h-diplo journal watch, i-z: first quarter 2009 · 3/14/2009 · coan, travis g. and ... arthur s....
TRANSCRIPT
Compiled by Scott Rausch, North Seattle Community College
Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 23, No. 6 (December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=0268-4527&volume=23&issue=6
Dylan, Huw. “Britain and the Missile Gap: British Estimates on the Soviet BallisticMissile Threat, 1957–61.” 777-806.
Tamkin, Nicholas. “Diplomatic Sigint and the British Official Mind during the SecondWorld War: Soviet claims on Turkey, 1940–45.” 749-766
Cooper, James. “The Reagan Years: The Great Communicator as Diarist. Intelligence andNational Security.” 892-901
Baxter, Christopher. “Forgeries and Spies: The Foreign Office and the ‘Cicero’ Case.”807-826
Martin, Alex and Peter Wilson. “The Value of Non-Governmental Intelligence: Wideningthe Field.” 767-776.
Johnson, Loch K. and Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones. Tim Weiner's Legacy of Ashes: The History ofthe CIA. 878-891.
Hughes, R. Gerald. “Of Revelatory Histories and Hatchet Jobs: Propaganda and Methodin Intelligence History.” 842-877.
[jw]
h-diploJOURNAL WATCH, I to ZH-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review
www.h-net.org/~diplo/journals/First Quarter 200914 March 2009
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International Interactions: Empirical and Theoretical Research in InternationalRelations, Vol. 34, No. 3 (July-September 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g905687671~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Horowitz, Shale and Sunwoong Kim. “Anti-Americanism in Electoral Politics: Insightsfrom South Korea's 2002 Presidential Election.” 258-281
Boehmer, Charles and Timothy Nordstrom. “Intergovernmental OrganizationMemberships: Examining Political Community and the Attributes of InternationalOrganizations.” 282-309
Thies, Cameron G. “The Construction of a Latin American Interstate Culture of Rivalry.International Interactions. 34(3):231-257.
International Interactions: Empirical and Theoretical Research in InternationalRelations, Vol. 34, No. 4 (October-December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g906419608~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Tammen, Ronald L. “The Organski Legacy: A Fifty-Year Research Program.” 314-332
Coan, Travis G. and Tadeusz Kugler. “The Politics of Foreign Direct Investment: AnInteractive Framework.” 402-422.
Abdollahian, Mark and Kyungkook Kang. “In Search of Structure: The NonlinearDynamics of Power Transitions.” 333-357
Alsharabati, Carole and Jacek Kugler. “War Initiation in a Changing World.” 358-381
Arbetman-Rabinowitz, Marina and Kristin Johnson. “Power Distribution and Oil in theSudan: Will the Comprehensive Peace Agreement Turn the Oil Curse into a Blessing?”382-401
Feng, Yi, Jacek Kugler, Siddharth Swaminathan and Paul J. Zak. “Path to Prosperity: TheDynamics of Freedom and Economic Development.” 423-441.
International Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 6, No. 1 (2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=ASI&volumeId=6&seriesId=0&issueId=01
“Spoiled Guests Or Dedicated Patriots? The Chinese In North Vietnam, 1954–1978,Xiaorong Han, pp 1-36
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“Ivory In Early Modern Ceylon: A Case Study In What Documents Don’t Reveal,” MarthaChaiklin, pp 37-63
“Currency In Early Choseon Korea: Issuance, Principles And Controversies,” HidenoriSukawa, pp 65-85
“New Studies On Statecraft In Mid- And Late-Qing China: Qing Intellectuals And TheirDebates On Economic Policies,” Mio Kishimoto, pp 87-102
“Foundations Of Literacy In Premodern China: A New Study Of Book Culture In TheQing And Republican Periods,” Yasushi Oki, pp 103-111
The International Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 13, No. 1 (2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g908069319~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Redondo, Elvira Domínguez. “The Millennium Development Goals and the human rightsbased approach: reflecting on structural chasms with the United Nations system.” 29-43
Okeke, Jide Martyns. “Humanitarianism and human security in a post-9/11 world.” 110-120
Castellino, Joshua. “The MDGs and international human rights law: a view from theperspective of minorities and vulnerable groups.” 10-28
Doyle, Cathal. “Indigenous peoples and the Millennium Development Goals – ‘sacrificiallambs’ or equal beneficiaries?” 44-71
Carmona, Magdalena Sepúlveda. “The obligations of ‘international assistance andcooperation’ under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.A possible entry point to a human rights based approach to Millennium DevelopmentGoal 8.” 86-109
Schmidt-Traub, Guido. “The Millennium Development Goals and human rights-basedapproaches: moving towards a shared approach.” 72-85
Doyle, Cathal. “Millennium Development Goals and human rights: in common cause oruneasy partners?” 5-9
International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence, Vol. 21, No. 4 (Fall 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=08850607&volume=21&issue=4
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Arthur S. Hulnick, “Intelligence Reform 2008: Where to from Here?” 621 – 634
Martin Rudner, “Protecting Critical Energy Infrastructure Through Intelligence,” 635 –660
Adam D. M. Svendsen, “The Globalization of Intelligence Since 9/11: The Optimizationof Intelligence Liaison Arrangements,” 661 – 678
Noel Hendrickson, “Critical Thinking in Intelligence Analysis,” 679 – 693
Louis René Beres, “On Assassination, Preemption, and Counterterrorism: The Viewfrom International Law,” 694 – 725
Don Bohning, “Rafael Quintero, Cold War Warrior: From the Bay of Pigs to Iran—Contra,” 726 – 747
Adrian Martin; Michael Tanji, “Farm Teams and Free Agents: The Sporting Way to Solvethe Intelligence Community's Talent Woes,” 748 – 767
International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence, Vol. 22, No. 1 (Winter2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g906616327~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Segell, Glen M. “Creating Intelligence: Information Operations in Iraq.” 89-109
Pritchard, Matthew C. and Michael S. Goodman. “Intelligence: The Loss of Innocence.”147-164.
Rudner, Martin. “Intelligence Studies in Higher Education: Capacity-Building to MeetSocietal Demand.” 110-130.
Nomikos, John M. and Aya Burweila. “Another Frontier to Fight: International Terrorismand Islamic Fundamentalism in North Africa.” 50-88.
Hussain, Imtiaz. “A Mexico–U.S. Security Community? Intelligence Without Policy, PolicyWithout Intelligence.” 31-49.
Shpiro, Shlomo. “Poisoned Chalice: Intelligence Use of Chemical and BiologicalWeapons.” 1-30.
Marrin, Stephen. “Training and Educating U.S. Intelligence Analysts.” 131-146.
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International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 41, No. 1 (January 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=MES&volumeId=41&seriesId=0&issueId=01
“And As You Listen: The Oral Narrative of Muhammad Abdel Wahab, Minister ofIndustry of Egypt, 1984–93,” AbdelAziz EzzelArab, pp 1-3
“Peasants into Syrians,” Kevin W. Martin, pp 4-6
“What Does It Mean, ‘Promoting Democratization’?” Sheila Carapico, pp 7-9
“ ‘Arab Nationalism’: Has a New Framework Emerged?” James L. Gelvin, pp 10-12
“Pensée 2: Theorizing Arab Nationalism,” Youssef M. Choueiri, pp 13-15
“Pensée 3: The Modernity of the Arabs,” Fred Halliday, pp 16-18
“Pensée 4: Out with the Old, In with the New,” Fred H. Lawson, pp 19-21
“Making Yemen Indian: Rewriting The Boundaries Of Imperial Arabia,” John M. Willis,pp 23-38
“Rituals Of Royalty And The Elaboration Of Ceremony In Oman: View From The Edge,”Dawn Chatty, pp 39-58
“Overview: Engaging The Arab Human Development Report 2005 On Women,” LilaAbu-Lughod and Fida J. Adely and Frances S. Hasso, pp 59-60
“Comments From An Author: Engaging The Arab Human Development Report 2005 OnWomen,” Islah Jad, 61-62
“Empowering Governmentalities Rather Than Women: The Arab Human DevelopmentReport 2005 And Western Development Logics,” Frances S. Hasso, pp 63-82
“Dialects Of Women's Empowerment: The International Circuitry Of The Arab HumanDevelopment Report 2005,” Lila Abu-Lughod, pp 83-103
“Educating Women For Development: The Arab Human Development Report 2005 AndThe Problem With Women's Choices,” Fida J. Adely, pp 105-122
International Journal of Naval History, Vol. 7, No. 3 (December 2008)http://www.ijnhonline.org/
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“The Ugly Duckling: The French Navy and the Saint-Domingue Expedition, 1801-1803,”Philippe R. Girard
The 2007 U.S. Naval Academy Naval History Symposium Papers
“The Rise of Latin Christian Naval Power in the Third Crusade,” Paul Dingman
“ ‘A Harsh and Spiritual Unity’: A New Look at Culture and Battle in the Marine Corps’Pacific War,” Aaron B. O’Connell
“Dangerous Crossings: The First Modern Polar Expedition, 1925,” Harold Cones andJohn Bryant
“Defeating Napoleon’s Designs: Littoral Operations in Galicia, 1809,” Brian M. De Toy
International Organization, Vol. 63, No. 1 (January 2009)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=INO&volumeId=63&seriesId=0&issueId=01
“Democracy-Enhancing Multilateralism,” Robert O. Keohane and Stephen Macedo andAndrew Moravcsik, pp 1-31
“The Discursive Process of Legalization: Charting Islands of Persuasion in the ICC Case,”Nicole Deitelhoff, pp 33-65
“Rage Against the Machines: Explaining Outcomes in Counterinsurgency Wars,” JasonLyall and Isaiah Wilson, pp 67-106
“Oil, Nontax Revenue, and the Redistributional Foundations of Regime Stability,” KevinM. Morrison, pp 107-138
“The Unconditional Most-Favored-Nation Clause and the Maintenance of the LiberalTrade Regime in the Postwar 1870s,” Bryan Coutain, pp 139-175
“In the Shadow of War: The Effects of Conflict on Liberal Democracy,” Ronald R. Krebs,pp 177-210
International Politics, Vol. 46, No. 1 (January 2009)http://www.palgrave-journals.com/ip/journal/v46/n1/index.html
“The cryptic cold war realism of Leo Strauss,” Jean-François Drolet, 1-27
The Liberal Origins Of Europe
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“The sovereign remedy of European unity: The progressive left and supranationalgovernment 1935–1945,” Mark Gilbert, 28-47
“The liberal-democratic foundations of the European nation-state and the challenges ofinternationalization,” Ludger Helms, 48-64
Small States
“The elusive definition of the small state,” Matthias Maass, 65-83
“The foreign policy of small powers,” Christos Kassimeris, 84-101
IS THE TALIBAN WINNING?
“Resurgence of the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan: How and why?”Najibullah Lafraie, 102-113
International Politics, Vol. 46, No. 2-3 (March 2009)http://www.palgrave-journals.com/ip/journal/v46/n2/index.html
Special Issue: Beyond Bush: A New Era in US Foreign Policy?
“Beyond Bush: A new era in US foreign policy?” Timothy J Lynch and TrevorB McCrisken, 115-118
Primacy?
“Persistent primacy and the future of the American era,” Robert J Lieber, 119-139
“From Pax Romana to Pax Americana? The history and future of the new AmericanEmpire,” Mark T Berger, 140-156
A Neoconservative Revolution that wasn't
“Is the Bush Revolution over?” Steven Hurst, 157-176
“Foreign policy fusion: Liberal interventionists, conservative nationalists andneoconservatives — the new alliance dominating the US foreign policy establishment,”Inderjeet Parmar, 177-209
Whither The Bush Doctrine?
“Out of sync: Bush's expanded national security state and the war on terror,” RobertG Patman, 210-233
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“Geopolitics, the revolution in military affairs and the Bush doctrine,” Simon Dalby, 234-252
U.S. Foreign Policy in Practice
“Coming face to face with bloody reality: Liberal common sense and the ideologicalfailure of the Bush doctrine in Iraq,” Toby Dodge, 253-275
“The North–South divide and security in the Western Hemisphere: United States–SouthAmerican relations after September 11 and the Iraq war,” Mario E Carranza, 276-297
“Neoconservative democratization in theory and practice: Developing democrats orraising radical Islamists?” Matthew Crosston, 298-326
Bush-Cheney Redux
“Bush–Cheney Redux,” Linda B Miller, 327-333
International Peacekeeping, Vol. 16, No. 1 (January 2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g908174364~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Cockayne, James and Adam Lupel. “Introduction: Rethinking the Relationship BetweenPeace Operations and Organized Crime.” 4-19.
Holt, Victoria K. and Alix J. Boucher. “Framing the Issue: UN Responses to Corruptionand Criminal Networks in Post-Conflict Settings.” 20-32.
Cockayne, James. “Winning Haiti's Protection Competition: Organized Crime and PeaceOperations Past, Present and Future.” 77-99.
Williams, Phil. “Organized Crime and Corruption in Iraq.” 115-135.
Gavigan, Patrick. “Organized Crime, Illicit Power Structures and Guatemala'sThreatened Peace Process.” 62-76.
Andreas, Peter. “Symbiosis Between Peace Operations and Illicit Business in Bosnia.”33-46.
Reno, William. “Understanding Criminality in West African Conflicts.” 47-61.
Felbab-Brown, Vanda. “Peacekeepers Among Poppies: Afghanistan, Illicit Economiesand Intervention.” 100-114.
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Muggah, Robert and Keith Krause. “Closing the Gap Between Peace Operations andPost-Conflict Insecurity: Towards a Violence Reduction Agenda.” 136-150.
Cockayne, James and Adam Lupel. “Conclusion: From Iron Fist to Invisible Hand – PeaceOperations, Organized Crime and Intelligent International Law Enforcement.” 151-168.
International Relations, Vol. 22, No. 4 (2008)http://ire.sagepub.com/content/vol22/issue4/
Jana Puglierin, “Introduction,” 403-404.
Thomas Karis, “A Life of Passionate Scholarship, 405-409.
Frank Schale, “The Government Advisor: John H. Herz and the Office of StrategicServices,” 411-418.
Jana Puglierin, “Towards Being a `Traveller between All Worlds',” 419-425.
Peter M. R. Stirk, “John H. Herz and the International Law of the Third Reich,” 427-440.
Casper Sylvest, “John H. Herz and the Resurrection of Classical Realism,” 441-455.
Kennedy Graham, “ `Survival Research' and the `Planetary Interest': Carrying Forwardthe Thoughts of John Herz,” 457-472.
Richard Ned Lebow, “Identity and International Relations,” 473-492.
Nicholas J. Wheeler, “`To Put Oneself into the other Fellow's Place': John Herz, theSecurity Dilemma and the Nuclear Age,” 493-509.
Ken Booth, “Navigating the `Absolute Novum': John H. Herz's Political Realism andPolitical Idealism,” 510-526.
International Security, Vol. 33, No. 3 (Winter 2008)http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/isec/33/3
“The Heart of the Matter: The Security of Women and the Security of States,” Valerie M.Hudson, Mary Caprioli, Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill, Rose McDermott, Chad F. Emmett, 7-45
“Motives for Martyrdom: Al-Qaida, Salafi Jihad, and the Spread of Suicide Attacks,” AssafMoghadam, 46-78
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Spoiling Inside and Out: Internal Political Contestation and the Middle East PeaceProcess,” Wendy Pearlman, 79-109
“When Right Makes Might: How Prussia Overturned the European Balance of Power,”Stacie E. Goddard, 110-142
“Linkage Diplomacy: Economic and Security Bargaining in the Anglo-Japanese Alliance,1902–23,” Christina L. Davis, 143-179
“Misunderstanding Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Area?” Kimberly Marten,Thomas H. Johnson, M. Chris Mason, 180-189
“Costs and Difficulties of Blocking the Strait of Hormuz,” William D. O'Neil, CaitlinTalmadge, 190-198
International Security, Vol. 34, No. 1 (Spring 2009) Forthcominghttp://www.mitpressjournals.org/page/journal/forthcoming.jsp?journalCode=isec
“Why Civil Resistance Works: The Strategic Logic of Nonviolent Conflict,” Maria J.Stephan and Erica Chenoweth
“How U.S. Treaty Behavior Threatens National Security,” Antonia Chayes
“Closing Time: Assessing the Iranian Threat to the Strait of Hormuz,” Caitlin Talmadge
“The Window of Vulnerability That Wasn't: Soviet Military Buildup in the 1970's—AResearch Note,” Pavel Podvig
“Divining Nuclear Intentions: A Review Essay,” William C. Potter and GaukharMukhatzhanova
International Spectator, Vol. 43, No. 4 (December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g905800508~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Moro, Francesco N. “The Foundations of American National Security.” 178-180.
Wallace, William. “Less [sic] Words and More Deeds in Constructing Europe.” 19-24.
Aydın Düzgit, Senem. “The AKP in Turkey: Off the Hook This Time.” 25-29.
Barkey, Henri J. “The Effect of US Policy in the Middle East on EU-Turkey Relations.” 31-44.
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Klein, Menachem. “One State in the Holy Land: A Dream or a Nightmare?” 89-101.
Dobbins, James. “European and American Roles in Nation-Building.” 123-136.
Brown, Nathan J. “Principled or Stubborn? Western Policy toward Hamas.” 73-87.
Croci, Osvaldo. “Not a Zero-Sum Game: Atlanticism and Europeanism in Italian ForeignPolicy.” 137-155.
Wilkinson, Paul. “Using Criminal Justice to Foster US-EU Cooperation on Counter-terrorism.” 7-17.
Fanlo, Carmen Campo and Miguel Medina Abellan. “European Foreign Policy WithoutLegal Personality?” 157-167.
Pischedda, Costantino. “Partition as a Solution to Ethnic Conflict.” 103-122.
Miller, James Edward. “An Empire of Liberty?” 172-174.
Tocci, Nathalie. “Making Sense of Euro-Mediterranean Relations.” 169-171.
Hroub, Khaled. “Palestinian Islamism: Conflating National Liberation and Socio-politicalChange.” 59-72.
Narbone, Luigi and Agnieszka Skuratowicz. “EU-Turkey Trade: A Case of DeepIntegration.” 45-57.
Alessandri, Emiliano. “Crisis Does Not Mean the End: the Atlantic Alliance in the 21stCentury.” 175-177.
International Studies, Vol. 45, No. 1 (March 2008[sic])http://isq.sagepub.com/content/vol45/issue1/
Mahfuzul H. Chowdhury, “Japan–Bangladesh Relations: A Review of DevelopmentPartnership,” 1-21.
Sanjay Srivastava, “Negotiation Analysis: The Cancun Ministerial of the WTO,” 23-43.
Srikanth Kondapalli, “Weapons of Mass Destruction Transfers in Asia: An Analysis,” 45-73.
International Studies Perspectives, Vol. 10, No. 1 (February 2009)http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118516737/home
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Policy
Dov Waxman, “From Jerusalem to Baghdad? Israel and the War in Iraq,” 1-17
Ramesh Thakur, Thomas G. Weiss, “United Nations "Policy": An Argument with ThreeIllustrations,” 18-35
Pedagogy and the Discipline
Nils B. Weidmann, Doreen Kuse, “WarViews: Visualizing and Animating GeographicData on Civil War,” 36-48
Andrew J. Enterline, Eric M. Jepsen, “Chinazambia and Boliviafranca: A Simulation ofDomestic Politics and Foreign Policy,” 49-59
Scott Seider, “Overwhelmed and Immobilized: Raising the Consciousness of PrivilegedYoung Adults about World Hunger and Poverty,” 60-76
ISP Forum: Race and International Relations
Tilden J. Le Melle, “Race in International Relations,” 77-83
Geeta Chowdhry, Shirin M. Rai, “The Geographies of Exclusion and the Politics ofInclusion: Race-based Exclusions in the Teaching of International Relations,” 84-91
Christine B. N. Chin, “Claiming Race and Racelessness in International Studies,” 92-98
James H. Mittelman, “The Salience of Race,” 99-107
International Studies Quarterly, Vol. 52, No. 4 (December 2008)http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/117984904/home
Nils Petter Gleditsch, “The Liberal Moment Fifteen Years On: Presidential address, 49thConvention of the International Studies Association, San Francisco, CA, March 27,2008.” 691-712
Stephen E. Gent, “Going in When it Counts: Military Intervention and the Outcome ofCivil Conflicts,” 713-735
Benjamin O. Fordham, “Power or Plenty? Economic Interests, Security Concerns, andAmerican Intervention,” 737-758
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J. Michael Greig, Patrick M. Regan, “When Do They Say Yes? An Analysis of theWillingness to Offer and Accept Mediation in Civil Wars,” 759-781
Zheng Wang, “National Humiliation, History Education, and the Politics of HistoricalMemory: Patriotic Education Campaign in China,” 783-806
David H. Bearce, “Not Complements, But Substitutes: Fixed Exchange RateCommitments, Central Bank Independence, and External Currency Stability,” 807-824
Bernhard Zangl, “Judicialization Matters! A Comparison of Dispute Settlement UnderGATT and the WTO,” 825-854
Timothy T. Hellwig, Eve M. Ringsmuth, John R. Freeman, “The American Public and theRoom to Maneuver: Responsibility Attributions and Policy Efficacy in an Era ofGlobalization,” 855-880
Nitza Berkovitch, Neve Gordon, “The Political Economy of Transnational Regimes: TheCase of Human Rights,” 881-904
International Studies Review, Vol. 10, No.4 (December 2008)http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/121520291/issue
Responsible Scholarship in International Relations: A Symposium
J. Ann Tickner, Andrei P. Tsygankov, “Responsible Scholarship in InternationalRelations: A Symposium,” 661-666
I: Ethical Issues in IR Theory and Research
Murielle Cozette, “What Lies Ahead: Classical Realism on the Future of InternationalRelations” (p 667-679)
Piki Ish-Shalom, “Theorization, Harm, and the Democratic Imperative: Lessons from thePoliticization of the Democratic-Peace Thesis,” (p 680-692)
Brooke Ackerly, Jacqui True, “Reflexivity in Practice: Power and Ethics in FeministResearch on International Relations” (p 693-707)
Cecelia Lynch, “Reflexivity in Research on Civil Society: Constructivist Perspectives” (p708-721)
II: IR Theory Outside the West
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Giorgio Shani, “Toward a Post-Western IR: The Umma, Khalsa Panth, and CriticalInternational Relations Theory,” (p 722-734)
Arlene B. Tickner, “Latin American IR and the Primacy of lo práctico,” (p. 735-748)
William A. Callahan, “Chinese Visions of World Order: Post-hegemonic or a NewHegemony?” (p 749-761)
Andrei P. Tsygankov, “Self and Other in International Relations Theory: Learning fromRussian Civilizational Debates,” 762-775)
Review Essays
Steven W. Hook, “Falling Out: The United States in the Global Community” (p 776-781)
Valerie M. Hudson, “Where is Strategic Culture to Be Found? The Case of China” (p 782-785)
Scott L. Kastner, “The Global Implications of China's Rise” (p 786-794)
International Studies Review, Vol. 11, No. 1 (March 2009)http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/120118378/grouphome/home.html
Reflection, Evaluation, Integration
David C. Ellis, “On the Possibility of "International Community"”(p 1-26)
Oded Haklai, “Authoritarianism and Islamic Movements in the Middle East: Researchand Theory-building in the Twenty-first Century” (p 27-45)
Paola Cesarini, Shareen Hertel, “Missing Our Comparative Advantage? Analysis from theHuman Rights Frontier” (p 46-62)
David Carment, Patrick James, Zeynep Taydas, “The Internationalization of EthnicConflict: State, Society, and Synthesis” (p 63-86)
Markus Kornprobst, “International Relations as Rhetorical Discipline: Toward (Re-)Newing Horizons,” (p 87-108)
Mariya Y. Omelicheva, “Global Civil Society and Democratization of World Politics: ABona Fide Relationship or Illusory Liaison?” (p 109-132)
Raffaele Marchetti, “Mapping Alternative Models of Global Politics” (p 133-156)
Review Essays
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Robert E. Bohrer II, “Difficult Democratizations” (p 157-164)
David Mitchell, “Challenges, Crises, and Change in US Foreign Policy” (p 165-173)
Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, Vol. 10, No. 3 (November2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1369801X&volume=10&issue=3
Lewis, Earl. “Race, Power, Multipositionality.” 340-358
Odem, Mary E. “Subaltern Immigrants.” 359-380
Lal, Ruby. “Recasting The Women's Question.” 321-339
Pandey, Gyanendra. “Subaltern Citizens And Their Histories.” 271-284
Johnson, Colin R. “Casual Sex.” 303-320
Sa'di, Ahmad H. “Remembering Al-Nakba In A Time Of Amnesia.” 381-399
Wakankar, Milind. “The Question Of A Prehistory.” 285-302
Issues & Studies, An International Quarterly on China, Taiwan, and East Asian Affairs,Vol.
44, No.1 (March 2008)http://iir.nccu.edu.tw/index.php?include=journal&kind=4
“The Institutional Context of President Chen Shui-bian's Cross-Strait Messages,” Jih-Wen Lin
“Maintaining Status Quo across the Taiwan Strait: A Constructivist/ InstitutionalistPerspective,” Der-Yuan Wu
“The Role of Issues in Taiwan's Politics, 1996-2004,” Chiung-chu Lin
“Ethnicity, Empowerment, and Political Trust:The 2005 Local Elections in Taiwan,”Chung-li Wu
“Network Analysis in Policymaking: The Case of Significant Labor Events in Taiwan,”Tsai-Chuan Ma
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“Separatism inModern China: An Analytical Framework,” Chien-peng Chung
“Professionalism, Political Orientation, and Perceived Self-Censorship: A Survey Studyof Hong Kong Journalists,” Francis L. F. Lee & Joseph M. Chan
Issues & Studies, An International Quarterly on China, Taiwan, and East Asian Affairs,Vol. 44, No.2 (June 2008)http://iir.nccu.edu.tw/index.php?include=journal&kind=4
“The Concept of Soft Power in China’s Strategic Discourse,” Joel Wuthnow
“The Refunctioning of Confucianism:The Mainland Chinese Intellectual Response toConfucianism since the 1980s,” Jiawen Ai
“Party Adaptation and the Prospects for Democratization in Authoritarian China,” XieYue
“Computer Scientists and China’s Participation in Global Internet Governance,” Chen-Dong Tso
“The Growth and Spatial Distribution of China’s ICT Industry: New Geography ofClustering and Innovation,” Cassandra C. Wang and George C.S. Lin
“Revaluation of the Chinese Currency and Its Impacts on China: A Political EconomyApproach,” Jingtao Yi, Yongnian Zheng, and Minjia Chen
“High Expectations and a Low Level of Commitment: A Class Perspective of WelfareAttitudes in Hong Kong,” Timothy Ka-Ying Wong, Shirley Po-San Wan, and KennethWing-Kin Law
Issues & Studies, An International Quarterly on China, Taiwan, and East Asian Affairs,Vol.
44, No. 3 (September 2008)http://iir.nccu.edu.tw/index.php?include=journal&kind=4
“The Seventeenth Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party: InstitutionalRepresentation,” Bo Zhiyue
“Rights Issues in China as Evidence for the Existence of Two Types of AgencyProblems,” Bi-Huei Tsai
“The U.S. Perception of Taiwan’s Sovereignty and the Future of Cross-Strait Relations,”Marc Chia-Ching Cheng
“Sino-Venezuelan Relations: Beyond Oil,” Joseph Y. . Cheng and Huangao Shi
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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China and the Two Koreas
“China in the North Korean Nuclear Quagmire: Rethinking Chinese Influence on NorthKorea,” Yongho Kim and Myung Chul Kim
“How Chinese Foreign Direct Investment Can Achieve Success in Korea: M&A Deals inthe Automotive and Semiconductor Industries,” Sung-Hoon Lim
“Cooperation and Conflict among Provinces: The Three Northeastern Provinces ofChina, the Russian Far East, and Sinuiju, North Korea,” Woo-Jun Kim
Issues & Studies, An International Quarterly on China, Taiwan, and East Asian Affairs,Vol. 44, No. 4 (December 2008)http://iir.nccu.edu.tw/index.php?include=journal&kind=4
“A Simple Model for Predicting the Outcome of the 2008 Legislative Yuan Elections inTaiwan,” Chung-li Wu
“A Clausewitzian Appraisal of Cross-Strait Relations,” James R. Holmes
“Between Independence and Unification: An Ordered Probit Analysis of Panel SurveyData on Taiwan’s Constitutional Future,” Chia-hung Tsai, Ding-ming Wang, Livianna S.Tossutti
“Taiwan and the ASEAN Economic Community: A Context for Economic Statecraft in anAsian Regional Free Trade Area,” Linjun Wu
“Slovenia on the Global Stage: A Role in the Taiwan Strait Conflict?” Saša Istenič
“Network-Building: Development of the Anti-Yasukuni Transnational AdvocacyNetwork, 2002-2007,” Chueiling Shin
“The Political Economy of Economic Reform in North Korea,” Yong Soo Park
Journal for Intelligence, Propaganda, and Security Studies, Vol 2, No, 2 (2008)http://www.acipss.org/newsletter_archiv/JIPSS_extract_4.pdf
Editorial
Siegfried Beer, “Homeland Security for Citizens: American and British Approaches,” 5
Eero Medijainen, “James Bond’s Last Mission. Sidney Reilly and the Coup d’état inTallinn of 1924,” 7
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Peter Pirker, “Politik im Schatten oder Schattenspiele? SOE und das österreichischepolitische Exil in Großbritannien 1940-1942,” 23
Florian Altenhöner, Der Fall Heinz Karl Jost: Ein MI5-Vernehmungsbericht aus dem Jahr1945,” 55
Chris Heim, “Radio and the Cold War in Europe,” 77
Harald Knoll, Dieter Bacher, Spione und Stalinopfer. Die Rolle österreichischer Zivilistenin den Aktivitäten ausländischer Nachrichtendienste in Österreich 1950-1953,” 99
Helmut Müller-Enbergs, “War das österreichische Abwehramt von der Stasiunterwandert?” 109
Wilhelm Dietl, “Geheimdienste, Medien und Justiz. Wie der BND mit unliebsamenMitarbeitern umgeht,” 115
Journal of African History, Vol. 49, No. 3 (October 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=AFH&volumeId=49&seriesId=0&issueId=03
“Death And Dying In The History Of Africa Since 1800,” Rebekah Lee And MeganVaughan, 341-359
“ ‘The Child Of Death’: Personal Names And Parental Attitudes Towards Mortality InBunyoro, Western Uganda, 1900–2005,” Shane Doyle, pp 361-382
“‘Divine Kings’: Sex, Death And Anthropology In Inter-War East/Central Africa,” MeganVaughan, pp 383-401
“Killing The Condemned: The Practice And Process Of Capital Punishment In BritishAfrica, 1900–1950s,” Stacey Hynd, pp 403-418
“Death, National Memory And The Social Construction Of Heroism,” Wale Adebanwi, pp419-444
“The Okija Shrine: Death And Life In Nigerian Politics,” Stephen Ellis, pp 445-466
“The Was, The Is And The Might-Have-Been: Political Leadership In Post-ApartheidSouth Africa,” Bill Nasson, pp 467-474
Journal of American History, Volume 95, No. 3 (December 2008)
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http://www.journalofamericanhistory.org/issues/953
“The Hazards of the Flush Times: Gambling, Mob Violence, and the Anxieties of America’sMarket Revolution,” Joshua D. Rothman (pp. 649–50)
“Origins of the Conservative Ascendancy: Barry Goldwater’s Early Senate Career and theDe-legitimization of Organized Labor,” Elizabeth Tandy Shermer (pp. 678–709)
“ ‘Becoming International Again’: C. Wright Mills and the Emergence of a Global NewLeft, 1956–1962,” Daniel Geary (pp. 710–36)
“ ‘Worth a Lot of Negro Votes’: Black Voters, Africa, and the 1960 PresidentialCampaign,” James H. Meriwether (pp. 737–63)
“Nothing Says “Democracy” Like a Visit from the Queen: Reflections on Empire andNation in Early American Histories,” Christopher Grasso and Karin Wulf (pp. 764–81)
Journal of American History, Volume 95, No. 4 (March 2009)http://www.journalofamericanhistory.org/issues/954/
“Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Saxons,” Nell Irvin Painter (pp. 977–85)
“ ‘The Outskirts of Our Happiness’: Race and the Lure of Colonization in the EarlyRepublic,” Nicholas Guyatt (pp. 986–1011)
“Relief from Relief: The Tampa Sewing-Room Strike of 1937 and the Right to Welfare,”Elna C. Green (pp. 1012–37)
“World History in a Nation-State: The Transnational Disposition in Historical Writing inthe United States,” Marcus Gräser (pp. 1038–54)
Round Table
“The Diplomatic History Bandwagon: A State of the Field,” Thomas W. Zeiler (pp. 1053–73)
“Politics and Foreign Relations,” Fredrik Logevall (pp. 1074–78)
“On the Limits of Thomas Zeiler’s Historiographical Triumphalism,” Mario Del Pero (pp.1079–82)
“What Bandwagon? Diplomatic History Today,” Jessica C. E. Gienow-Hecht (pp. 1083–86)
“Hop off the Bandwagon! It’s a Mass Movement, Not a Parade,” Kristin Hoganson (pp.1087–91)
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 68, No. 1 (February 2009)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=JAS&volumeId=68&seriesId=0&issueId=01#toccontent
“Thai Politics as Reality TV,” Duncan McCargo, pp 7-19
“Life as Form: How Biomimesis Encountered Buddhism in Lu Xun,” Lydia H. Liu, pp 21-54
“State, Sovereignty, and the People: A Comparison of the “Rule of Law” in China andIndia,” Jonathan K. Ocko and David Gilmartin, pp 55-100
“Sovereignty, Rule of Law, and Ideologies of the Nation,” Vivienne Shue, pp 101-106
“Justice or Legitimacy: A Response to Ocko and Gilmartin,” Paul W. Kahn, pp 106-111
“Rule of Law in China and India: A Historical-Cultural Approach,” Randall Peerenboom,pp 111-117
“Not Just a Concept: Institutions and the “Rule of Law’,” Lauren Benton, pp 117-122
“The Limits of Legal Sovereignty: China and India in Recent History,” Prasenjit Duara,pp 122-127
“Inconspicuous Consumption: Sake, Beer, and the Birth of the Consumer in Japan,”Penelope Francks, pp 135-164
“The Chimera of Privacy: Reading Self-Discipline in Japanese Diaries from the SecondWorld War (1937–1945),” Aaron William Moore, pp 165-198
“Mimicry, Masculinity, and the Mystique of Indian English: Western India, 1870–1900,”Shefali Chandra, pp 199-225
“Strategic Hypocrisy: The British Imperial Scripting of Tibet's Geopolitical Identity,”Dibyesh Anand, pp 227-252
Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Winter 2009)http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jcws/11/1
“The Improbable Permanence of a Commitment: America's Troop Presence in Europeduring the Cold War,” Hubert Zimmermann, 3-27
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Explosive Challenge: Diplomatic Triangles, the United Nations, and the Problem ofFrench Nuclear Testing, 1959–1960,” Mervyn O'Driscoll, 28-56
“Beyond Betrayal: Beijing, Moscow, and the Paris Negotiations, 1971–1973,” Lorenz M.Lüthi, 57-107
“How Able Was “Able Archer”?: Nuclear Trigger and Intelligence in Perspective,”Vojtech Mastny, 108-123
“ ‘Agents of Moscow” at the Dawn of the Cold War: The Comintern and the CommunistParty of New Zealand,” Alexander Trapeznik, 124-149
Journal of Conflict Resolution, Vol. 53, No. 1 (January 2009)http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/vol53/issue1/
Thomas Edward Flores and Irfan Nooruddin, “Democracy under the Gun UnderstandingPostconflict Economic Recovery,” 3-29.
Ravi Bhavnani and Dan Miodownik, “Ethnic Polarization, Ethnic Salience, and CivilWar,” 30-49.
Paivi Lujala, “Deadly Combat over Natural Resources: Gems, Petroleum, Drugs, and theSeverity of Armed Civil Conflict,” 50-71.
Ernesto Reuben and Arno Riedl, “Public Goods Provision and Sanctioning in PrivilegedGroups,” 72-93.
Daniel Bar-Tal, Amiram Raviv, Alona Raviv, and Adi Dgani-Hirsh, “The Influence of theEthos of Conflict on Israeli Jews' Interpretation of Jewish—Palestinian Encounters,” 94-118.
William A. Donohue and Daniel Druckman, “Message Framing Surrounding the Oslo IAccords,” 119-145.
Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 26, No. 4 (October 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g905627347~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Roque, Sandra. “Manuela: A social biography of war displacement and change inAngola.” 371-384.
Hammar, Amanda and Graeme Rodgers. “Introduction: Notes on political economies ofdisplacement in southern Africa.” 355-370.
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Rutherford, Blair. “An unsettled belonging: Zimbabwean farm workers in LimpopoProvince, South Africa.” 401-415.
Rodgers, Graeme. “Everyday life and the political economy of displacement on theMozambique–South Africa borderland.” 385-399.
Milgroom, Jessica and Marja Spierenburg. “Induced volition: Resettlement from theLimpopo National Park, Mozambique.” 435-448.
Hammar, Amanda. “In the name of sovereignty: Displacement and state making in post-independence Zimbabwe.” 417-434.
Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 27, No. 1 (January 2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g908545867~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Crawford, Gordon. “ ‘Making democracy a reality’? The politics of decentralisation andthe limits to local democracy in Ghana.” 57-83.
Klerck, Gilton. “Rise of the temporary employment industry in Namibia: A regulatory‘fix’.” 85-103.
Boggero, Marco. “Darfur and Chad: A fragmented ethnic mosaic.” 21-35.
Kibreab, Gaim. “Land policy in post-independence Eritrea: A critical reflection.” 37-56.
Akpan, Wilson. “When corporate citizens ‘second-class’ national citizens: Theantinomies of corporate-mediated social provisioning in Nigeria's oil province.” 105-118.
Whitaker, Beth Elise and Jason Giersch. “Voting on a constitution: Implications fordemocracy in Kenya.” 1-20.
Journal of Contemporary Asia, Vol. 39, No. 1 (January 2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g907776024~db=all~tab=toc~o
rder=page
Devadason, Evelyn. “Malaysia-China Network Trade: A Note on Product Upgrading.” 36-49.
Hewison, Kevin and Catherine C. H. Chiu. “Hong Kong-Invested Companies in Thailand:Labour Relations and Practices.” 1-22.
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Prager Nyein, Susanne. “Ethnic Conflict and State Building in Burma.” 127-135.
Rasiah, Rajah, Abdillah Noh and Makmor Tumin. “Privatising Healthcare in Malaysia:Power, Policy and Profits.” 50-62.
Huei, Pang Yang. “The Four Faces of Bandung: Detainees, Soldiers, Revolutionaries andStatesmen.” 63-86.
Petras, James. “Separatism and Empire Building in the Twenty-first Century.” 116-126.
Ryoo, Woongjae. “The Public Sphere and the Rise of South Korean Civil Society.” 23-35.
Cheng, Joseph Y. S. and Huangao Shi. “China's African Policy in the Post-Cold War Era.”87-115.
Journal of Contemporary China, Vol. 18, No. 58 (January 2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g906444423~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Jacobsen, Michael. “Navigating between Disaggregating Nation States and EntrenchingProcesses of Globalisation: reconceptualising the Chinese diaspora in Southeast Asia.”69-91.
Gibson, Neil. “The Privatization of Urban Housing in China and its Contribution toFinancial System Development.” 175-184.
Chung, Wai-Keung and Gary G. Hamilton. “Getting Rich and Staying Connected: theorganizational medium of Chinese capitalists.” 47-67.
Cheung, Gordon C. K. “Made in China vs. Made by Chinese: Global Identities of ChineseBusiness.” 1-5.
Ravenhill, John and Yang Jiang. “China's Move to Preferential Trading: a new directionin China's diplomacy.” 27-46.
He, Kai. “Dynamic Balancing: China's balancing strategies towards the United States,1949–2005.” 113-136.
Pan, Chengxin. “What is Chinese about Chinese Businesses? Locating the ‘rise of China’in global production networks.” 7-25.
Mobrand, Erik. “Endorsing the Exodus: how local leaders backed peasant migrations in1980s Sichuan.” 137-156.
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Chen, Jing. “Explaining the Change in China's Attitude toward UN Peacekeeping: a normchange perspective.” 157-173.
Cheung, Gordon C. K. “Governing Greater China: dynamic perspectives and transforminginteractions.” 93-111.
Journal of Contemporary China, Vol. 18, No. 59 (March 2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g908174333~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Wang, Peter Chen-Main. “Revisiting US–China Wartime Relations: a study ofWedemeyer's China mission.” 233-247.
Xiao, Ren. “Between Adapting and Shaping: China's role in Asian regional cooperation.”303-320.
Myers, Ramon H. “Towards an Enlightened Authoritarian Polity: the KuomintangCentral Reform Committee on Taiwan, 1950–1952.” 185-199.
Wayne, Martin I. “Inside China's War on Terrorism.” 249-261.
Kuo, Tai-Chun. “A Strong Diplomat in a Weak Polity: T. V. Soong and wartime US–Chinarelations, 1940–1943.” 219-231.
Gilley, Bruce and Heike Holbig. “The Debate on Party Legitimacy in China: a mixedquantitative/qualitative analysis.” 339-358.
Lin, Hsiao-Ting. “War, Leadership and Ethnopolitics: Chiang Kai-shek and China'sfrontiers, 1941–1945.” 201-217.
Chan, Gordon Y. M. “Administrative Monopoly and the Anti-Monopoly Law: anexamination of the debate in China.” 263-283.
Yeung, Godfrey. “How Banks in China make Lending Decisions.” 285-302.
Das, Dilip K. “A Chinese Renaissance in an Unremittingly Integrating Asian Economy.”321-338.
Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Vol. 16, No. 3 (December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g906233509~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Shoshan, Nitzan. “Placing the Extremes: Cityscape, Ethnic ‘Others’ and Young RightExtremists in East Berlin.” 377-391.
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Bar-On, Tamir. “Fascism to the Nouvelle Droite: The Dream of Pan-European Empire.”327-345.
Falzon, Mark-Anthony and Mark Micallef. “Sacred Island or World Empire? LocatingFar-Right Movements In and Beyond Malta.” 393-406.
Mammone, Andrea, Emmanuel Godin and Brian Jenkins. “The Extreme Right inContemporary Europe: Cultural and Spatial Perspectives.” 323-326.
Goodwin, Matthew J. “Backlash in the ’Hood: Determinants of Support for the BritishNational Party (BNP) at the Local Level.” 347-361.
Dechezelles, Stéphanie. “The Cultural Basis of Youth Involvement in Italian ExtremeRight-wing Organisations.” 363-375.
Redgrave, Mike. “Europeanising the National Interest: Tony Blair's and New Labour'sLost Objective.” 421-432.
Luo, Chih-Mei. “Interpreting the Blair Government's Policy-making on EuropeanMonetary Union: An Examination of Public Policy Theories.” 433-448.
Peunova, Marina. “An Eastern Incarnation of the European New Right: AleksandrPanarin and New Eurasianist Discourse in Contemporary Russia.” 407-419.
Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 44, No. 1 (2009)http://jch.sagepub.com/content/vol44/issue1/
John Stephens, “ 'The Ghosts of Menin Gate': Art, Architecture and Commemoration,” 7-26.
Matthew G. Stanard, “ 'Interwar Pro-Empire Propaganda and European ColonialCulture: Toward a Comparative Research Agenda',” 27-48.
Alex Goodall, “Diverging Paths: Nazism, the National Civic Federation, and AmericanAnticommunism, 1933—9,” 49-69.
David R. Devereux, “The Sino-Indian War of 1962 in Anglo-American Relations,” 71-87.
Vanessa Ann Chambers, “ `Informed By, but Not Guided By, the Concerns of thePresent': Contemporary History in UK Higher Education — Its Teaching andAssessment,” 89-105.
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Journal of Genocide Research, Vol. 10, No. 4 (December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=14623528&volume=10&issue=4
Barta, Tony. “ ‘They appear actually to vanish from the face of the Earth.’ Aborigines andthe European project in Australia Felix.” 519-539
Banivanua-Mar, Tracey. “ ‘A thousand miles of cannibal lands’: imagining away genocidein the re-colonization of West Papua.” 583-602
Huttenbach, Henry R. “From the Editors: genocide prevention: sound policy or pursuitof a mirage?” 471-473
Ryan, Lyndall. “Massacre in the Black War in Tasmania 1823–34: a case study of theMeander River Region, June 1827.” 479-499
Mcveigh, Robbie. “‘The balance of cruelty’: Ireland, Britain and the logic of genocide.”541-561
Koslov, Elissa Mailänder. “ ‘Going east’: colonial experiences and practices of violenceamong female and male Majdanek camp guards (1941–44).” 563-582
Robinson, Shirleene and Jessica Paten. “The question of genocide and Indigenous childremoval: the colonial Australian context.” 501-518
Zimmerer, Jürgen and Dominik J. Schaller. “Settlers, imperialism, genocide.Introduction: apologies and the need to right historical wrongs.” 475-477
Journal Of The Gilded Age And Progressive Era, Vol. 7, No. 4 (October 2008)http://www.jgape.org/toc.php
“Dreams of a Democratic Culture: Revising the Origins of the Great Books Idea, 1869–1921,” Tim Lacy
“Phocion Howard Examines the Northern Pacific Railroad, 1873,” Lewis Saum
“ ‘All Americans are hero-worshippers’: American Observations on the First U.S. Visit bya Reigning Monarch, 1876,” Phil Roberts
“Childhood’s Imperial Imagination: Edward Stratemeyer’s Fiction Factory and theValorization of American Empire,” Brian Rouleau
Journal of Global History, Vol. 3, No. 3 (November 2008)
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http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=JGH&volumeId=3&issueId=03
“Imperial paths, big comparisons: the late Ottoman Empire,” Cem Emrence, 289-311
“Power and markets in global finance: the gold standard, 1890–1926,” G. Balachandran,313-335
“The road to the Industrial Revolution: hypotheses and conjectures about the medievalorigins of the ‘European Miracle’,” Jan Luiten van Zanden, 337-359
“Knowledge and divergence from the perspective of early modern India,” TirthankarRoy, 361-387
“ ‘Profits sprout like tropical plants’: a fresh look at what went wrong with the Eurasianspice trade c. 1550–1800,” Stefan Halikowski Smith, 389-418
“Was fashion a European invention?” Carlo Marco Belfanti, 419-443
“Seascapes and Mediterranean crossings,” Henk Driessen, 445-449
“Aden, Geniza, and the Indian Ocean during the Middle Ages,” Sebouh Aslanian, 451-457
“Global histories of food,” Felipe Fernández-Armesto, 459-462
Journal of the Historical Society, Vol. 8, No. 4 (December 2008)http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118546215/home
Sabina Loriga, “The Controversies over the Publication of Ariel Toaff's ‘BloodyPassovers’ ” (p 469-502)
Paul Bookbinder, “Reborn Jews: A New Jewish Community in Germany,” (p 503-522)
Sonja P. Wentling, “Prologue to Genocide or Epilogue to War? American Perspectives onthe Jewish Question in Poland, 1919–1921,” (p 523-544)
Franklin W. Knight, “Migration and Culture: A Case Study of Cuba, 1750–1900,” (p 545-566)
James J. Sack, “The British Conservative Press and Its Involvement in Antisemitic andRacial Discourse, Circa 1830–1895,” (p 567-583)
Roger L. Williams, “Tocqueville on Religion,” (p 585-600)
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Paul F. Grendler, “The Life and Death of the University of Mantua, 1624–1630,” (p 601-626)
Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Vol. 36, No. 4 (December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g906369409~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
McIntyre, W. David. “The Unofficial Commonwealth Relations Conferences, 1933–59:Precursors of the Tri-sector Commonwealth.” 591-614.
Fichter, James. “The British Empire and the American Atlantic on Tristan da Cunha,1811–16.” 567-589.
MacKenzie, John M. “ ‘Comfort’ and Conviction: A Response to Bernard Porter.” 659-668.
Matheka, Reuben M. “Decolonisation and Wildlife Conservation in Kenya, 1958–68.”615-639.
Cohen, Andrew. “Business and Decolonisation in Central Africa Reconsidered.” 641-658.
Hopkins, A. G. “Explorers' Tales: Stanley Presumes – Again.” 669-684.
Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 39, No. 4 (Spring 2009)http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jinh/39/4
“Creating Social Capital in the Early American Republic: The View from Connecticut,”Johann N. Neem, 471-495
“Rural Society and Social Networks in Nineteenth-Century Westphalia: The Role ofGodparenting in Social Mobility,” Christine Fertig, 497-522
“Vive la différence? Intergenerational Mobility in France and the United States duringthe Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries,” Jérôme Bourdieu, Joseph P. Ferrie, LionelKesztenbaum, 523-557
Journal of Israeli History: Politics, Society, Culture, Vol. 27, No. 2 (September 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=13531042&volume=27&issue=2
Guesnet, François. “Sensitive travelers: Jewish and non-Jewish visitors from EasternEurope to Palestine between the two World Wars.” 171-189
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Bar-On, Mordechai. “Cleansing history of its content: Some critical comments on IlanPappe's The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine.” 269-275
Silber, Michael K. “Alliance of the Hebrews, 1863–1875: The diaspora roots of an ultra-Orthodox proto-Zionist utopia in Palestine.” 119-147
Engel, David. “Citizenship in the conceptual world of Polish Zionists.” 191-199
Metzer, Jacob. “Jewish immigration to Palestine in the long 1920s: An exploratoryexamination.” 221-251
Silber, Marcos. “ ‘Immigrants from Poland want to go back’: The politics of returnmigration and nation building in 1950s Israel.” 201-219
Porat, Dan A. “Between nation and land in Zionist teaching of Jewish history, 1920–1954.” 253-268
Karlinsky, Nahum. “Jewish philanthropy and Jewish credit cooperatives in EasternEurope and Palestine up to 1939: A transnational phenomenon?” 149-170
Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 40, No. 4 (December2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=LAS&volumeId=40&seriesId=0&issueId=04
Special Issue: Cuba: 50 Years of Revolution
“Does Cuba Fit Yet or Is It Still ‘Exceptional’?” Antoni Kapcia, pp 627-650
“The Left in Transition: The Cuban Revolution in US Third World Politics,” John A.Gronbeck-Tedesco, pp 651-673
“A Revolutionary Modernity: The Cultural Policy of the Cuban Revolution,” NicolaMiller, pp 675-696
“The New Afro-Cuban Cultural Movement and the Debate on Race in ContemporaryCuba,” Alejandro De La Fuente, pp 697-720
“Feminists, Queers and Critics: Debating the Cuban Sex Trade,” Noelle M. Stout, pp 721-742
“En Casa: Women and Households in Post-Soviet Cuba,” Anna Cristina Pertierra, pp743-767
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Cuba's new relationship with foreign capital: economic policy-making since 1990,”EMILY MORRIS, pp 769-792
Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 41, No. 1 (January 2009)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=LAS&volumeId=41&seriesId=0&issueId=01
“New Forms of Social Assistance and the Evolution of Social Protection in LatinAmerica,” ARMANDO BARRIENTOS and CLAUDIO SANTIBÁÑEZ, pp 1-26
“Bio-Hegemony: The Political Economy of Agricultural Biotechnology in Argentina,”PETER NEWELL, pp 27-57
“Lost in Translation: Interpreting the Failure of Privatisation in the Brazilian ElectricPower Industry,” SUNIL TANKHA, pp 59-90
“Sentencing the Social Question: Court-Made Labour Law in Cases of OccupationalAccidents in Argentina, 1900–1915,” LINE SCHJOLDEN, pp 91-120
“The Future of Christianity in Latin America,” DANIEL H. LEVINE, pp 121-145
Journal of Military History, Vol. 73, No. 1 (January 2009)http://www.smh-hq.org/jmh/volumes/jmh731/toc731.html
Michael S. Adelberg, "The Scope and Severity of Civil Warfare in RevolutionaryMonmouth County, New Jersey," 9-47
Jeremy Black, "A Revolution in Military Cartography?: Europe 1650-1815," 49-68
Frederick C. Leiner, "The Squadron Commander's Share: Decatur v. Chew and the PrizeMoney for the Chesapeake's First War of 1812 Cruise," 69-82
John Morgan, "War Feeding War? The Impact of Logistics on the Napoleonic Occupationof Catalonia," 83-116
Christian B. Keller, "Flying Dutchmen and Drunken Irishmen: The Myths and Realities ofEthnic Civil War Soldiers," 117-145
Brian Holden Reid, "'Young Turks, or Not So Young?': The Frustrated Quest of MajorGeneral J. F. C. Fuller and Captain B. H. Liddell Hart, 147-175
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Richard H. Kohn, "The Danger of Militarization in an Endless 'War' on Terrorism," 177-208
Review Essays
Charles Esdaile, "Recent Writing on Napoleon and his Wars," 209-220
Thomas S. Wilkins, "Anatomy of a Military Disaster: The Fall of 'Fortress Singapore'1942," 221-230
Klaus Schmider, "The Last of the First: Veterans of the Jagdwaffe Tell their Story," 231-249
Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 46, No. 4 (December 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=MOA&volumeId=46&seriesId=0&issueId=04
“Djibouti's unusual resource curse,” Jennifer N. Brass, pp 523-545
“Regulating FDI in weak African states: a case study of Chinese copper mining inZambia,” Dan Haglund, pp 547-575
“The challenge of monitoring and evaluation under the new aid modalities: experiencesfrom Rwanda,” Nathalie Holvoet and Heidy Rombouts, pp 577-602
“Rogue incumbents, donor assistance and Sierra Leone's second post-conflict electionsof 2007,” Jimmy D. Kandeh, pp 603-635
“Running out of credit: the limitations of mobile telephony in a Tanzanian agriculturalmarketing system,” Thomas Molony, pp 637-658
“Striving for normality in a time of AIDS in Malawi,” Pauline E. Peters and Peter A.Walker and Daimon Kambewa, pp 659-687
Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 47, No. 1 (January 2009)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=MOA&volumeId=47&seriesId=0&issueId=01
“Revenue authorities and public authority in sub-Saharan Africa,” Odd-Helge Fjeldstadand Mick Moore, pp 1-18
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Win the match and vote for me: the politicisation of Ghana's Accra Hearts of Oak andKumasi Asante Kotoko football clubs,” Kevin S. Fridy and Victor Brobbey, pp 19-39
“Forced labour in Eritrea,” Gaim Kibreab, pp 41-72
“The politics of anti-corruption reform in Africa,” Letitia Lawson, pp 73-100
“Selected chiefs, elected councillors and hybrid democrats: popular perspectives on theco-existence of democracy and traditional authority,” Carolyn Logan, pp 101-128
“To ‘midwife’ – and abort – a democracy: Mauritania's transition from military rule,2005–2008,” Boubacar N'Diaye, pp 129-152
Journal of Modern Chinese History, Vol. 2, No. 2 (December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g906355419~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
See, Irwin. “Alone against the waking dragon: Britain's failure to secure internationalcooperation in China, 1925–1926.” 167-184.
Yanli, Gao. “Judd's China: a missionary congressman and US–China policy.” 197-219.
Leutner, Mechthild. “Cooperation networks and actors in semi-colonial China, 1860–1911.” 147-165.
Shyu, Larry N. “Diplomatic relations through wartime alliance: the Republic of China'srelations with Canada.” 185-196.
Xiaoping, Fang. “From union clinics to barefoot doctors: healers, medical pluralism, andstate medicine in Chinese villages, 1950–1970.” 221-237.
Yoshihiro, Ishikawa. “In search of a new vision: recent Japanese-language overviews ofmodern Chinese history.” 239-254.
Journal of Modern History, Vol. 80, No. 4 (December 2008)http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/jmh/2008/80/4#
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“King Leopold's Imperialism and the Origins of the Belgian Colonial Party, 1860–1905,”Vincent Viaene, 741-790
“Geographies of Power: The Tunisian Civic Order, Jurisdictional Politics, and ImperialRivalry in the Mediterranean, 1881–1935,” Mary Dewhurst Lewis, 791-830
“When Argentina Was “French”: Rethinking Cultural Politics and European Imperialismin Belle-Époque Buenos Aires,” J. P. Daughton, 831-864
“ ‘Going for an Indian’: South Asian Restaurants and the Limits of Multiculturalism inBritain,” Elizabeth Buettner, 865-901
Journal of Modern History, Vol. 81, No. 1 (March 2009)http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/jmh/2009/81/1
“ ‘Each and every one of you must become a chef’: Toward a Social Politics ofWorking-Class Childhood on the Extreme Right in 1930s France,” Laura Lee Downs, 1-44
“Lost Children: Displacement, Family, and Nation in Postwar Europe,” Tara Zahra, 45-86
“The Postcolonial Family? West African Children, Private Fostering, and the BritishState,” Jordanna Bailkin, 87-121
“A Looming Crash or a Soft Landing? Forecasting the Future of the Memory ‘Industry’,”Gavriel D. Rosenfeld, 122-158
Journal of Modern Italian Studies, Vol. 13, No. 4 (November 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1354571X&volume=13&issue=4&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email
Pesman, Ros. “Garibaldi: a hero and his making.” 536-540
Ridolfi, Maurizio. “Visions of republicanism in the writings of Giuseppe Mazzini.” 468-479
Rohdie, Sam. “Luchino Visconti's La Terra Trema. Journal of Modern Italian Studies.”520-531
Severini, Marco. “ ‘The disciplined revolutionary: Garibaldi and his myth’– a survey ofbicentennial publications in Italy.” 532-535
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Sarti, Roland. “Introduction: Thought and action? Perspectives on Mazzini and Garibaldion the bicentenaries of their births.” 463-467
Mattarelli, Sauro. “Duties and rights in the thought of Giuseppe Mazzini.” 480-485
Di Napoli, Mario. “Garibaldi and parliamentary democracy.” 503-511
Finelli, Michele. “Mazzini in Italian historical memory.” 486-491
Cardoza, Anthony L. “Rethinking modern Italy after the cultural turn.” 541-549
Limiti, Giuliana. “Garibaldi and Mazzini: thought and action.” 492-502
Monsagrati, Giuseppe. “The General's labyrinths and the knotty problems of Italianpolitics after Italy's unification.” 512-519
Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 43, No. 3 (December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g906996732~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Richards, Rhys. “On Using Pacific Shipping Records to Gain New insights into culturecontact in Polynesia before 1840.” 375-382.
Douglas, Bronwen. “Greg Dening: Way-finder in the Presents of the Past.” 383-389.
Bainton, Nicholas A. “The Genesis and the Escalation of Desire and Antipathy in theLihir Islands, Papua New Guinea.” 289-312.
Osmond, Gary. “ ‘Modest Monuments’?” 313-329.
Daly, Martin. “ ‘Another Agency in this Great Work’.”367-374.
Hooper, Antony. “Tokelau” 331-339.
Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 38, No. 1 (Autumn 2008)http://caliber.ucpress.net/toc/jps/38/1
“Palestinian Refugee Compensation and Israeli Counterclaims for Jewish Property inArab Countries,” Michael R. Fischbach, 6-24
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Secrets and Lies: The Persecution of Muhammad Salah (Part II),” Michael E. Deutsch,Erica Thompson, 25-53
“Postscript to Oslo: the Mystery of Norway's Missing Files,” Hilde Henriksen Waage, 54-65
“Recollections of the Nakba through a Teenager's Eyes,” Muhammad Hallaj, 66-73
“Remembering Mahmud Darwish (1941–2008),” Rashid Khalidi, 74-77
“Echoes of the Present: S. Yizhar's Khirbet Khizeh and Israel Today,” Raja Shehadeh, 78-83
Journal of Political Science Education, Vol. 5, No. 1 (January 2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g908481270~db=all
Ripley, Brian, Neal Carter and Andrea K. Grove. “League of Our Own: Creating a ModelUnited Nations Scrimmage Conference.” 55-70.
Mendeloff, David and Carolyn Shaw. “Connecting Students Internationally to ExplorePostconflict Peacebuilding: An American–Canadian Collaboration.” 27-54.
Fliter, John. “Incorporating a Sophisticated Supreme Court Simulation into anUndergraduate Constitutional Law Class.” 12-26.
Hamann, Kerstin, Philip H. Pollock and Bruce M. Wilson. “Learning from “Listening” toPeers in Online Political Science Classes.” 1-11.
Agbatogun, A. Olaoluwakotansibe. “Print and Broadcast Mass Media Factors asPredictors of Nigerian Teachers' Political Awareness and Participation.” 71-84.
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 40, No. 1 (January 2009)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=SEA&volumeId=40&seriesId=0&issueId=01
“Thai Buddhism, Thai Buddhists and the southern conflict,” Duncan McCargo, pp 1-10
“The Politics of Buddhist identity in Thailand's deep south: The Demise of civilreligion?” Duncan McCargo, pp 11-32
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Appropriating a space for violence: State Buddhism in southern Thailand,” MichaelJerryson, pp 33-57
“Landscapes of fear, horizons of trust: Villagers dealing with danger in Thailand'sinsurgent south,” Marc Askew, pp 59-86
“Making new space in the Thai literary canon,” Thak Chaloemtiarana, pp 87-110
“Garu a, Vajrap i and religious change in Jayavarman VII's Angkor,” Peter D. Sharrock,pp 111-151
“Semelai agricultural patterns: Toward an understanding of variation amongindigenous cultures in southern peninsular Malaysia,” Rosemary Gianno and Klaus J.Bayr, pp 153-185
“Decent colonialism? Pure science and colonial ideology in the Netherlands East Indies,1910–1929,” Andrew Goss, pp 187-214
Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 31, No. 6 (December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g906444767~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Stoddart, Kristan. “Maintaining the ‘Moscow Criterion’: British Strategic NuclearTargeting 1974–1979.” 897-924.
Madsen, Chris. “Strategy, Fleet Logistics, and the Lethbridge Mission to the Pacific andIndian Oceans 1943–1944.” 951-981.
Henriksen, Dag. “Inflexible Response: Diplomacy, Airpower and the Kosovo Crisis, 1998–1999.” 825-858.
Patalano, Alessio. “Shielding the ‘Hot Gates’: Submarine Warfare and Japanese NavalStrategy in the Cold War and Beyond (1976–2006).” 859-895.
Grant, Matthew. “Home Defence and the Sandys Defence White Paper, 1957.” 925-949.
Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 32, No. 1 (January 2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g908944859~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Cheung, Tai Ming. “Dragon on the Horizon: China's Defense Industrial Renaissance.” 29-66.
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Renshon, Jonathan. “Assessing Capabilities in International Politics: BiasedOverestimation and the Case of the Imaginary ‘Missile Gap’.” 115-147.
Raghavan, Srinath. “Civil–Military Relations in India: The China Crisis and After.” 149-175.
Morris, Daniel R. “Surprise and Terrorism: A Conceptual Framework.” 1-27.
Chase, Michael S., Andrew S. Erickson and Christopher Yeaw. “Chinese Theater andStrategic Missile Force Modernization and its Implications for the United States.” 67-114.
Journal of Vietnamese Studies, Vol. 4, No. 1 (Winter 2009)http://caliber.ucpress.net/toc/vs/4/1
“Paint-by-Numbers Democracy: The Stakes, Structure, and Results of the 2007Vietnamese National Assembly Election,” Edmund Malesky, Paul Schuler, 1-48
“Mothering and Fathering the Vietnamese: Religion, Gender, and National Identity,”Phạm Quỳnh Phương, Chris Eipper, 49-83
“Digging Up the Past: Prehistory and the Weight of the Present in Vietnam,” HaydonCherry, 84-144
“Paul Mus: Voir Simplement . . .,” David Chandler, Christopher Goscha, 145-148
“Paul Mus (1902–1969): A Biographical Sketch,” David Chandler, 149-191
“Conceptualizing Resistance and Revolution in Vietnam: Paul Mus' Understanding ofColonialism in Crisis,” Susan Bayly, 192-205
“Ambushed by History: Paul Mus and Colonial France's "Forced Re-entry" into Vietnam(1945–1954)” Agathe Larcher-Goscha, 206-239
Lusotopie, Vol. 15, No. 2 (December 2008)http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/brill/luso/2008/00000015/00000002;jsessionid=3bdyjg6kr1p0.alexandra
Étude
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Khouri, Nicole; Pereira Leite, Joana. “The Portuguese Colonial Press in Mozambique andthe Indian Community (1930-1975),” pp. 3-50
Miscellanées
Palmeiro Pinheiro, José Luís. “A territorial audiovisual sector in a Europe "withoutborders"?” pp. 53-70
Padrão Temudo, Marina. “From forced labour to small farming: The persistence ofsocial inequalities in São Tomé and Príncipe,” pp. 71-93
Gret, Marion. “Gender and participatory democracy in Brazil,” pp. 95-105
Campos, Ângela. “ ‘We are still ashamed of our own history’. Interviewing ex-combatants of the Portuguese colonial war (1961-1974),” pp. 107-126
Accent: Histoires d'Asie
Bègue, Sandrine. “Brahmin elites and central power in Goa during the Luso-Indianconflict (1947-1961),” pp. 129-150
Fernandes, Aureliano. “Local power in colonial and contemporary Goa,” pp. 151-173
Bertrand, Romain. “From Lusitanian heritage to discourse of autochtony: An insight intothe political history and sociology of the Betawi demands in Jakarta,” pp. 175-196
Gunn, Geoffrey C. “Re-enter the United Nations: A role for the PeacebuildingCommission in East Timor?” pp. 197-219
Les Chroniques
Cahen, Michel. “Persistance du lusotropicalisme au XXIe siècle,” pp. 223-229
Sabourin, Éric. “Oppression paternaliste et exploitation capitaliste au Brésil,” pp. 231-234
Pélissier, René. “Grandes espérances, mince innocence,” pp. 235-246
Manière de voir, No. 102 (December 2008/January 2009)http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/102/
Le krach du libéralisme
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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« Le casino et le cantonnier », Laurent Cordonnier
Les armes de la finance
« Bretton Woods, histoire d’une faillite », Frédéric F. Clairmont
« Le dollar, « notre devise, votre problème » », Akram Belkaïd
« La dérive des nouveaux produits financiers », Ibrahim Warde
« Parier sur le risque, d’Alexandrie à la City », A. B.
« Dans la tête d’un banquier » Pierre Bourdieu
« Déréguler à tout prix », Serge Halimi
« Paradis fiscaux, la filière européenne », Thierry Lambert
« Une comptabilité sur mesure pour les actionnaires », Jacques Richard
« L’imposture des placements éthiques », Céline Ovadia
Des crises à répétition
« Dans la tourmente de l’économie reaganienne », Bernard Cassen
« Les années 1990 au Japon, ou l’état d’urgence économique », F. F. C.
« Le naufrage exemplaire des caisses d’épargne américaines », Jacques Decornoy
« De la Russie à l’Albanie, le vertige de l’argent facile. » I. W.
« L’Argentine entre dette et pillage. » Jorge Beinstein
« Voies d’eau dans le navire libéral » S.H.
« La chute de la maison Enron » Thomas Frank
« FMI, la preuve par l’Ethiopie », Joseph E. Stiglitz
« Les retraités trahis par les fonds de pension », Martine Bulard
« Faillites publiques, fortunes privées », Olivier Toscer
La reprise en main de l’économie
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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« Et la bulle immobilière éclata... » I.W.
« Pékin, mont-de-piété de l’Amérique. » M. B.
« Malaise à Wall Street et à la City », A. B.
« Le modèle américain », Pierre Dommergues
« Quand le patronat accuse le capitalisme, » François Chesnais
« Trois taxes globales pour maîtriser la spéculation. » Howard M. Wachtel
« « Cher Monsieur... », Pour en finir avec les crises », Frédéric Lordon
Manière de voir, No. 103 (February/March 2009)http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/103/
Les révoltés du travail
Résistances improbables
« Les sans-papiers jouent leur va-tout », Olivier Piot
« Aux Philippines, une zone franche se rebelle », Mimi Brady et Henry Holland
« Fin de l’idylle entre Renault et la Roumanie », Stéphane Luçon
« Les « Nanas-Benz », reines d’Afrique », Elisabeth Lequeret
« Ce que les Japonais ont appris à Narita », Philippe Pons
« Les chômeurs français font école en Allemagne », Brigitte Pätzold
« Des cols blancs contre la finance », Christophe Dabitch et Jean-François Meekel
« Notre utopie contre la leur », Serge Halimi
Luttes organisées
« Quand les données officielles dévoilent la vitalité des conflits sociaux », S. Béroud, J.-M. Denis, G. Desage, B. Giraud et J. Pélisse
« 1905-1995, un siècle de batailles ouvrières », Michel Dreyfus
« Petites chroniques d’une crise annoncée », Gilbert Rochu
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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« S’organiser en temps d’apartheid », Jean-Pierre Richard
« A Chicago, la lutte syndicale a payé », Peter Dreier
« Les femmes dans les luttes sociales », Geneviève et Thérèse Brisac
« La Commune de Longwy », Pierre Rimbert et Rafaël Trapet
« Pour un mouvement social européen », Pierre Bourdieu
Nouveaux horizons
« Les inventeurs de mondes », Mireille Azzoug
« Ambiguïtés de l’économie sociale et solidaire », Jean-Loup Motchane
« Redistribution des terres en Ecosse », Alastair McIntosh et Vérène Nicolas
« A Longo Maï, réussites et tâtonnements », Ingrid Carlander
« L’Espagne, royaume de l’anarchisme », Frédéric Goldbronn et Frank Mintz
« Les travailleurs et l’autogestion au Chili et au Pérou », Michel Raptis
« Un chef-d’oeuvre pour saluer une révolution », Lionel Richard
« Bâtir la civilisation du temps libéré », André Gorz
« Caméra sociale » Mona Chollet
Middle East Journal, Vol. 62 No. 4 (Autumn 2008)http://www.mideasti.org/middle-east-journal/issue/62/4
“Showdown at Doha: The Secret Oil Deal That Helped Sink the Shah of Iran,” AndrewScott Cooper
“Imperial Myopia: Some Lessons from Two Invasions of Iraq,” Peter Sluglett
“ ‘Only for Women:’ Women, the State, and Reform in Saudi Arabia,” Amélie Le Renard
“Back from the Brink: Turkey’s Ambivalent Approaches to the Hard Drugs Issue,” PhilipRobins
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“The Israeli National Information Center and Collective Memory of the Israeli-ArabConflict,” Rafi Nets-Zehngut
Middle East Policy, Vol. 15, No. 4 (Winter 2008)http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118000334/home
Terrorism
Douglas Macgregor, Marvin Weinbaum, Abdullah Ansary, Robert Pape, “The"Global Waron Terror": What Has Been Learned?” (p 1-25)
Brian Glyn Williams, “Mullah Omar's Missiles: A Field Report on Suicide Bombers inAfghanistan,” (p 26-46)
Iran And Its Neighbors
Kayhan Barzegar, “Iran's Foreign Policy in Post-Invasion Iraq” (p 47-58)
Mustafa Kibaroglu, Baris Caglar, “Implications of A Nuclear Iran for Turkey” (p 59-80)
Arthur Bonner, “Georgian Losses and Russia's Gain” (p 81-90)
Ari Barbalat, “A Friend Like This: Re-evaluating Bush and Israel” (p 91-111)
Original Articles
Joseph A. Kéchichian, “A Vision of Oman: State of the Sultanate Speeches by Qaboos BinSaid, 1970–2006” (p 112-133)
Augustus Richard Norton, Eva Bellin, Eric Davis, Michael C. Hudson, Bahman Baktiari,Kristin Smith Diwan, “Advice to President Obama: Dedicated to the Memory ofProfessor Louis J. Cantori” (p 134-156)
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 12, No. 1 (March 2008)http://meria.idc.ac.il/journal/2008/issue1/jvol12no1in.asp
"Lebanon 2006: Unfinished War," by Jonathan Spyer
"Ignorance Cannot Be Realistic: A Critique of the Mearsheimer-Walt Thesis," OfiraSeliktar
"Impediments to Stability in Iraq: The Elusive Economic Dimension," by Robert Looney
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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"Harsh Readjustment: The Sunnis and the Political Process in Contemporary Iraq," byRonen Zeidel
"Shaykh Yusuf al-Qaradawi: Portrait of a Leading Islamist Thinker," by Ana Soage
"The Relationship Between Traditional and Contemporary Islamist Political Thought,"by Sherko Kirmanj
"Pakistan on The Tightrope," by Isaac Kfir
Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 44, No. 6 (December 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g905051213~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Alkan, Necati. “Süleyman Nazif's ‘Open Letter to Jesus’: An Anti-Christian Polemic in theEarly Turkish Republic.” 851-865.
Senay, Banu. “How do the Youth Perceive and Experience Turkish Citizenship?” 963-976.
Philliou, Christine. “Women in the Ottoman Balkans: Gender, Culture and History.”1009-1010.
Talhamy, Yvette. “The Nusayri Leader Isma‘il Khayr Bey and the Ottomans (1854–58).”895-908.
Fine, Jonathan. “Establishing a New Governmental System: The Israeli EmergencyCommittee, October 1947–April 1948.” 977-991.
Bahgat, Gawdat. “Energy and the Arab–Israeli Conflict.” 937-944.
Ergin, Murat. “ ‘Is the Turk a White Man?’ Towards a Theoretical Framework for Race inthe Making of Turkishness.” 827-850.
Oguzlu, Tarik and Mustafa Kibaroglu. “Incompatibilities in Turkish and EuropeanSecurity Cultures Diminish Turkey's Prospects for EU Membership.” 945-962.
Wasti, Syed Tanvir. “Amir Shakib Arslan and the CUP Triumvirate.” 925-936.
Warburg, Gabriel. “Voices of Exiles: A Study of al-Tayyib Salih and his Work.” 1010-1012.
Archibald, J. and M. Guidère. “Understanding the Media's Language of War.” 993-1007.
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Bein, Amit. “The Istanbul Earthquake of 1894 and Science in the Late Ottoman Empire.”909-924.
Ginat, Rami and Meir Noema. “Al-Fajr al-Jadid: A Breeding Ground for the Emergence ofRevolutionary Ideas in the Immediate Post-Second World War.” 867-893.
Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 45, No. 1 (January 2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g907378456~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Reza Razavi, “The Cultural Revolution in Iran, with Close Regard to the Universities, andits Impact on the Student Movement,” 1 – 17
Nev n Co ar; Sevtap Dem rc , “Incorporation into the World Economy: From Railwaysto Highways (1850-1950),” 19 – 31
Jad Chaaban, “Youth and Development in the Arab Countries: The Need for a DifferentApproach,” 33 – 55
Gerass Mos Karabel As, “The Military Institution, Atat rk's Principles, and Turkey'sSisyphean Quest for Democracy,” 57 – 69
V. Necla Gey kda i; M. Ya ar Gey kda I, “Liberalization in Turkey: Does History RepeatItself?” 71 – 86
Yair Seltenreich; Yossi Katz, “Between the Galilee and its Neighbouring Isle: JulesRosenheck and the JCA Settlements in Cyprus, 1897-1928,” 87 – 109
Paul Rowe, “Building Coptic Civil Society: Christian Groups and the State in Mubarak'sEgypt,” 111 – 126
Simone Panter-Brick, “Gandhi's Views on the Resolution of the Conflict in Palestine: ANote,” 127 – 133
Masoud Kazemzadeh, “Nukes, Options and Liberalism: US-Iran Confrontation,” 135 –147
Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 43, No. 1 (January 2009)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=ASS&volumeId=43&seriesId=0&issueId=01
“Introduction,” David Gilmartin, pp 1-3
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“At Empire's End: The Nizam, Hyderabad and Eighteenth-Century India,” munis d.Faruqui, pp 5-43
“The Ignored Elites: Turks, Mongols and a Persian Secretarial Class in the Early DelhiSultanate,” Sunil Kumar, pp 45-77
“ ‘Silk Road, Cotton Road or . . . . Indo-Chinese Trade in Pre-European Times’,” StephenF. Dale, pp 79-88
“The Political Economy of Opium Smuggling in Early Nineteenth Century India: Leakageor Resistance?” Claude Markovits, pp 89-111
“Opium and the Company: Maritime Trade and Imperial Finances on Java, 1684–1796,”George Bryan Souza, pp 113-133
“The Mughals, the Sufi Shaikhs and the Formation of the Akbari Dispensation,” MuzaffarAlam, pp 135-174
“Notes on Political Thought in Medieval and Early Modern South India,” VelcheruNarayana Rao and Sanjay Subrahmanyam, pp 175-210
“Becoming Turk the Rajput Way: Conversion and Identity in an Indian WarriorNarrative,” Cynthia Talbot, pp 211-243
“Nature and Nurture on Imperial China's Frontiers,” peter c. Perdue, pp 245-267
“The Frontiers of Memory: What the Marathas Remembered of Vijayanagara,” SumitGuha, pp 269-288
“ ‘Kiss My Foot,’ Said the King: Firearms, Diplomacy, and the Battle for Raichur, 1520,”Richard M. Eaton, pp 289-313
“Frontiers of Family Life: Early Modern Atlantic and Indian Ocean Worlds,” PatrickManning, pp 315-333
“Chinese Revenue Farms and Borders in Southeast Asia,” Carl A. Trocki, pp 335-362
Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 43, No. 2 (March 2009)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=ASS&volumeId=43&seriesId=0&issueId=02
“From Hell to Paradise? Voluntary Transfer of Convicts to the Andaman Islands, 1921–1940,” Taylor C. Sherman, pp 367-388
“The Co-ordinating State and the Economy: The Nizamat in Eighteenth-Century Bengal,”Tilottama Mukherjee, pp 389-436
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“ ‘First Our Jobs Then Our Girls’: The Dominant Caste Perceptions on the ‘Rising’ Dalits,”Prem Chowdhry, pp 437-479
“Quality Control: Resource Access and Local Village Elections in Rural China,” janet c.Sturgeon, pp 481-509
“Mumbdev and the Other Mother Goddesses in Mumbai,” Marika Vicziany and JayantBapat, pp 511-541
“A City With a View: The Afforestation of the Delhi Ridge, 1883–1913,” Michael Mannand Samiksha Sehrawat, pp 543-570
“Re-Orientalism: The Perpetration and Development of Orientalism by Orientals,” LisaLau, pp 571-590
Modern Italy, Vol. 14, No. 1 (January 2009)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g908870979~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Coluzzi, Paolo. “Endangered minority and regional languages (‘dialects’) in Italy.” 39-54.
Di Mascio, Fabrizio. “Sociology of the stumbling-block: A profile of AlessandroPizzorno.” 69-90.
Capussotti, Enrica. “Moveable identities: Migration, subjectivity and cinema incontemporary Italy.” 55-68.
Cullen, Niamh. “The intellectual community of La Rivoluzione Liberale.” 19-38.
Näre, Lena. “The making of ‘proper’ homes: Everyday practices in migrant domesticwork in Naples.” 1-17.
Le Monde Diplomatique, December 2008http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/12
Idées
« Marx contre-attaque » (aperçu), par Lucien Sève
Finance
« La tourmente financière : vue d’un paradis fiscal » (aperçu), par Olivier Cyran
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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« Séisme sur les retraites en Argentine et au Chili », par Manuel Riesco
« L’art de faire une place : aux fonds de pension à la française », par Jean-FrançoisCouvrat
Massacres
« Qu’y a-t-il de commun entre Tamerlan, Oradour et le Prince Noir ? » par Christian deBrie
Etats-Unis
« Le Parti démocrate au pouvoir pour vingt ans ? » par Jerome Karabel
Moyen-Orient
« Et l’Irak accouche d’une nouvelle génération de djihadistes » par Vicken Cheterian
« Désarroi des militants au Liban » (V. C.)
Congo
« Kinshasa menacé par la poudrière du Kivu » (aperçu), par Mwayila Tshiyembe
« Balkanisation et pillage dans l’Est congolais » par Delphine Abadie, Alain Deneault etWilliam Sacher
Ecologie
« Cette glace qui fond en Antarctique » par Daniel Tanuro
Université
« Comment devenir le chercheur du mois » (aperçu), par Pierre Jourde
Télévision
« Vraiment si belle, la vie ? » (aperçu), par Mathias Roux
« Un G20 pour rien » par Serge Halimi
Dossier Immobilier : Quand La Pierre Se Transformait En Or
« L’univers télévisé du « porno » immobilier » (aperçu), par Aditya Chakrabortty
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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« Poumon et maillon faible de l’économie mondiale » par Akram Belkaïd
« La fièvre de la brique espagnole » par José García Montalvo
« Rêves contrariés à Dubaï » par Samir Aïta
« Des agences prises à leur propre piège » par Marc Endeweld
« Tous petits propriétaires » par Laurent Bonelli
« A Jersey, même les chambrettes sont hors de prix » (O.C.)
Europe, Russie
« L’Europe énergétique entre concurrence et dépendance » par Mathias Reymond
« Désunion européenne face à la Géorgie » par Federico Santopinto
« André Glucksmann l’a-t-il lu ? » par Dominique Vidal
« La Russie retrouve ses racines musulmanes » par Jacques Lévesque
Asie
« Au Timor, des amnisties qui divisent » par Angela Robson
« Petites mains chinoises pour industrie nippone » par Anne Roy
Le Monde Diplomatique, January 2009http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2009/01
Asie
« Plongée au cœur de l’Inde musulmane » (aperçu) par Wendy Kristianasen
« Quand la télévision choisit ses victimes » par Gnani Sankaran
« Liaisons dangereuses en Asie du Sud » par Graham Usher
Etats-Unis
« A Chicago, la lutte syndicale a payé » par Peter Dreier
« M. Obama, prisonnier des « faucons » en Irak ? » par Gareth Porter
Europe
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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« Grèce : « Aux banques ils donnent de l’argent, aux jeunes ils offrent... des balles », » parValia Kaimaki
« En Italie, l’onde, la vague et la marée » par Serge Quadruppani
« La politique agricole commune vidée de son contenu » par Jean-Christophe Kroll etAurélie Trouvé
Bande Dessinée
« Les indépendants défendent leurs cases » (aperçu) par Morvandiau
Les Livres Du Mois
« La mémoire refoulée de l’Occident » (aperçu) par Alain Gresh
Dossier : Les Anarchistes
« Appellations peu contrôlées » (aperçu) par Jean-Pierre Garnier
« Une indocilité contagieuse » par Claire Auzias
« CNT, les clés de l’énigme espagnole » par Angel Herrerín López.
« En Extrême-Orient aussi... » par Cho Se-hyun
« L’infréquentable Pierre-Joseph Proudhon » par Edward Castleton
« Une tradition révolutionnaire et philosophique » (inédit)par Daniel Colson
« La géographie sociale d’Elisée Reclus » (inédit) par Philippe Pelletier
Afrique
« Convoitises sur l’argent des émigrés » par Anne-Cécile Robert et Jean-ChristopheServant
« Un juteux marché pour les opérateurs de téléphonie » (A.-C. R. et J.-C. S.)
« Aux racines du contentieux franco-rwandais » par André-Michel Essoungou
Amérique Latine
« Cuba en quête d’un modèle socialiste renouvelé » par Janette Habel
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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« L’équipe de choc de la CIA » par Hernando Calvo Ospina
Le Monde Diplomatique, February 2009http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2009/02
Economie
« M. George W. Bush, président MBA » par Ibrahim Warde
« Plan « zéro emploi » dans les Ardennes » (aperçu) par Thomas Lemahieu
« Pour les vrais libéraux, la meilleure défense, c’est l’attaque » par Eric Dupin
« « Perseverare diabolicum » » par Pierre Rimbert
« Anniversaire en demi-teinte pour l’euro » par Laurent Jacque
Europe
« Espagne : Bataille pour la mémoire républicaine » par Jean Ortiz
« Du cheval de M. Nicolas Sarkozy » par Laurent Bonelli
Maghreb
« L’Algérie ne croit plus aux promesses » (aperçu) par Ali Chibani
« Au miroir brouillé du petit écran » (A. C.)
« Remise en cause des acquis démocratiques » (A.C., article inédit)
En Débat
« Liberté, fraternité... diversité ? » par Walter Benn Michaels
Dossier Proche-Orient
« Contrecoups imprévus de la guerre livrée aux Palestiniens » (aperçu) par Alain Gresh
« Plus le mensonge est gros... » (aperçu) par Dominique Vidal
« A Gaza, Goliath parle hébreu » (aperçu) par Tom Segev
« David et Goliath ou le mythe historique inversé » (article inédit) par Shlomo Sand
« L’insoutenable légèreté de la guerre » (article inédit) par Peter Lagerquist
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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« Nous n’avons plus que la persévérance » (version complète sur ce site) par LeilaFarsakh
« Quand Israël et l’Iran s’alliaient discrètement » (aperçu) par Alastair Crooke
« Au-delà de la violence au Proche-Orient » par Jean-Pierre Filiu
« Un lieu qui pleure » par John Berger
Amérique Latine
« Tous les Colombiens ne s’appellent pas Ingrid » (aperçu) par Paola Ramírez Orozco
« Exploits militaires » par Maurice Lemoine
Amérique Du Nord
« La diplomatie belliqueuse d’Ottawa » par Marc-Olivier Bherer
« Le cœur de l’automobile américaine a cessé de battre » (aperçu) par Laurent Carroué
« Plan d’aide français » par Martine Bulard
Afrique
« Monsanto à l’assaut du Burkina Faso » par Françoise Gérard
« Quand un assassinat devient une affaire d’Etat » par Vincent Ouattara
Nonproliferation Review, Vol. 16, No. 1 (March 2009)http://cns.miis.edu/npr/161toc.htm
“The Development of Latent Nuclear Capabilities in Southeast Asia: An All-Too-Predictable Outcome?” Michael Malley and Tanya Ogilvie-White
“Coercion or Persuasion? The Bumpy Road to Multilateralization of NuclearSafeguards,” Astrid Forland
Viewpoints
“Albania's Chemical Weapons Con,” Matthew V. Tompkins
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“The Global Nuclear Energy Partnership: Proliferation Concerns and Implications,” JeffLindemyer
ORBIS: A Journal of World Affairs, Vol. 52, No. 4 (Autumn 2008)http://www.fpri.org/orbis/5204/
The Future of War
“Editor’s Corner,” Mackubin T. Owens
“Learning from Contemporary Conflicts to Prepare for Future War,” H.R. MacMaster
“History, War and the Future,” Williamson Murray
“A Strategy for Victory and Implications for Policy,” William C. Martel
“The Global Era of National Policy and the Pan-Oceanic National Fleet,” Robert O. Work
“Air and Space Power Going Forward,” David A. Deptula
“The ‘Demand Side’: Avoiding a Nuclear-Armed Iran,” Bradley L. Bowman
“U.S. Military Fatalities in Iraq: A Perspective on Year 5,” Glenn Kutler
“Reputation and U.S. Withdrawal from Iraq,” Hakan Tun
“U.S. Asia Policy and the American Election,” Lowell Dittmer
“Taiwan’s Presidential and Legislative Elections,” Shelley Rigger
Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 78, No. 1 (February 2009)http://caliber.ucpress.net/toc/phr/78/1
“Global West, American Frontier,” David M. Wrobel, 1-26
“ "Beating Plowshares into Swords": The Colorado River Delta, the Yellow Peril, and theMovement for Federal Reclamation, 1901–1928,” Eric Boime, 27-53
“A Bolt from the Blue? New Evidence on the Japanese Navy and the Draft UnderstandingBetween Japan and the United States, April 1941,” Peter Mauch, 55-79
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Counter-Organizing the Sunbelt: Right-to-Work Campaigns and Anti-UnionConservatism, 1943–1958,” Elizabeth Tandy Shermer, 81-118
Parlement[s], Revue d'histoire politique, No. 10 (November 2008)http://www.parlements.org/revueparlements.html#P_N10
La Guerre des mots. 14-18 dans les Parlements européens
Fabienne Bock, “Introduction”
Nicolas Rousselier, “Le Parlement français et la Première guerre mondiale”
Charles Ridel, “Le Parlement français et la question des embusqués”
Alexandre Niess, “Les Régions libérées à la Chambre: textes et hommes (1917-1925)”
Vahakn N. Dadrian and Alexandre Niess, “L’État, le parti et les parlementaires turcs faceau génocide arménien (1908-1916)”
Carlotta Latini, “Le Parlement italien et les lois d'exception”
Torsten Oppelland, “Les débats sur la guerre sous-marine et la neutralité américaineau Reichstag (1914-1917)”
Nicolas Patin, “La guerre au Reichstag : la génération du front entre en politique?”
Sources
“Le député Viollette défend les prérogatives parlementaires en matière d’économie deguerre (rapport du 29 décembre 1916),” Fabienne Bock
Varia
Christophe Maillard, “Pierre Biétry (1872-1918), un parlementaire iconoclaste”
Anne-Laure Anizan, “Paul Painlevé, le savant et le politique”
Pascal Marchand, “La déclaration de politique générale a-t-elle vécu?”
Passport : The Newsletter of the Society for the History of American Foreign Relations,August 2008http://www.shafr.org/publications/newsletter/august-2008/
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Debating the New Henry Kissinger Literature,” Jeremi Suri, Thomas Alan Schwartz,Jussi Hanhimäki, Edward C. Keefer, and William Glenn Gray
“A Roundtable Discussion of Melvyn Leffler's For the Soul of Mankind: The UnitedStates, the Soviet Union, and the Cold War,” Anna Kasten Nelson, Bruce Cumings,Vojtech Mastny, and Melvyn Leffler
“Public History and Public Audiences: The U.S. Department of State and Its HistoricalAdvisory Committee,” Kristin L. Ahlberg and Thomas W. Zeiler
“‘Now, is This Your Work, Or...?’ " Reflections on The Value of History,” J. Samuel Walker
“Accessing Records at Modern Presidential Libraries,” Robert Holzweiss
“Teaching New Media: A Class on the White House Tapes,” Jeff Woods
“Bureaucracy or Censorship? An Experience with the FBI,” Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones
“Testimony of Dr. Martin J. Sherwin, in Front of the Senate Homeland Security andGovernmental Affairs Committee, Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management,Government Information, Federal Services and International Security, May 14, 2008”
Politique étrangère, 2008-4 (Winter 2008)http://www.cairn.be/revue-politique-etrangere-2008-4.htm
Le nucléaire au risque de la prolifération
Nicolas Sarkozy, “L'union Européenne Et La Russie Dans La Gouvernance Mondiale,”723-732
Dmitri Medvedev, “La Russie, La Crise Mondiale Et La Sécurité Européenne,” 733-743
Thomas Graham, “Les Relations Etats-Unis/Russie : Une Approche Pragmatique,” 745-758
Julianne Smith, “La Relation Otan/Russie : Moment De Vérité Ou Déjà Vu?” 759-773
Gaïdz Minassian, “Grandes Manœuvres Au Caucase Du Sud,” 775-787
Grégory Boutherin, “Le Traité Sur La Non-Prolifération A L'épreuve Du Droit DeRetrait,” 791-801
Raphaël Gutmann, “L'accord Nucléaire Indo-Américain : Enjeux Et Polémiques,” 803-815
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Reza Khazaneh, “Iran: Avancées Et Maîtrise Des Programmes Nucléaires,” 817-826
Jean-Loup Samaan, “Mythes Et Réalités Des Cyberguerres,” 829-841
Michel Goya, “Fureur Et Stupeur: Les enseignements psychologiques de la guerre entreIsraël et le Hezbollah,” 843-855
Pierre-Henri d’Argenson, “L'influence Française A Bruxelles : Les Voies De LaReconquête,” 857-870
Assane Thiam, “La Politique Africaine De Nicolas Sarkozy : Rupture Ou Continuité?”873-884
Gérard Claude, “Les Relations Franco-Libanaises Sous La Présidence De Jacques Chirac,”885-897
Philippe François, et al., “Géostratégie De La Mongolie : Entre Le Marteau Et L'enclume,”899-909
Politique étrangère, 2008-5 (2008 Supplement)http://www.cairn.be/revue-politique-etrangere-2008-5.htm
World Policy Conference 2008
Jolyon Howorth, “United States: What Does The World Expect Of The “IndispensableNation”?” 11-22
Thomas Gomart, “Russia Alone Forever? The Kremlin's Strategic Solitude,” 23-33
Takashi Inoguchi, “Japan: What Power? What Strategies?” 35-49
Valérie Niquet, “China's Future Role In World Affairs: An Enigma?” 51-64
Jean-Luc Racine, “Post-Post-Colonial India: From Regional Power To Global Player,” 65-78
Michel Foucher, “Is The European Union Viable With 27 Members And More? FromMarket To Geopolitical Community,” 79-91
William I. Zartman, “Sub-Saharan Africa: Implosion Or Take-Off?” 93-108
Denis Bauchard, “From Lebanon To Pakistan: A Crescent Of Crisis Out Of Control?” 109-122
Bassma Kodmani, “Peace In The Middle East: The Dangers Of Delay,” 123-139
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Philippe Moreau Defarges, “Global Governance: Mirage Or Horizon?” 141-151
Jacques Mistral, “Globalization Needs Better Governance,” 153-162
Jacques Lesourne, “Energy And Climate: An Undeniable Need For Global Cooperation,”163-173
Guido Steinberg, “Towards A “Political Turn” In The Fight Against Jihadist Terrorism,”175-187
Christophe Bertossi, “The Regulation Of Migration: A Global Challenge,” 189-202
Raison politiques, No. 32 (2008)http://www.pressesdesciencespo.fr/livre/?GCOI=27246100099410&fa=sommaire
Nouvelles menaces, nouvelles sécurités
“De la sécurité nationale à la sécurité humaine,” Frédéric Gros, Monique Castillo,Antoine Garapon
Dossier
“La condition biométrique. Une approche socio-anthropologique des techniquesd'identification biométrique,” Gérard Dubey
“La sécurité humaine : Un renversement conceptuel pour les relations internationals,”Florence Basty
“La Biosécurité. Vers une Anthropologie du Contemporain,” Stephen J. Collier, AndrewLakoff, Paul Rabinov
“La naissance de la biosécurité,” Jean Luc Déziel
“Nouvelles conflictualités et défense moderne : l'approche globale,” Gl Coulloume-Labarthe et al.
“Sécurité, précaution et prospective,” Carl Trémoureux
“La peur de la violence et la figure du "dernier homme",” Monique Castillo
Varia
“Peut-on désutopiser le cosmopolitisme ? Réflexions sur la citoyenneté mondiale,” YvesCusset
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice, Vol. 12, No. 4 (December2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=13642529&volume=12&issue=4
Jenkins, Keith. “Cohen contra Ankersmit.” 537-555
Mason, Mark. “Historiospectography? Sande Cohen on Derrida's Specters of Marx.” 483-514
Munslow, Alun. “History: Discipline and epistemology.” 557-568
Jenkins, Keith. “Editorial: On Sande Cohen.” 433-436
Cohen, Sande. “On the body and passion of history and historiography.” 515-535
Davies, Martin L. “Institutionalized nihilism: An outline of the academic function.” 463-481
Coope, Jonathan. “Historics: Why history dominates contemporary society.” 569-572
Jenkins, Keith. “Sande Cohen: On the verge of newness.” 437-462.
Review of International Studies, Vol. 35, No. 1 (January 2009)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=RIS&volumeId=35&seriesId=0&issueId=01
“America’s Middle East grand strategy after Iraq: the moment for offshore balancing hasarrived,” Christopher Layne, pp 5-25
“American power preponderance and the nuclear revolution,” Campbell Craig, pp 27-44
“Those who forget historiography are doomed to republish it: empire, imperialism andcontemporary debates about American power,” Paul k. Macdonald, pp 45-67
“The construction of US financial power,” Martijn Konings, pp 69-94
“Hegemonic transition in East Asia? The dynamics of Chinese and American power,”Mark Beeson, pp 95-112
“Conceptualising hegemonic legitimacy,” David P. Rapkin and Dan Braaten, pp 113-149
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Matrioshka hegemony? Multi-levelled hegemonic competition and security in post-Soviet Central Asia,” Ruth Deyermond, pp 151-173
“Enacting meaning-in-use: qualitative research on norms and international relations,”Antje Wiener, pp 175-193
“Constructivist methods: a plea and manifesto for pluralism,” Amir Lupovici, pp 195-218
“British irony, global justice: a pragmatic reading of Chris Brown, Banksy and RickyGervais,” James Brassett, pp 219-245
Revue française de science politique, Vol. 58, No. 6 (December 2008)http://www.pressesdesciencespo.fr/livre/?GCOI=27246100149900&fa=sommaire
De la responsabilité
“Usages de la responsabilité. Introduction,” Bertrand Guillarme
“De la responsabilité pénale à l'éthique de responsabilité. Le cas des écrivains,” GisèleSapiro
“La responsabilité collective et ses implications,” Margaret Gilbert
“Responsabilité collective, justice réparatrice et droit pénal international,” ChristianNadeau
“A la recherche d'une responsabilité du contrôle,” Dennis F. Thompson
“Scandales et redéfinitions de la responsabilité politique. La dynamique des affaires desanté et de sécurité publiques,” Violaine Roussel
“Soigner en situation de risque judiciaire. Refus de transfusion et responsabilitémédicale,” Janine Barbot
Lectures Critiques
“Sur quelques aspects du retour du contexte dans l'analyse électorale. En lisant Ladémocratie de l'abstention,” Bruno Cautrès
“A la recherche du territoire. Lecture critique de quatre ouvrages sur la Franceinfranationale,” Andy Smith
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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“Au-delà de la « panique morale ». Regards croisés sur deux socio-analyses des ghettosaméricains et des banlieues françaises,” Julie Voldoire
Revue historique, No. 647 (2008-3)http://www.cairn.info/revue-historique-2008-3.htm
Audrey Becker-Piriou, “De Galla Placidia A Amalasonthe, Des Femmes Dans LaDiplomatie Romano-Barbare En Occident?” 507-543
Jean-Patrice Boudet, “Le Modèle Du Roi Sage Aux Xiiie Et Xive Siècles: Salomon,Alphonse X Et Charles V,” 545-566
Sylvain Gouguenheim, “Le Procès Pontifical De 1339 Contre L'ordre Teutonique,” 567-603
Matthieu Lahaye, “Louis Ier D'espagne (1661-1700) : Essai Sur Une Virtualité Politique,”605-626
Xavier Paulès, “Les Institutions De Désintoxication Pour Fumeurs D'opium A CantonEntre 1839 Et 1952,” 627-656
Johann Chapoutot, “Comment Meurt Un Empire : Le Nazisme, L'antiquité Et Le Mythe,”657-767
Revue historique, No. 648 (2008-4)http://www.cairn.info/revue-historique-2008-4.htm
Isabelle Simon, “Un Aspect Des Largesses Impériales : Les Sparsiones De Missilia ARome (Ier Siècle Avant J.-C. - Iiie Siècle Après J.-C.),” 763-788
Joël Blanchard, “Les Hiérarchies De L'honneur: Avatars d'une grille conceptuelle à la findu Moyen Âge : Mézières et le Pseudo-Denys,” 789-817
Isabelle Poutrin, “La Conversion Des Musulmans De Valence (1521-1525) Et LaDoctrine De L'église Sur Les Baptêmes Forcés,” 819-855
LAURENT TATARENKO, “Violence Et Luttes Religieuses Dans La Confédération Polono-Lithuanienne (Fin Xvie - Milieu Du Xviie Siècle): L'exemple De La Confrontation EntreUniates Et Orthodoxes,” 857-890
Pierre Barral, “Gambetta Et Ferry, Amis Et Rivaux,” 891-919
Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine, Vol. 55, No. 3 (Autumn 2008)http://www.cairn.be/revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2008-3.htm
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Le Fascisme Italien
Marie-Anne Matard-Bonucci, “Lectures Et Relectures Du Fascisme Italien,” 5-10
Emilio Gentile, “Le Silence De Hannah Arendt : L'interprétation Du Fascisme Dans LesOrigines Du Totalitarisme,” 11-34
Jean-Yves Dormagen, “Le Duce Et L'état-Major Du Fascisme : Contribution A UneSociologie De La Domination Charismatique,” 35-60
Paul Dietschy, “Sport, Education Physique Et Fascisme Sous Le Regard De L'historien,”61-84
François Dumasy, “Le Fascisme Est-Il Un « Article D'exportation »? Idéologie et enjeuxsociaux du Parti National Fasciste en Libye pendant la colonisation italienne,” 85-115
Marie-Anne Matard-Bonucci, “D'une Persécution L'autre : Racisme Colonial EtAntisémitisme Dans L'italie Fasciste,” 116-137
David Rodogno, “Le Nouvel Ordre Fasciste En Méditerranée,1940-1943 : PrésupposésIdéologiques, Visions Et Velléités,” 138-156
Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine, Vol. 55, No. 4 (Winter 2008)http://www.cairn.be/revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2008-4.htm
Gouverner Les Corps
Lars Behrisch, “Ville, Criminalité Et Contrôle Social En Allemagne ( Xve - Xvie Siècles) :Görlitz, Un Cas A Part?” 7-33
Sylvain Rappaport,“Les Femmes Et La Chaîne Des Forçats : L'impossible Absence,” 34-56
Enquêter
Isabelle Laboulais-Lesage,“Entre Minéralogie Et Statistique Territoriale : Les EnquêtesDu Journal Des Mines Entre L'an Iii Et L'an Vii,” 57-81
Daniel Roche, “Les Chevaux De La République : L'enquête De L'an Iii,” 82-121
Gérer
Evelyne Payen-variéras, “Entre Priorités Marchandes Et Rationalité Industrielle : LesCadres Salariés Du Central Pacific Railroad, 1869-1889,” 122-159
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine, Vol. 55, No. 5 (2009)http://www.cairn.be/revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2008-5.htm
Origines Et Conséquences De L'évaluation Dans L'université
Jean-Yves Mérindol, “Comment L'évaluation Est Arrivée Dans Les UniversitésFrançaises,” 7-27
Isabelle Bruno, “La Recherche Scientifique Au Crible Du Benchmarking. Petite histoired'une technologie de gouvernement,” 28-45
Sandrine Garcia,“L'évaluation Des Enseignements : Une Révolution Invisible,” 46-60
La Bibliométrie En Débat
Ghislaine Filliatreau, “Bibliométrie Et Evaluation En Sciences Humaines Et Sociales :Une Brève Introduction,” 61-66
Yves Gingras, “Du Mauvais Usage De Faux Indicateurs,” 67-79
Christophe Charle, “L'organisation De La Recherche En Sciences Sociales En FranceDepuis 1945 : Bref Bilan Historique Et Critique: L'organisation de la recherche enFrance,” 80-97
Revue internationale et stratégique, No. 72 (Winter 2008)http://www.cairn.be/revue-internationale-et-strategique-2008-4.htm
Vers un nouveau partage du monde?
Eclairages
Roger Cukierman, “Entretien,” 7-20
Rony Brauman, “Entretien,” 21-28
Patrick Quantin, “Le Rôle Politique Des Sociétés Civiles En Afrique : Vers UnRééquilibrage,” 29-38
Cyrille P. Coutansais, “La Piraterie Moderne, Nouvel Avatar De La Mondialisation,” 39-50
Rudolf El-Kareh, “La Crise Politique Et Institutionnelle Au Liban,” 51-60
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Yannick Prost, “L'amérique Latine, Encore Terre De Révolutions?” 61-72
Loïc Simonet, “L'otan Et La Protection Des Infrastructures Energétiques : Jusqu'oùEngager L'alliance?” 73-82
Simon Henderson, “ Géopolitique Energétique, Une Perspective Américaine,” 83-88
Royal United Services Institute Journal, Vol. 153, No. 6 (December 2008)http://www.rusi.org/go.php
“The Overdue Defence Review: Old Questions, New Answers,” Michael Clarke
“Britain's National Security: Compulsion and Discretion,” Colin S Gray
“A Force for Influence?: Making British Defence Effective,” Malcolm Chalmers
“Campaign Plans, War Plans and British Defence Policy,” Hew Strachan
“Sleep-Walking Towards the Precipice: The Crisis in British Defence Policy,” MaxHastings
“Imagining the Congo Secure and Stable,” J. Peter Pham
“Time for a New Deal: Rational Investment and Nation-building in Congo,” StephenCarter
“What the DRC Most Needs: A Surge of its Own,” Michael O’Hanlon
“NATO and the Challenge of Energy Security,” Jaap de Hoop Scheffer
“Counter-Terrorism from Within: Assessing Saudi Arabia's Religious Rehabilitation andDisengagement Programme,” Christopher Boucek
“Exploiting the Value of Small Navies: The Experience of the Royal Netherlands Navy,”Julian Lindley-French and Wouter van Straten
“Clash of Organisational Cultures? The challenge of integrating civilian and militaryefforts in stabilisation operations,” Andrea Baumann
“Identity, Politics and Technology in the RAF’s History,” Richard Overy
“ 'Collateral Damage’ and the Battle for Saipan, 1944,” Matthew Hughes
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, First Quarter 2009
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Security Studies, Vol. 17, No. 4 (2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g906333449~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Becker, Una, Harald Müller and Simone Wisotzki. “Democracy and Nuclear ArmsControl—Destiny or Ambiguity?” 810-854.
Krause, Peter John Paul. “The Last Good Chance: A Reassessment of U.S. Operations atTora Bora.” 644-684.
Byman, Daniel. “An Autopsy of the Iraq Debacle: Policy Failure or Bridge Too Far?” 599-643.
Löwenheim, Oded and Gadi Heimann. “Revenge in International Politics.” 685-724.
Haacke, Jürgen and Paul D. Williams. “Regional Arrangements, Securitization, andTransnational Security Challenges: The African Union and the Association of SoutheastAsian Nations Compared.” 775-809.
Dyson, Tom. “Convergence and Divergence in Post-Cold War British, French, andGerman Military Reforms: Between International Structure and Executive Autonomy.”725-774.
Security Studies, Vol. 17, No. 4 (2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g908662463~db=all~tab=toc~order=page
Slater, Jerome. “The Two Books of Mearsheimer and Walt.” 4-57.
Mistry, Dinshaw. “Tempering Optimism about Nuclear Deterrence in South Asia.” 148-182.
Lehmann, Timothy C. “Keeping Friends Close and Enemies Closer: Classical RealistStatecraft and Economic Exchange in U.S. Interwar Strategy.” 115-147.
MacDonald, Paul K. “Is Imperial Rule Obsolete?: Assessing the Barriers to OverseasAdventurism.” 79-114.
Mearsheimer, John J. and Stephen M. Walt. “Is It Love or The Lobby? ExplainingAmerica's Special Relationship with Israel.” 58-78.
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Politics and Policy
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Race and Ethnicity
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