
• Daqing Yang, “Through a Japanese Prism: Foreign influence and Chinese telecommunications in the early Republican era,” 858.
• Weipin Tsai, “The Qing Empire’s Last Flowering: The expansion of China’s Post Office at the turn of the twentieth century,” 895.
Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 4 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=ASS&volumeId=49&seriesId=0&is sueId=04
• Bérénice Guyot-Réchard, “Reordering a Border Space: Relief, rehabilitation, and nation-building in northeastern India after the 1950 Assam earthquake,” 931.
• Scott Relyea, “Yokes of Gold and Threads of Silk: Sino-Tibetan competition for authority in early twentieth century Kham,” 963.
• Magnus Marsden, “From Kabul to Kiev: Afghan trading networks across the former Soviet Union,” 1010.
• C. Ryan Perkins, “A New Pablik: Abdul Halim Sharar, volunteerism, and the Anjuman-e Dar-us-Salam in late nineteenth-century India,” 1049.
• Bart Klem, “Showing One’s Colours: The political work of elections in post-war Sri Lanka,” 1091.
• Arjun Subrahmanyan, “Education, Propaganda, and the People: Democratic paternalism in 1930s Siam,” 1122.
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• Lauri Paltemaa, “Serve the City! Urban disaster governance in Tianjin city 1958-1962,” 1143.
• Robert Peckham, “Hygienic Nature: Afforestation and the greening of colonial Hong Kong,” 1177.
• Julie E. Hughes, “Royal Tigers and Ruling Princes: Wilderness and wildlife management in the Indian princely states,” 1210. ______
Modern & Contemporary France, Vol. 23, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cmcf20/23/3#.VaT0cygujGo
• Fiona Haig, “De-Stalinisation? Grassroots Responses to the XXth Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in France’s ‘Var rouge’,” 285.
• Andrew W.M. Smith and James W. Hawkey, “’From the soil we have come, to the soil we shall go and from the soil we want to live’: Language, Politics and Identity in the Grande Révolte of 1907,” 307.
• Didier Chabanet and Frédéric Royall, “The 2011 Indignés/Occupy Movements in France and Ireland: An Analysis of the Causes of Weak Mobilisations,” 327.
• Sarah Louise Wood, “Silence, Space and Ecology: Representing the ‘Amerindian’ in Contemporary Guyane,” 351.
• Kathleen Antonioli, “Classic and Modern: Colette Criticism in the Interwar,” 369.
• Nathan Bracher, “L’Histoire hors sujet ou Écrire le passé ‘comme Elstir peignait la mer’: le cas de l’Histoire des grands-parents que je n’ai pas eus d’Ivan Jablonka,” 387. ______
Modern Italy, Vol. 20, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cmit20/20/2#.VaT3MigujGo
• Eileen Ryan, “Violence and the politics of prestige: the fascist turn in colonial Libya,” 123.
• Mattia Granata, “The economic policies of Italian social democracy in the post-war period (1945-1962),” 137.
• Giuseppe Scotto, “From ‘emigrants’ to ‘Italians’: what is new in Italian migration to London?,” 153.
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• Francesco Della Puppa and Francesco Miele, “Beyond (but not too much) the male breadwinner model: a qualitative study on child care and masculinities in contemporary Italy,” 167.
• Alex Wilson, “Direct election of regional presidents and party change in Italy,” 185.
• Nicola D’Elia, “Historiography as a political battlefield (1956-1989): Italian left-wing historians on early German Social Democracy,” 199. ______
Le Monde Diplomatique (May 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2015/05/
• Serge Halimi, “Comment échapper à la confusion politique,” 1.
• Rodney Benson, “Quarante ans d’immigration dans les médias en France et aux Etats- Unis,” 1.
• Rodney Benson, “Plusieurs approches,” 10.
• Rodney Benson, “Qui a la parole?”
• Renaud Lambert, “A la recherche du prochain Syriza,” 1.
• Pierre Rimbert, “Les joies de l’écriture automatique,” 11.
• Renaud Lambert, “La goutte d’eau irlandaise.”
• Philippe Descamps, “Gagnant-gagnant?”
• Kristin Ross, “L’internationalisme au temps de la Commune,” 3.
• Akram Belkaïd, “Washington débordé par l’affrontement entre Riyad et Téhéran,” 4.
• Shervin Ahmadi, “Un accord qui ouvre le champ des possibles en Iran,” 5.
• Cécile Marin, “Pétrole et religion n’expliquent pas tout.”
• Catherine Locatelli, “Gazprom, le Kremlin et le marché,” 6.
• Hélène Richard, “South Stream, les raisons d’un abandon.”
• Sanou Mbaye, “Métamorphoses de la dette africaine,” 7.
• Cécile Marin, “De désendettement à l’irruption des fonds vautours.”
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• Barbara Landrevie, “La Méditerranée empoisonnée,” 8.
• Dominique Hoppe, “Le coût du monolinguisme,” 9.
• Janette Habel, “Quand Cuba débat,” 12.
• Alexia Eychenne, “Grossesse fatale pour les bonnes à Hongkong,” 13.
• Gérard Mordillat, “Voir ou avoir?,” 14.
• Lucie Geffroy, “Guérilla littéraire,” 27.
• Mona Chollet, “Le temps des claustrophiles,” 28.
Dossier
• “L’Allemagne, puissance sans désir,” 17.
• Wolfgang Streeck, “Une hégémonie fortuite,” 17.
• Dominique Vidal, “A droite, du nouveau,” 18.
• Olivier Cyran, “’Bild’ contre les cyclo-nudistes,” 19.
• Sabine Kergel, “Ce qu’ont perdu les femmes de l’Est,” 20.
• Philippe Leymarie, “Embarras autour des ventes d’armes,” 21.
• Wolfgang Streeck, “Comment l’Allemagne s’est imposée.”
Le Monde Diplomatique (June 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2015/06/
• Félix Tréguer, “Feu vert à la surveillance de masse,” 1.
• Félix Tréguer, “Etats et entreprises à l’assaut de la vie privée,” 4.
• Félix Tréguer, “Résistance multiforme.”
• Gilbert Achcar, “La religion peut-elle servir le progrès social?,” 3.
• Owen Jones, “Au Royaume-Uni, la victoire des bourreaux,” 6.
• Stelios Kouloglou, “Grèce, le coup d’Etat silencieux,” 7.
• Bertrand Badie, “Les Nations unies face au conservatisme des grandes puissances,” 8. 30 | Page
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• Gabriel Galice, “La paix par la force ou par le droit,” 8.
• Anne-Cécile Robert, “Oubli des peuples.”
• Ana Otasevic, “Faillite de la mission européenne au Kosovo,” 10.
• Jean-Pierre Chevènement, “Crise ukrainienne, une épreuve de vérité,” 11.
• Jacques Lévesque, “La crise russo-ukrainienne accouchera-t-elle d’un nouvel ordre européen?”
• Lori M. Wallach, “Mirages du libre-échange,” 12.
• Nathalie Alvarado and Carlos Santiso, “Insécurité endémique en Amérique latine,” 13.
• Gilles Balbastre, “C’est toujours la faute à l’école…,” 14.
• Pierre Benetti, “Au Burundi, les racines de la colère,” 16.
• Eric Tandy, “Oï, oï, fais-le tout seul!,” 27.
• Virginie Bueno, “Le malade virtuel,” 28.
Dossier
• “Vous avez dit ‘complot’?,” 1.
• Frédéric Lordon, “Le symptôme d’une dépossession,” 17.
• Franck Gaudichaud, “De Santiago à Caracas, la main noire de Washington,” 18.
• Julien Brygo, “’Qui croit à la version officielle?’,” 18.
• Akram Belkaïd, “Une obsession dans le monde arabe,” 19.
• Benoît Bréville, “Dix principes de la mécanique conspirationniste,” 20.
• Marina Maestrutti, “Personne n’est à l’abri,” 21.
• Evelyne Pieiller, “Aux frontières du réel,” 22.
• Alain Damasio, “Vos souvenirs sont notre avenir,” 22.
• Alexandre Sumpf, “Le complot bolchevique et l’a(r)gent allemand.”
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Le Monde Diplomatique, (July 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2015/07/
• Pablo Iglesias, “Podemos, ‘notre stratégie’,” 1.
• Nada Maucourant, “L’autre combat des femmes kurdes d’Irak,” 1.
• Florence Beaugé, “Tunisiennes après la révolution,” 8.
• Serge Halimi, “Fureur à l’Elysée.”
• Evelyne Pieiller, “Michel Onfray ou l’amour de l’ordre,” 3.
• “Comment sauver vraiment la Grèce,” 4.
• Costas Lapavitsas, “Sortie de l’euro, une occasion historique,” 4.
• Gabriel Colletis, Jean-Philippe Robé, and Robert Salais, “Convertir la dette en investissements,” 4.
• Pierre Rimbert, “’Syriza delenda est’,” 28.
• Cecilia Valdez, “En Espagne, un bâillon sur la colère,” 6.
• Chloé Maurel, “Un passeport pour les apatrides,” 6.
• Pierre Rimbert, “Les tongs voyagent à l’oeil.”
• Jean-Arnault Dérens and Laurent Geslin, “Les Balkans, nouvelle ligne de front entre la Russie et l’Occident,” 10.
• Jean-Arnault Dérens and Laurent Geslin, “La Macédoine au coeur des manoeuvres.”
• Jean-Arnault Dérens and Laurent Geslin, “Rejouer en Ukraine la guerre des années 1990.”
• Allan Popelard and Paul Vannier, “Panamá sans les Panaméens,” 12.
• Christelle Gérand, “Ma maison, ma voiture, mon puits de pétrole,” 13.
• Guy Scarpetta, “Quand l’art du roman s’empare de l’histoire,” 14.
• Laura Raim, “Police de la pensée économique à l’Université,” 16.
• Gilles Rotillon, “Le monde si simple de Jean Tirole,” 16.
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• Yifan Ding, “Bientôt des yuans dans toutes les poches?,” 18.
• Yifan Ding, “En Chine, un réforme financière à haut risque.”
• Daniel Bertrand, “Conjurer la fragmentation au Mali,” 19.
• Cécile Marin, “Les acteurs du conflit dans le nord du Mali.”
• Marylène Patou-Mathis, “Non, les hommes n’ont pas toujours fait la guerre,” 20.
• Jacques Denis, “Darboussier, mémoire tenace de l’esclavage,” 22.
• Jacques Denis, “Le combat de Solitude.”
• Sébastien Lapaque, “Panaït Istrati, roi des vagabonds,” 27. ______
Le Monde Diplomatique – Manière de voir (June-July 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/141/
Libre-échange, la déferlante
• Pierre Rimbert, “Un bâton dans la roue.”
Nouvelle vague
• Lori M. Wallach, “Ce typhon qui menace les peuples.”
• Raoul Marc Jennar and Renaud Lambert, “Mondialisation heureuse, mode d’emploi.”
• Serge Halimi, “Groupés face au spectre chinois.”
• Yes Men, “Ces obstacles qui barrent l’autoroute du bonheur.”
• Benoît Bréville and Martine Bulard, “Des tribunaux pour détrousser les Etats.”
• Olivier Cyran, “La machine à courdre du monde.”
• Raoul Marc Jennar, “Cinquante nuances de libéralisation.”
• Martine Bulard, “Le Far West asiatique.”
• Jacques Berthelot, “Le baiser de la mort de l’Europe à l’Afrique.”
Perseverare diabolicum
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• Renaud Lambert, “Et le Paraguay découvrit le libre-échange.”
• Philip S. Golub, “Asie, le retour.”
• Alain Roux, “Les guerres de l’opium revisitées.”
• Antoine Schwartz, “Napoléon III contre les ‘moutons frrrançais.’”
• Jean Monnet, “L’Union européenne, un super marché.”
• Yes Men, “Tisser ensemble un monde meilleur.”
• Alexander Zevin, “’The Economist’, un journal pour la cause.”
• Serge Halimi, “Un village néo-zélandais à l’heure du marché.”
• Gilles Caire, “Les bronzés au secours du Sud?”
• Laurence Tubiana, “La mondialisation contre l’écologie.”
• “Alena, des mots magiques, des mots tactiques…”
• Akram Belkaïd, “En Tunisie, la mise à niveau pour faire la pilule de l’ouverture.”
De la résistance à la reconquête
• Agnès Sinaï, “Le jour où le Sud se rebiffa.”
• Bernard Cassen, “Un protectionnisme altruiste.”
• Susan George, “Quand Keynes pensait un autre monde.”
• Yes Men, “Un bref instant de lucidité.”
• Anne-Cécile Robert, “Le plan de Lagos.”
• Frédéric Lordon, “La démondialisation et ses ennemis.”
• Collectif, “’Bon, d’accord. Mais que faire?’” ______
Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, Vol. 21, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fnep20/21/2#.VaVk0CgujGo
• Brandon Kendhammer, “Getting Our Piece of the National Cake: Consociational Power Sharing and Neopatrimonialism in Nigeria,” 143. 34 | Page
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• Michael Woldemariam, “Partition Problems: Relative Power, Historical Memory, and the Origins of the Eritrean-Ethiopian War,” 166.
• Licia Cianetti, “Integrating Minorities in Times of Crisis: Issues of Displacement in the Estonian and Latvian Integration Programs,” 191.
• Emma Ambrose and Cas Mudde, “Canadian Multiculturalism and the Absence of the Far Right,” 213.
• Eric Rodrigo Meringer, “Protestant Moravianism, Constructions of Anglo Affinity, and the Hidden History of Liberation Theology among Nicaragua’s Indigenous Miskitu People,” 237. ______
Orbis, Vol. 59, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00304387
• Derek S. Reveron and Nikolas K. Gvosdev, “(Re)Discovering the National Interest: The Future of U.S. Foreign Policy,” 299.
• R.D. Hooker, Jr., “Understanding U.S. Grand Strategy,” 317.
• William Krist, “Negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership: Closing the Deal,” 331.
• Gilbert Rozman, “Reassessing the U.S. Rebalance to Northeast Asia,” 348.
• Vincent Wei-cheng Wang, “The U.S. Asia Rebalancing and the Taiwan Strait Rapprochement,” 361.
• Jason Silver, “China’s Asymmetric Intelligence Advantage: The State Security Law,” 380.
• Morena Skalamera, “The Ukraine Crisis: The Neglected Gas Factor,” 398.
• Mackubin Thomas Owens, “Force Planning: The Crossroads of Strategy and the Political Process,” 411. ______
Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Review, Vol. 45, No. 3 (January 2015) https://shafr.org/sites/default/files/Passport-01-2015.pdf
• Thomas Borstelmann, “Presidential Column: Exploring Borders in a Transnational Era,” 6.
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• Jay Sexton, Eliga H. Gould, Shannon E. Duffy, Robert J. Allison, Jeffrey J. Malanson, and Francis D. Cogliano, “A Roundtable on Francis D. Cogliano, Emperor of Liberty: Thomas Jefferson’s Foreign Policy,” 7.
• Christopher McKnight Nichols and Jeremi Suri, “What is a Public Intellectual?,” 18.
• Andrew Johnstone, “Before the Water’s Edge: Domestic Politics and U.S. Foreign Relations,” 25.
• Grant Madsen, “Policy History and Diplomatic History: Together at Last?,” 30.
• Olivia L. Sohns, “A View from Overseas: Teaching and Reflecting on U.S.-Israel Relations in Jerusalem,” 35.
• Nicholas Evan Sarantakes and Brian C. Etheridge, “In Search of a Solution: SHAFR and the Jobs Crisis in the History Profession,” 37.
• Stephen M. Streeter, “Review of Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969-1976, vol. XXI: Chile, 1969-1973,” 40.
Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Review, Vol. 46, No. 1 (April 2015) https://shafr.org/sites/default/files/passport-04-2015.pdf
• Andrew L. Johns, “From the Editor: Book Reviews in SHAFR Publications,” 5.
• Barbara J. Keys, Richard Ian Kimball, Dennis Merrill, Christine Skwiot, and Scott Laderman, “A Roundtable on Scott Laderman, Empire in Waves: A Political History of Surfing,” 6.
• Kimber Quinney, “Public Intellectuals, We Need You!: Four Lessons from Max Ascoli for Intellectuals and U.S. Foreign Relations,” 14.
• Marc J. Selverstone, “Eternal Flaming: The Historiography of Kennedy Foreign Policy,” 22.
• Alan McPherson, “The Dominican Intervention, 50 Years On,” 31.
• Molly M. Wood, “Scholars as Teachers: Thoughts on Scholarship in the Classroom,” 35.
• Andy DeRoche, “’She Did a Lot for Us’: Jean Wilkowski in Zambia,” 38.
• Kyle Longley, “In Memoriam: Mark Gilderhus,” 55.
• Molly M. Wood, “In Memoriam: Charles Chatfield,” 58.
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• Andrew L. Johns, “The Last Word: Things I Think,” 59. ______
Peace & Change: A Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 40, Issue 3 (July 2015) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pech.2015.40.issue-3/issuetoc
• Steven Garabedian, “’It Don’t Make Sense’: Willie Dixon, The Blues, War, and Peace,” 287.
• John Idriss Lahai, “From Discontinuity to Continuity: Tertiary Education Institutions, Conflict and Peacebuilding in Sierra Leone,” 313.
• Brian S. Mueller, “Waging Peace in a Disarmed World: Arthur Waskow’s Vision of a Nonlethal Cold War,” 339.
• Eric J. Morgan, “His Voice Must Be Heard: Dennis Brutus, the Anti-Apartheid Movement, and the Struggle for Political Asylum in the United States,” 368.
• Daniel S. Lucks, “Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Riverside Speech and Cold War Civil Rights,” 395. ______
Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, Vol. 21, Issue 2 (May 2015) http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/pac/21/2/
• Melinda A. Leonard, Samantha M. Yung, and Ed Cairns, “Predicting intergroup forgiveness from in-group identification and collective guilt in adolescent and adult affiliates of a Northern Irish cross-community organization,” 155.
• Michelle Billies, “Surveillance threat as embodied psychological dilemma,” 168.
• Ramzi Suleiman and Yifat Agat-Galili, “Sleeping on the enemy’s couch: Psychotherapy across ethnic boundaries in Israel,” 187.
• Cristina Jayme Montiel, “Multilayered trauma during democratic transition: A woman’s first-person narrative,” 197.
• Holly F. Young, Magda Rooze, and Jorien Holsappel, “Translating conceptualizations into practical suggestions: What the literature on radicalization can offer to practitioners,” 212.
• Todd L. Pittinsky and Nicole Diamante, “Global bystander nonintervention,” 226.
• Shira Kudish, Smadar Cohen-Chen, and Eran Halperin, “Increasing support for concession-making in intractable conflicts: The role of conflict uniqueness,” 248.
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• Mark A. Staal and Carroll H. Greene III, “An examination of ‘adversarial’ operational psychology,” 264.
• Jean Maria Arrigo, Roy J. Eidelson, and Lawrence P. Rockwood, “Adversarial operational psychology is unethical psychology: A reply to Staal and Greene (2015),” 269.
• Mark A. Staal and Carroll H. Greene III, “Operational psychology: An ethical practice – A reply to Arrigo, Eidelson, and Rockwood (2015),” 279.
• Jean Maria Arrigo, Roy J. Eidelson, and Lawrence P. Rockwood, “Adversarial operational psychology: Returning the foundational issues,” 282.
• Muhammad Kamruzzaman Mozumder and Shamsul Haque, “Stereotypical thoughts and perceptions among Chakma and Settler Bengalis in Southeastern Bangladesh,” 285.
• Gordon Sammut, Frank Bezzina, and Mohammad Sartawi, “The spiral of conflict: Naïve realism and the black sheep effect in attributions of knowledge and ignorance,” 289.
• Yossi David and Ifat Maoz, “Gender perceptions and support for compromise in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” 295.
• Miki Kashtan, “Risking everything for the common good,” 299. ______
Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice, Vol. 27, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cper20/27/2#.VaV29ygujGo
Symposium: Gender, Conflict, and Global Environmental Change
• Christiane Fröhlich and Giovanna Gioli, “Gender, Conflict, and Global Environmental Change,” 137.
• Adrienne Stork, Cassidy Travis, and Silja Halle, “Gender-Sensitivity in Natural Resource Management in Côte d’Ivoire and Sudan,” 147.
• Holly Dunn and Richard Matthew, “Natural Resources and Gender in Conflict Settings,” 156.
• Deepa Joshi, “Gender Change in the Globalization of Agriculture?,” 165.
• Brittany Ajroud, Kame Westerman, and Janet Edmond, “Men and Women as Conservation Partners in Conflict Settings,” 175.
• Henri Myrttinen, Jana Naujoks, and Janpeter Schilling, “Gender, Natural Resources, and Peacebuilding in Kenya and Nepal,” 181. 38 | Page
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• Kerstin Rosenow-Williams and Katharina Behmer, “Gendered Environmental Security in IDP and Refugee Camps,” 188.
• Tobias Von Lossow, “Gender in Inter-State Water Conflicts,” 196.
• Joane Nagel, “Gender, Conflict, and the Militarization of Climate Change Policy,” 202.
Other Features
• Eric Bonds, “Challenging Global Warming’s New ‘Security Threat’ Status,” 209.
• Steve Dobransky, “The Tragic Script of Thucydides in Political Science,” 217.
• Michelle Bentley, “The Problem with the Chemical Weapons Taboo,” 228.
• John Saroyan, “Suppressed and Repressed Memories among Armenian Genocide Survivors,” 237.
• W. John Morgan, “Peace Profile: Waldo Williams,” 244. ______
Politique Étrangère (2015/2) https://www.cairn.info/revue-politique-etrangere-2015-2.htm
La Russie, une puissance faible? Dossier
• Fiodor Loukianov, translated from the Russian by Boris Samkov, “La Russie, une puissance révisionniste?,” 11.
• Thomas Gomart, “Russie: de la ‘grande stratégie’ à la ‘guerre limitée’,” 25.
• Ioulia Joutchkova and Vladislav Inozemtsev, “La logique non économique de Vladimir Poutine,” 39.
• Tatiana Kastouéva-Jean, “Le système Poutine: bâti pour durer?,” 53.
Contrechamps Climat: avant la Conférence de Paris
• Sunita Narain, translated from the English by Valentine Deville-Fradin, “Climat: l’injustice faite au Sud,” 69.
• Christian de Perthuis and Raphaël Trotignon, “COP21: quelles chances de succès?, 83.
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Actualités
• Archibald Gallet, “Les enjeux du chaos libyen,” 99.
• Jean-Loup Samaan, “Israël-Hezbollah: la nouvelle équation stratégique,” 113.
• Myriam Benraad, “Défaire Daech: une guerre tant financière que militaire,” 125.
• Marc-André Lagrange, “Soudan du Sud: de l’État en faillite à l’État chaotique,” 137.
• Marc-Antoine Pérouse de Montclos, “Boko Haram, une exception dans la mouvance djihaidiste?,” 147.
Repères
• Norbert Gaillard, “Le concept de risque pays,” 161.
• Lars Erslev Andersen, “Terrorisme en contre-radicalisation: le modèle danois,” 173. ______
Raisons Politiques (2015/2) https://www.cairn.info/revue-raisons-politiques-2015-2.htm
Éditorial
• Éric Fassin, “Les langages de l’intersectionnalité,” 5.
Dossier: Les Langages de l’ Intersectionnalité
• Éric Fassin, “D’un langage l’autre: l’intersectionnalité comme traduction,” 9.
• Urmila Goel, “From Methodology to Contextualisation. The Politics and Epistemology of Intersectionality,” 25.
• Mara Viveros Vigoya, “L’intersectionnalité au prisme du féminisme latino-américain,” 39.
• Sébastien Chauvin and Alexandre Jaunait, “L’intersectionnalité contre l’intersection,” 55.
• Sarah Mazouz, “Faire des différences. Ce que l’ethnographie nous apprend sur l’articulation des modes pluriels d’assignation,” 75.
• Nira Yuval-Davis, “Situated Intersectionality and Social Inequality,” 91.
Varia
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• Thomas Boccon-Gibod, “Vérité du pouvoir et puissance de l’autorité Foucault et les voies de la critique,” 101. ______
Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice, Vol. 19, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rrhi20/19/3
• Alun Munslow, “Rethinking history,” 323.
• Alun Munslow, “Rethinking Metahistory: The Historical imagination in nineteenth century Europe,” 324.
• Adam Kozuchowski, “More than true: the rhetorical function of counterfactuals in historiography,” 337.
• Deborah Mayersen, “One hundred days of horror: portraying genocide in Rwanda,” 357.
• Katalin Eszter Morgan, “Learning empathy through school history textbooks? A case study,” 370.
• Angelos Mouzakitis, “From narrative to action: Paul Ricoeur’s reflections on history,” 393.
• Catherine Baker, “Beyond the island story?: The opening ceremony of the London 2012 Olympic Games as public history,” 409.
• Peter J. Beck, “For historians, even ‘historians of a postmodernist kind’, ‘presentation’ is the word,” 429.
• Herman Paul, “Relations to the past: a research agenda for historical theorists,” 450.
Lincoln Film Section
• Louise Spence, “Forum: Lincoln: Introduction,” 459.
• Peter Almond and Stephen Brier, “’Untold Stories’,” 463.
• Alison Landsberg, “’This isn’t usual, Mr. Pendleton, this is history’: Spielberg’s Lincoln and the production of historical knowledge,” 482.
• Mary Niall Mitchell, “Seeing Lincoln: Spielberg’s film and the visual culture of the nineteenth century,” 493.
• Willem Hesling, “Lincoln: a man for too many seasons?,” 506.
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• Andrea Foroughi, “’Your household accounts have always been so interesting’: family relations and gender politics in Lincoln’s two ‘houses’,” 512.
• Robert Burgoyne and John Trafton, “Haunting in the historical biopic: Lincoln,” 525. ______
The Review of Faith & International Affairs, Vol. 13, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rfia20/13/2#.VaYqJygujGo
• Brian J. Grim, “The Modern Chinese Secret to Sustainable Economic Growth: Religious Freedom and Diversity,” 1.
• Robert P. Weller, “Global Religious Changes and Civil Life in Two Chinese Societies: A Comparison of Jiangsu and Taiwan,” 13.
• Sarah Cornelison, “Conditions and Mechanisms for Terrorist Mobilization: Applying the Chechen Case to the Uighur Question,” 25.
• Fabio Petito and Scott M. Thomas, “Encounter, Dialogue, and Knowledge: Italy as a Special Case of Religious Engagement in Foreign Policy,” 40.
• Cenap Çakmak, “The Arab Spring and the Shiite Crescent: Does Ongoing Change Serve Iranian Interests?,” 52.
• Jill Olivier and Quentin Wodon, “Religion, Reproductive Health, and Sexual Behavior in Ghana: Why Statistics from Large Surveys Don’t Tell the Whole Story,” 64.
• Todd M. Johnson, Gina A. Zurlo, and Albert W. Hickman, “Embezzlement in the Global Christian Community,” 74. ______
Review of International Studies, Vol. 41, Issue 3 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=RIS&volumeId=41 &issueId=03&iid=9708976
• James Brassett and Lena Rethel, “Sexy money: the hetero-normative politics of global finance,” 429.
• Lisa Maria Dellmuth and Jonas Tallberg, “The social legitimacy of international organisations: Interest representation, institutional performance, and confidence extrapolation in the United Nations,” 451.
• Luke Cooper, “The international relations of the ‘imagined community’: Explaining the late nineteenth-century genesis of the Chinese nation,” 477.
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• Shiera S. el-Malik, “Why Orientalism still matters: Reading ‘casual forgetting’ and ‘active remembering’ as neoliberal forms of contestation in international politics,” 503.
• David Hughes, “Unmaking an exception: A critical genealogy of US exceptionalism,” 527.
• Jason Ralph and Adrian Gallagher, “Legitimacy faultlines in international society: The responsibility to protect and prosecute after Libya,” 553.
• Gregorio Bettiza, “Constructing civilisations: Embedding and reproducing the ‘Muslim world’ in American foreign policy practices and institutions since 9/11,” 575.
• Kilian Spandler, “The political international society: Change in primary and secondary institutions,” 601.
• Tom Bentley, “The sorrow of empire: Rituals of legitimation and the performative contradictions of liberalism,” 623. ______
Revolutionary Russia, Vol. 28, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/frvr20/28/1#.VaZFrygujGo
• Paul du Quenoy, “In the ‘Most Uncompromising Russian Style’: The Russian Repertoire at the Metropolitan Opera, 1910-1947,” 1.
• George Gilbert, “Rightist Ritual, Memory and Identity Commemoration in Late Imperial Russia,” 22.
• Yiannis Kokosalakis, “’Merciless War’ against Trifles: The Leningrad Party Organisation After the Fall of the Zinoviev Opposition,” 48. ______
Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine (2015/1) https://www.cairn.info/revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2015-1.htm
L’Eau, le Climat et les Hommes
• Kenneth Pomeranz, translated from English by Guillaume Ratel, “Les eaux de l’Himalaya: barrages géants et risques environnementaux en Asie contemporaine,” 7.
• Jean-Baptiste Fressoz and Fabien Locher, “L’agir humain sur le climat et la naissance de la climatologie historique, XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles,” 48.
La Confession des Objets
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• Marc Mudrak, “La construction matérielle du catholicisme allemand au début de la Réforme,” 79.
• Antoine Roullet, “Le soin du vêtement au couvent, entre uniforme et distinction: les carmélites déchaussées espagnoles, années 1560-1630,” 104.
La Cohésion des Sujets
• Fabrice Micallef, “Guerre civile et épreuve délibérative. Les assemblées provençales au début des troubles de la Ligue (1585-1588),” 127.
Monnaie et Crédit en France
• Eric Monnet, “La politique de la Banque de France au sortir des Trente Glorieuses: un tournant monétariste?,” 147. ______
Revue Français de Science Politique (2015/2) https://www.cairn.info/revue-francaise-de-science-politique-2015-2.htm
• Florence Faucher and Colin Hay, “Les rituels de vote en France et au Royaume-Uni,” 213.
• Pierre-Louis Mayaux, “La production de l’acceptabilité sociale: Privatisation des services d’eau et normes sociales d’accès en Amérique latine,” 237.
• Hélène Dufournet, “Le piège rhétorique: une contrainte par la morale? Réflexions sur l’emprise des ‘arguments moraux’ dans les processus d’action publique,” 261.
• Ève Seguin, “Pourquoi les exoplanètes sont-elles politiques? Pragmatisme et politicité des sciences dans l‘oeuvre de Bruno Latour,” 279. ______
Revue Internationale et Stratégique (2015/2) https://www.cairn.info/revue-internationale-et-strategique-2015-2.htm
Autre Regard
• Interview with Yassine Belattar by Pascal Boniface and Marc Verzeroli, “Le rire, arme de l’engagement,” 7.
Éclairages
• Éric Mottet, “Géopolitique du Laos: Des ressources naturelles au service d’une intégration régionale,” 16.
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• Jean-Jacques Kourliandsky, “L’érosion d’une influence: le cas des relations entre l’Espagne et l’Amérique latine,” 26.
• Olga Alexeeva, Frédéric Lasserre, and Pierre-Louis Têtu, “Vers l’affirmation d’une stratégie chinoise agressive en Arctique?,” 38.
Dossier: Devenirs Humanitaires
• Michel Maietta and Stéphanie Stern, “L’humanitaire du XXIe siècle,” 49.
• Michel Maietta, “Origine et évolution des ONG dans le système humanitaire international,” 53.
• Interview with Fabrice Weissman by Stéphanie Stern and Marc Verzeroli, “État des lieux du secteur humanitaire,” 61.
• Amar Thioune, “Quels rôles pour les ONG du Sud?,” 73.
• Jean-Marie Stratigos, “Anthropologie et aide humanitaire, une relation à (re)définer,” 83.
• Mike Penrose, “Futur proche et lointain de la réponse humanitaire,” 93.
• Stéphanie Stern, “Le secteur privé représente-t-il une menace pour le secteur humanitaire?,” 103.
• Boris Martin, “BRAC: un modèle d’entreprise sociale venu du Sud,” 113.
• Jean-Bernard Véron, “Les humanitaires face aux enjeux du XXIe siècle,” 121.
• Jean-François Mattéi, “Renouveler la pensée humanitaire par une approche éthique,” 129.
• Kristin Bergtora Sandvik and Maria Gabrielsen Jumbert, “Les drones humanitaires,” 139.
• Djamel Misraoui, “Islam et humanitaire,” 147.
• Interview with Jean-Baptiste Jeangène Vilmer by Stéphanie Stern and Marc Verzeroli, “La difficile définition du cadre de l’intervention humanitaire,” 157.
• Françoise Sivignon, “Repenser l’implication des usagers l’implication dans les programmes de santé des ONG internationales,” 167. ______
The Royal United Services Institute Journal, Vol. 160, No. 2 (April 2015) https://www.rusi.org/publications/journal/issue:I5540EA8CF329F/ 45 | Page
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• Michael Fallon, Ed Miliband, and Nick Clegg, “UK General Election: Defense Perspectives.”
• Martin N. Murphy, “Triple Barrels: The Economic, Financial and Maritime Warfare Nexus in the Twenty-First Century.”
• Euan Graham, “Maritime Security and Threats to Energy Transportation in Southeast Asia.”
• Alessio Patalano, “Beyond the Gunboats: Rethinking Naval Diplomacy and Humanitarian Assistance Disaster Relief in East Asia.”
• Peter Roberts, “The Future of Amphibious Forces.”
• Nicola Contessi, “Traditional Security in Eurasia: The Caspian Caught between Militarisation and Diplomacy.”
• John Louth and Justin Bronk, “Science, Technology and the Generation of the Military Instrument.”
• Tamir Libel and Emily Boulter, “Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in the Israel Defense Forces: A Precursor to a Military Robotic Revolution?”
• Heather Campbell, “Lessons to be Learnt? The Third Anglo-Afghan War.”
• Captain Garth Neville Walford VC (deceased April 1915) and Commander Alexander Spearman, RN (deceased June 1915), “Great War Stories.”
• Andrew Glazzard, “Adam Curtis’s Bitter Lake: Nightmares of Modernity.”
The Royal United Services Institute Journal, Vol. 160, No. 3 (June 2015) https://www.rusi.org/publications/journal/issue:I5582DDAC6178A/
• Patrick Porter, “Why Distance Matters: Putting the ‘Geo’ Back into Politics.”
• Alessio Patalano, “Nightmare Nostrum? Not Quite: Lessons from the Italian Navy in the Mediterranean Crisis.”
• John Baron, “Time to Recognise the Danger, Or: Whatever Happened to the China- Watchers?”
• Richard D. Hooker, Jr., “Operation Baltic Fortress, 2016: NATO Defends the Baltic States.”
• Tom Parker, “It’s a Trap: Provoking an Overreaction is Terrorism 101.” 46 | Page
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• Sophie Lefeez, “Versatility and Technology: A Case Study of the Milan and Javelin.”
• John Louth, “Logistics as Force Enabler: The Future Operational Imperative.”
• Beatrice Heuser, “Waterloo: A Strange Defeat.”
• Jasper Heinzen, “The Forgotten Victory: Germans and the Battle of Waterloo, 1815- 2015.”
• Graciela Iglesias Rogers, “Waterloo, the Napoleonic Wars and the Recasting of the Global Iberian World.”
• Emma De Angelis, “Painting Images of the Past out of the Embers of War.” ______
Scandinavian Economic History Review, Vol. 63, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/sehr20/63/2#.VaZryygujGo
• Joerg Baten and Stefan Priwitzer, “Social and intertemporal differences of basic numeracy in Pannonia (first century BCE to third century BCE),” 110.
• Johan Söderberg, “Oceanic thirst? Food consumption in mediaeval Sweden,” 135.
• Dan Johansson, Mikael Stenkula, and Gunnar Du Rietz, “Capital income taxation of Swedish households, 1862-2010,” 154.
• Karl Stern, “Implementation of non-tariff measures in Estonia in the 1930s,” 178. ______
Scandinavian Journal of History, Vol. 40, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/shis20/40/3#.VaZtWCgujGo
• Seija Jalagin, Inger Marie Okkenhaug, and Maria Småberg, “Introduction: Nordic missions, gender and humanitarian practices: from evangelizing to development,” 285.
• Heini Hakosalo, “Modest witness to modernization: Finland meets Ovamboland in mission doctor Selma Rainio’s family letters, 1921-1932,” 298.
• Karina Hestad Skeie, “Gender, Mission and Work: The complex relationship between formal rights and missionary agency in the Norwegian Lutheran China Mission Association,” 332.
• Thomas G. Oey, “Towards translocal development: Swedish-American Baptist Minnie Johnson Hanson and her context of the mission to the Kachins of Burma (Myanmar),” 357. 47 | Page
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• Malin Gregersen, “Protecting people in protected places: Gender, perceptions of protection, and the Scandinavian women of YWCA Changsha, China, 1917-1927,” 382.
• Maria Småberg, “On mission in the cosmopolitan world: Ethics of care in the Armenian refugee crisis, 1929-1947,” 405.
• Inger Marie Okkenhaug, “Religion, relief and humanitarian work among Armenian women refugees in Mandatory Syria, 1927-1934,” 432.
• Seija Jalagin, “A Nordic Hebrew Christian centre in Jerusalem? Relief work, education and Nordic neutrality in Palestine, 1943-1946,” 455. ______
Security Studies, Vol. 24, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fsst20/24/2#.VaaEECgujGo
Process Tracing: A Symposium
• Colin Elman and John M. Owen, “Symposium on Process Tracing: Note to Readers,” 199.
• James Mahoney, “Process Tracing and Historical Explanation,” 200.
• Nina Tannenwald, “Process Tracing and Security Studies,” 219.
• Andrew Bennett, “Using Process Tracing to Improve Policy Making: The (Negative) Case of the 2003 Intervention in Iraq,” 228.
• David Waldner, “Process Tracing and Qualitative Causal Inference,” 239.
Original Articles
• Stefano Recchia, “Soldiers, Civilians, and Multilateral Humanitarian Intervention,” 251.
• Daniel Altman, “The Strategist’s Curse: A Theory of False Optimism as a Cause of War,” 284.
• Erik Gartzke and Jon R. Lindsay, “Weaving Tangled Webs: Offense, Defense, and Deception in Cyberspace,” 316.
• Alex Braithwaite, “Transnational Terrorism as an Unintended Consequence of a Military Footprint,” 349.
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Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 96, Issue 2 (June 2015) 48 | Page
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http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ssqu.2015.96.issue-2/issuetoc
Ethos, Polls, and Modern Living
• Susan Saegert, Andrew Greer, Emily P. Thaden, and Donald L. Anthony, “Longing for a Better American Dream: Homeowners in Trouble Evalaute Shared Equity Alternatives,” 297.
• Justin T. Denney, Tim Wadsworth, Richard G. Rogers, and Fred C. Pampel, “Suicide in the City: Do Characteristics of Place Really Influence Risk?,” 313.
• Rebecca Wickes, Renee Zahnow, Melanie Taylor, and Alex R. Piquero, “Neighborhood Structure, Social Capital, and Community Resilience: Longitudinal Evidence From the 2011 Brisbane Flood Disaster,” 330.
• Verena Dill, Uwe Jirjahn, and Georgi Tsertsvadze, “Residential Segregation and Immigrants’ Satisfaction with the Neighborhood in Germany,” 354.
Sports and Society
• James N. Druckman, Mauro Gilli, Samara Klar, and Joshua Robison, “Measuring Drug and Alcohol Use Among College Student-Athletes,” 369.
• Charles T. Clotfelter, “Die-Hard Fans and the Ivory Tower’s Ties that Bind,” 381.
Research on Movements
• Aaron M. McCright and Riley E. Dunlap, “Comparing Two Measures of Social Movement Identity: The Environmental Movement as an Example,” 400.
• Francesca Spina, “Environmental Justice and Patterns of State Inspections,” 417. Politics
• Daniel Stockemer and Rodrigo Praino, “Blinded by Beauty? Physical Attractiveness and Candidate Selection in the U.S. House of Representatives,” 430.
• Liza G. Steele, “Income Inequality, Equal Opportunity, and Attitudes about Redistribution,” 444.
• Alessandro Nai, “The Maze and the Mirror: Voting Correctly in Direct Democracy,” 465.
• Emily K. Vraga, “How Party Affiliation Conditions the Experience of Dissonance and Explains Polarization and Selective Exposure,” 487.
• Richard W. Waterman, John Bretting, and Joseph Stewart, “The Politics of U.S. Ambassadorial Appointments: From the Court of St. James to Burkina Faso,” 503. 49 | Page
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• Jason Enia and Patrick James, “Regime Type, Peace, and Reciprocal Effects,” 523.
Racial & Ethnic Politics in the U.S.
• Alex Street, Chris Zepeda-Millán, and Michael Jones-Correa, “Mass Deportations and the Future of Latino Partisanship,” 540.
• John Szmer, Robert K. Christensen, and Erin B. Kaheny, “Gender, Race, and Dissensus on State Supreme Courts,” 553.
• Anne R. Williamson and Michael J. Scicchitano, “Minority Representation and Political Efficacy in Public Meetings,” 576.
• Seth C. McKee and Melanie J. Springer, “A Tale of ‘Two Souths’: White Voting Behavior in Contemporary Southern Elections,” 588.
Measurement Issues and Societal Challenges
• Reuben Allen, “Alternative Methods to Enumerate Data on Race in Puerto Rico,” 608.
• Didier Ruedin, “Increasing Validity by Recombining Existing Indices: MIPEX as a Measure of Citizenship Models,” 629.
• Thomas Craemer, “Estimating Slavery Reparations: Present Value Comparisons of Historical Multigenerational Repartions Policies,” 639.
• Seo-Young Cho, “Measuring Anti-Trafficking Policy – Integrating Text and Statistical Analyses,” 656. ______
South African Historical Journal, Vol. 67, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rshj20/67/1#.VaaroSgujGo
• Scott Everett Couper, “’Where Men Fail, Women Take Over’: Inanda Seminary’s Rescue by its Own,” 1.
• Jo-Ansie van Wyk and Anna-Mart van Wyk, “From the Nuclear Laager to the Non- Proliferation Club: South Africa and the NPT,” 32.
• Chari Blignaut, “’Die hand aan die wieg regeer die land [The hand that rocks the cradle rules the land]’: Exploring the Agency and Identity of Women in the Ossewa-Brandwag, 1939-1954,” 47.
• Brett M. Bennett, “Margaret Levyns and the Decline of Ecological Liberalism in the Southwest Cape, 1890-1975,” 64. 50 | Page
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• Shula Marks, “Response to Anne Digby, ‘Debating the Gluckman Commission: A Final Rejoinder’,” 85.
• Anne Digby, “Debating the Gluckman Commission: A Final Rejoinder,” 91.
Obituary
• Catherine Burns, “Jeff Guy: A Life – Historian, Teacher, Passionate Citizen and Gifted Writer,” 106. ______
South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, Vol. 38, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/csas20/38/2#.VaavaCgujGo
• Bob van der Linden, “Pre-Twentieth-Century Sikh Sacred Music: The Mughals, Courtly Patronage and Canonisation,” 141.
• Oliver Godsmark, “Citizenship, Reservations and the Regional Alternative in the All- India Services, ca. 1928-1950,” 156.
• Ravi Arvind Palat, “Empire, Food and the Diaspora: Indian Restaurants in Britain,” 171.
• Sudheesh Ramapurath Chemmencheri, “Subaltern Struggles and the Global Media in Koodankulam and Kashmir,” 187.
• John Gray, “Representations of Unity and Diversity of Women in Panchayat and Post- Panchayat Nepal,” 200.
Special Section: Beyond the Metropolis – Regional Globalisation and Town Development in India. Guest Editor: Timothy J. Scrase
• Timothy J. Scrase, Mario Rutten, Ruchira Ganguly-Scrase, and Trent Brown, “Beyond the Metropolis – Regional Globalisation and Town Development in India: An Introduction,” 216.
• Sanderien Verstappen and Mario Rutten, “A Global Town in Central Gujarat, India: Rural-Urban Connections and International Migration,” 230.
• Ruchira Ganguly-Scrase and Timothy J. Scrase, “Darjeeling Re-Made: The Cultural Politics of Charm and Heritage,” 246.
• Trent Brown, “Youth Mobilities and Rural-Urban Tensions in Darjeeling, India,” 263.
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• Yengkhom Jilangamba, “Beyond the Ethno-Territorial Binary: Evidencing the Hill and Valley Peoples in Manipur,” 276.
• Sanjay Barbora, “Uneasy Homecomings: Political Entanglements in Contemporary Assam,” 290.
• Duncan McDuie-Ra, “’Is India Racist?’: Murder, Migration, and Mary Kom,” 304.
• Dolly Kikon, “Fermenting Modernity: Putting Akhuni on the Nation’s Table in India,” 320.
• Ian Copland, “Donald Anthony Low (1927-2015),” 336.
• Thomas Weber, “Narayan Desai (1924-2015),” 339. ______
Strategic Analysis, Vol. 39, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsan20/39/4#.VabH9SgujGo
• Satish Chandra and Rahul Bhonsle, “National Security: Concept, Measurement and Management,” 337.
• Rajeev Ranjan Chaturvedy, “South China Sea: India’s Maritime Gateway to the Pacific,” 360.
• Reshmi Kazi, “Nuclear Security in Asia: Problems and Challenges,” 378.
• Rohit Karki and Lekhnath Paudel, “Challenges to the Revision of the Nepal-India 1950 Peace and Friendship Treaty,” 402.
Commentary
• Keshab Chandra Ratha and Sushanta Kumar Mahapatra, “Interpreting China’s Third Plenum,” 417.
• Jan Kallberg, “Bringing Fear to the Perpetrators: Humanitarian Cyber Operations as Evidence Gathering and Deterrence,” 423.
• Samuel Oyewole, “Boko Haram: Insurgency and the War against Terrorism in the Lake Chad Region,” 428.
• Aslam Khan, “Boko Haram: The Multifaceted Story of Terror and Cultism,” 433.
Policy
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• The “Maritime Security in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR)” Working Group of the Strategic Studies Network (SSN), “Harnessing Opportunities and Overcoming Challenges: Maritime Security in the Indian Ocean Region,” 438.
Review Essay
• Udai Bhanu Singh, “Role of Historical Legacy in India’s Relations with Territories to its East,” 453.
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Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 38, Issue 5 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/38/5#.VabLiigujGo
• R. Kim Cragin, “Semi-Proxy Wars and U.S. Counterterrorism Strategy,” 311.
• Marion Van San, “Striving in the Way of God: Justifying Jihad by Young Belgian and Dutch Muslims,” 328.
• Marco Nilsson, “Foreign Fighters and the Radicalization of Local Jihad: Interview Evidence from Swedish Jihadists,” 343.
• Veronica Strandh and Niklas Eklund, “Swedish Counterterrorism Policy: An Intersection Between Prevention and Mitigation?,” 359.
• Liana Eustacia Reyes and Shlomi Dinar, “The Convergence of Terrorism and Transnational Crime in Central Asia,” 380.
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 38, Issue 6 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/38/6#.VabNFigujGo
• Joel A. Capellan, “Lone Wolf Terrorist or Deranged Shooter? A Study of Ideological Active Shooter Events in the United States, 1970-2014,” 395.
• Matteo Vergani and Sean Collins, “Radical Criminals in the Grey Area: A Comparative Study of Mexican Religious Drug Cartels and Australian Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs,” 414.
• Jeff Gruenewald, Kayla Allison-Gruenewald, Brent R. Klein, “Assessing the Attractiveness and Vulnerability of Eco-Terrorism Targets: A Situational Crime Prevention Approach,” 433.
• Martin Jander, “German Leftist Terrorism and Israel: Ethno-Nationalist, Religious- Fundamentalist, or Social-Revolutionary?,” 456.
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• Diego Muro, “Healing through Action? The Political Mobilization of Victims of Al Qaeda-Inspired Violence in Spain and the United Kingdom,” 478.
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 38, Issue 7 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/38/7#.VabOrygujGo
• Anita Peresin and Alberto Cervone, “The Western Muhajirat of ISIS,” 495.
• Natalie Delia Deckard, Atta Barkindo, and David Jacobson, “Religiosity and Rebellion in Nigeria: Considering Boko Haram in the Radical Tradition,” 510.
• Matthew Testerman, “Removing the Crutch: External Support and the Dynamics of Armed Conflict,” 529.
• Kenneth Pennington and Orla Lynch, “Counterterrorism, Community Policing and the Flags Protests: An Examination of Police Perceptions of Northern Ireland’s Operation Dulcet,” 543.
• Haroro J. Ingram, “An Analysis of the Taliban in Khurasan’s Azan (Issues 1-5),” 560.
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 38, Issue 8 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/38/8#.VabQIigujGo
• Daniel Byman, “The Homecomings: What Happens When Arab Foreign Fighters in Iraq and Syria Return?,” 581.
• Timothy Holman, “Belgian and French Foreign Fighters in Iraq 2003-2005: A Comparative Case Study,” 603.
• Shawn Teresa Flanigan and Cheryl O’Brien, “Service-Seeking Behavior, Perceptions of Armed Actors, and Preferences Regarding Governance: Evidence from the Palestinian Territories,” 622.
• Brandon M. Boylan, “Sponsoring Violence: A Typology of Constituent Support for Terrorist Organizations,” 652.
• Alexander Knorr, “Economic Factors for Piracy: The Effect of Commodity Price Shocks,” 671.
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Studies in Political Economy: A Socialist Review, Vol. 95 (2015) http://spe.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/spe/issue/view/1616/showToc
• Meg Luxton, “Reclaiming Marxist Feminism: A Response.”
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• Sharon R. Roseman, Pauline Gardiner Barber, and Barbara Neis, “Towards a Feminist Political Economy Framework for Analyzing Employment-Related Geographical Mobility.”
Forum: Regulating Care
• Susan Braedley and Rosemary Warskett, “Regulating Care: An Introduction.”
• Albert Banerjee and Pat Armstrong, “Centring Care: Explaining Regulatory Tensions in Residential Care for Older Persons.”
• Tamara Daly, “Dancing the Two-Step in Ontario’s Long-Term Care Sector: Deterrence Regulation=Consolidation.”
• Susan Braedley and Gillian Martel, “Dreaming of Home: Long-Term Residential Care and (In)Equities by Design.”
• Martha MacDonald, “Regulating Individual Charges for Long-Term Residential Care in Canada.”
• Laura O’Neill, “Regulating Hospital Social Workers and Nurses: Propping Up an ‘Efficient’ Lean Health Care System.”
• Donna Baines and Tamara Daly, “Resisting Regulatory Rigidities: Lessons from Front- Line Care Work.” ______
Terrorism and Political Violence, Vol. 27, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ftpv20/27/3#.VabUXSgujGo
Foreign Fighters Research
• Cerwyn Moore, “Introductory Comments to Foreign Fighters Research: Special Mini- Series,” 393.
• Cerwyn Moore, “Foreign Bodies: Transnational Activism, the Insurgency in the North Caucasus and ‘Beyond’,” 395.
• Jasper L. de Bie, Christianne J. de Poot, and Joanne P. van der Leun, “Shifting Modus Operandi of Jihadist Foreign Fighters From the Netherlands Between 2000 and 2013: A Crime Script Analysis,” 416.
• Richard Bach Jensen, “Anarchist Terrorism and Global Diasporas, 1878-1914,” 441.
• David Malet, “Foreign Fighter Mobilization and Persistence in a Global Context,” 454.
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Original Articles
• Elena Pokalova, “Legislative Responses to Terrorism: What Drives States to Adopt New Counterterrorism Legislation?,” 474.
• Oliver J. Walther and Dimitris Christopoulos, “Islamic Terrorism and the Malian Revolution,” 497.
• Daniel Baracskay, “The Evolutionary Path of Hamas: Examining the Role of Political Pragmatism in State Building and Activism,” 520.
• Muhammad Sohail Anwar Malik, Michael Sandholzer, M. Zubair Khan, and Sajjad Akbar, “Identification of Risk Factors Generating Terrorism in Pakistan,” 537.
• Håvard Mokleiv Nygård and Michael Weintraub, “Bargaining Between Rebel Groups and the Outside Option of Violence,” 557.
Review Essay
• Ryan Shaffer, “The Terrorism, Ideology, and Transformations of Al-Qaeda,” 581. ______
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 36, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/36/3#.VabYSCgujGo
Special Issue: Food Sovereignty: convergence and contradictions, condition and challenges
• Alberto Alonso-Fradejas, Saturnino M. Borras, Jr., Todd Holmes, Eric Holt-Giménez, and Martha Jane Robbins, “Food sovereignty: convergence and contradictions, conditions and challenges,” 431.
• Martha Jane Robbins, “Exploring the ‘localisation’ dimension of food sovereignty,” 449.
• Christopher M. Bacon, “Food sovereignty, food security and fair trade: the case of an influential Nicaraguan smallholder cooperative,” 469.
• Tanya M. Kerssen, “Food sovereignty and the quinoa boom: challenges to sustainable re-peasantisation in the southern Altiplano of Bolivia,” 489.
• Giuliano Martiniello, “Food sovereignty as praxis: rethinking the food question in Uganda,” 508.
• Wendy Godek, “Challenges for food sovereignty policy making: the case of Nicaragua’s Law 693,” 526.
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• Louis Thiemann, “Operationalising food sovereignty through an investment lens: how agro-ecology is putting ‘big push theory’ back on the table,” 544.
• A. Haroon Akram-Lodhi, “Accelerating towards food sovereignty,” 563.
• Clara Mi Young Park, Ben White, and Julia, “We are not all the same: taking gender seriously in food sovereignty discourse,” 584.
• Saturnino M. Borras, Jr., Jennifer C. Franco, and Sofia Monsalve Suárez, “Land and food sovereignty,” 600.
• Zoe W. Brent, Christina M. Schiavoni, and Alberto Alonso-Fradejas, “Contextualising food sovereignty: the politics of convergence among movements in the USA,” 618.
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 36, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/36/4#.VabbfygujGo
• Peter Marcus Kristensen, “How can emerging powers speak? On theorists, native informants and quasi-officials in International Relations discourse,” 637.
• Sydney Calkin, “Post-Feminist Spectatorship and the Girl Effect: ‘Go ahead, really imagine her’,” 654.
• Rajesh Venugopal, “Democracy, development and the executive presidency in Sri Lanka,” 670.
• Naser Ghobadzdeh and Shahram Akbarzadeh, “Sectarianism and the prevalence of ‘othering’ in Islamic thought,” 691.
• Stacy Banwell, “Globalisation masculinities, empire building and forced prostitution: a critical analysis of the gendered impact of the neoliberal economic agenda in post- invasion/occupation Iraq,” 705.
Uganda Focus
• Jon Harald Sande Lie, “Developmentality: indirect governance in the World Bank- Uganda partnership,” 723.
• Sophie King, “Political capabilities for democratisation in Uganda: good governance or popular organisation building?,” 741.
Turkey Focus
• Meltem Yilmaz Sener, “How the World Bank manages social risks: implementation of the Social Risk Mitigation Project in Turkey,” 758.
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• Hakki Tas, “Turkey – from tutelary to delegative democracy,” 776.
Tribute
• Seifudein Adem, “Ali A. Mazrui: a great man, a great scholar,” 792.
Viewpoint
• Marcin Wojciech Solarz and Malgorzata Wojtaszczyk, “Population Pressures and the North-South Divide between the first century and 2100,” 802.
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 36, Issue 5 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/36/5#.Vabe_igujGo
• Caroline Hughes, Joakim Öjendal and Isabell Schierenbeck, “The struggle versus the song – the local turn in peacebuilding: an introduction,” 817.
• Hanna Leonardsson and Gustav Rudd, “The ‘local turn’ in peacebuilding: a literature review of effective and emancipatory local peacebuilding,” 825.
• Roger Mac Ginty, “Where is the local? Critical localism and peacebuilding,” 840.
• Thania Paffenholz, “Unpacking the local turn in peacebuilding: a critical assessment towards an agenda for future research,” 857.
• Stefanie Kappler, “The dynamic local: delocalisation and (re-)localisation in the search for peacebuilding identity,” 875.
• Sandra Pogodda and Oliver P. Richmond, “Palestinian unity and everyday state formation: subaltern ‘ungovernmentality’ versus elite interests,” 890.
• Caroline Hughes, “Poor people’s politics in East Timor,” 908.
• Joakim Öjendal and Sivhouch Ou, “The ‘local turn’ saving liberal peacebuilding? Unpacking virtual peace in Cambodia,” 929.
• Malin Hasselskog and Isabell Schierenbeck, “National policy in local practice: the case of Rwanda,” 950.
• Anna K. Jarstad and Kristine Höglund, “Local violence and politics in KwaZulu-Natal: perceptions of agency in a post-conflict society,” 967.
• Christian Arandel, Derick W. Brinkerhoff, and Marissa M. Bell, “Reducing fragility through strengthening local governance in Guinea,” 985.
• Goran Hyden, “Rethinking justice and institutions in African peacebuilding,” 1007. 58 | Page
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• Isabell Schierenbeck, “Beyond the local turn divide: lessons learnt, relearnt and unlearnt,” 1023.
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 36, Issue 6 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/36/6#.VadhsigujGo
• Louiza Odysseos and Anna Selmeczi, “The power of human rights/the human rights of power: an introduction,” 1033.
Subjects and struggles
• Louiza Odysseos, “The question concerning human rights and human rightlessness: disposability and struggle in the Bhopal gas disaster,” 1041.
• Lara Montesinos Coleman, “Struggles, over rights: humanism, ethical dispossession and resistance,” 1060.
• Anna Selmeczi, “Who is the subject of neoliberal rights? Governmentality, subjectification and the letter of the law,” 1076.
• Joe Hoover, “The human right to housing and community empowerment: home occupation, eviction defense and community land trusts,” 1092.
• Judith Renner, “Producing the subjects of reconciliation: the making of Sierra Leoneans as victims and perpetrators of past human rights violations,” 1110.
Rights, states, borders
• Jarmila Rajas, “Disciplining the human rights of immigrants: market veridiction and the echoes of eugenics in contemporary EU immigration policies,” 1129.
• Raffaela Puggioni, “Border politics, right to life and acts of dissensus: voices from the Lampedusa borderland,” 1145.
• Arladna Estévez, “The Endriago subject and the dislocation of state attribution in human rights discourse: the case of Mexican asylum claims in Canada,” 1160.
Power, privilege and change
• Jane K. Cowan and Julie Billaud, “Between learning and schooling: the politics of human rights monitoring at the Universal Periodic Review,” 1175.
• Daniel Tagliarina, “Power, privilege and rights: how the powerful and powerless create a vernacular of rights,” 1191.
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• Shadi Mokhtari, “Human rights and power amid protest and change in the Arab world,” 1207.
Politicisation and depoliticisation
• Serif Onur Bahçecik, “The power effects of human rights reforms in Turkey: enhanced surveillance and depolitisation,” 1222.
• Eva Hilberg, “Promoting health or securing the market? The right to health and intellectual property between radical contestation and accommodation,” 1237.
• Mathias Großklaus, “Appropriation and the dualism of human rights: understanding the contradictory impact of gender norms in Nigeria,” 1253.
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Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 26, Issue 2 (June 2015) http://tcbh.oxfordjournals.org/content/26/2.toc
• Max Jones, “’National Hero and Very Queer Fish’: Empire, Sexuality and the British Remembrance of General Gordon, 1918-72,” 175.
• Lise Butler, “Michael Young, the Institute of Community Studies, and the Politics of Kinship,” 203.
• Jack Saunders, “The Untraditional Worker: Class Re-Formation in Britain 1945-65,” 225.
• Gordon Pentland, “Edward Heath, the Declaration of Perth and the Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party, 1966-70,” 249.
• Gareth Millward, “Social Security Policy and the Early Disability Movement – Expertise, Disability, and the Government, 1965-77,” 274.
• Neil Armstrong, “Divorce and the English Clergy c. 1970-1990,” 298.
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The Washington Quarterly, Vol. 38, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwaq20/38/1#.VadrwygujGo
Provocations
• Mathew Burrows, “The Emerging Global Middle Class – So What?,” 7.
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• George Perkovich and Toby Dalton, “Modi’s Strategic Choice: How to Respond to Terrorism from Pakistan,” 23.
• Robert Einhorn, “Ukraine, Security Assurances, and Nonproliferation,” 47.
• Vipin Narang, “Nuclear Strategies of Emerging Nuclear Powers: North Korea and Iran,” 73.
• Yoel Guzansky, “The Saudi Nuclear Genie is Out,” 93.
• Stephen Watts and Sean Mann, “Determining U.S. Commitments in Afghanistan,” 107.
RAD (Reassurance, Assurance, and Deterrence) in Asia
• Mira Rapp Hooper, “Uncharted Waters: Extended Deterrence and Maritime Disputes,” 127.
• David Santoro and John K. Warden, “Assuring Japan and South Korea in the Second Nuclear Age,” 147.
• Jeffrey Hornung, “Japan’s Pushback of China,” 167.
• Eric Heginbotham and Jacob L. Heim, “Deterring without Dominance: Discouraging Chinese Adventurism under Austerity,” 185.
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The William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 72, No. 2 (April 2015) http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5309/willmaryquar.72.issue-2
• Alison Games, “Cohabitation, Suriname-Style: English Inhabitants in Dutch Suriname after 1667,” 195.
• Nicholas Radburn, “Guinea Factors, Slaves Sales, and the Profits of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in Late Eighteenth-Century Jamaica: The Case of John Tailyour,” 243.
• Zachary Dorner, “’No one here knows half so much of this matter as yourself’: The Deployment of Expertise in Silvester Gardiner’s Surgical, Druggist, and Land Speculation Networks, 1734-83,” 287.
• Joseph Hall, “Glimpses of Roanoke, Visions of New Mexico, and Dreams of Empire in the Mixed-Up Memories of Gerónimo de la Cruz,” 323.
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Women’s History Review, Vol. 24, Issue 4 (2015) 61 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwhr20/24/4#.VadxEygujGo
• Barbara Caine, “Introduction: Letters between Mothers and Daughters,” 483.
• Clare Monagle, “Poor Maternity: Clare of Assisi’s letter to Agnes of Prague,” 490.
• James Daybell, “Social Negotiations in Correspondence between Mothers and Daughters in Tudor and Early Stuart England,” 502.
• Carolyn James, “What’s Love Got to Do with It? Dynastic Politics and Motherhood in the Letters of Eleonora of Aragon and her Daughters,” 528.
• Susan Broomhall, “’My daughter, my dear’: the correspondence of Catherine de Médicis and Elisabeth de Valois,” 548.
• Diana G. Barnes, “Tenderness, Tittle-tattle and Truth in Mother-Daughter Letters: Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Mary Wortley Montagu Stuart, Countess of Bute, and Lady Louisa Stuart,” 570.
• Pauline Nestor, “’A conscientious and well-informed Victorian mother’: Elizabeth Gaskell’s letters to her daughters,” 591.
• Barbara Caine, “From ‘Dearest Mama’ to ‘Dear Mother’: changing styles in early twentieth-century letters from daughters to mothers,” 603.
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World Policy Journal, 32:2 (June 2015) http://wpj.sagepub.com/content/32/2.toc
Editor’s Note
• The Editors, “Climate’s Cliff,” 1.
Upfront
• Admire Nyamwanza, Ali Kerem Kayhan, Maharaj K. Pandit, and Afroza Haque, Christopher Riedy, Jennifer Doherty-Bigara, Ibon Galarraga, and Erica Dingman, “The Big Question: Climate’s Biggest Losers: Who has the most to lose from climate change in your country?,” 3.
• Lester R. Brown, “Fossil to Solar & Wind,” 9.
• “Anatomy: Unveiling Espionage: World’s Driest Nations,” 14.
• “Map Room: Arctic Militarization,” 16. 62 | Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015
Climate’s Cliff
• Subhankar Banerjee, “In the Warming Arctic Seas,” 18.
• Ted Andersen, “Nicaragua’s Big Dig,” 28.
• Qiu Xiaolong, “China’s Smoke-Smothered Sky,” 40.
• David Andelman and Guy Deutscher, “Kicking the Oil Addiction: Facts and Fiction,” 53.
Conversation
• “A Light Bulb Goes Off: A Conversation with Hiroshi Amano,” 63.
Poet-in-Residence
• Eliza Griswold, “Ovid on Climate Change,” 69.
Portfolio
• Jeremy Suyker, “Iran’s House of Strength,” 70.
Features
• Ravi Krishnani, “Indian Women: No Friends Online,” 85.
• Jas Singh, “India’s Right Turn,” 93.
• Aliza Goldberg, “Fear in Istanbul, Relief in Prague,” 105.
• Thierry Vircoulon, “Cameroon: Africa’s Pivot,” 113.
Coda
• David A. Andelman, “Coda: Feeding the World,” 120.
Copyright © 2015 The Authors This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License.
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