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Compiled by Lubna Qureshi, Stockholm University Journal of American East Asian Relations, Vol. 22, Issue 3 (2015) http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18765610/22/3
• Robert C. Cottrell, “Sex and Saigon: Gendered Perspectives on the Vietnam War,” 179.
• Amanda Boczar, “Uneasy Allies: The Americanization of Sexual Policies in South Vietnam,” 187.
• Amber Batura, “The Playboy Way: Playboy Magazine, Soldiers, and the Military in
Vietnam,” 221.
• Jeffrey A. Keith, “Producing Miss Saigon: Imaginings, Realities, and the Sensual Geography of Saigon,” 243.
Journal of American-East Asian Relations, Vol. 22, Issue 4 (2015) http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18765610/22/4
• David P. Fields, “The Rabbi, the Lawyer, and the Prophet: American Exceptionalism and the Question of Korean Independence.” 291.
• Jimin Kim, “Empire versus Empire: American Critiques of Japan’s Colonial Rule in
Korea in the 1920s and 1930s,” 315.
• Brandon K. Gauthier, “A Tortured Relic: The Lasting Legacy of the Korean War and Portrayals of ´North Korea’ in the U.S. Media, 1953-1962,” 343.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of American History, Vol. 102, No. 3 (December 2015) http://jah.oah.org/issues/december-2015/
• Robert Michael Morrissey, “The Power of the Ecotone: Bison, Slavery, and the Rise and Fall of the Grand Village of the Kaskaskia,” 667.
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H-Diplo JOURNAL WATCH, J to Z H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review First Quarter 2016 22 January 2016
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• Kendra T. Field, “’No Such Thing as Stand Still’: Migration and Geopolitics in African American History,” 693.
• Kirsten Fermaglich, “’What’s Uncle Sam’s Last Name?’: Jews and Name Changing in
New York During the World War II Era,” 719.
• Jennifer Burns, “The Three ‘Furies’ of Libertarianism: Rose Wilder Lane, Isabel Paterson, and Ayn Rand,” 746.
• Edward E. Curtis IV, “’My Heart is in Cairo’: Malcolm X, the Arab Cold War, and the
Making of Islamic Liberation Ethics,” 775. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of American Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 4 (November 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AMS&volumeId=49&issueId=04&iid=10020807
• Hamilton Carroll and Annie McClanahan, “Fictions of Speculation: Introduction,” 655.
• Aimee Bahng, “Specters of the Pacific: Salt Fish Drag and the Atomic Hauntologies in the Era of Genetic Modification,” 663.
• Gerry Canavan, “Capital as Artificial Intelligence,” 685.
• Eva Cherniavsky and Tom Foster, “Permanent Crisis and Technosociality in Bruce
Sterling’s Distraction,” 711.
• Laura Finch, “The Un-real Deal: Financial Fiction, Fictional Finance, and the Financial Crisis,” 731.
• Leigh Claire La Berge, “Fiction is Liquid: States of Money in The Sopranos and Breaking
Bad,” 755.
• Andrew Pepper, “Who Knows What’s Going On? Mapping New Security Landscapes in Contemporary Espionage Fiction,” 775.
• Katherine Sugg, “The Walking Dead: Late Liberalism and Masculine Subjection in
Apocalypse Fictions,” 793.
• Michael Szalay, “Pimps and Pied Pipers: Quality Television in the Age of its Direct Delivery,” 813.
• Evan Calder Williams, “Salvage,” 845.
Responses to New Southern Studies Forum
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• Jon Smith, “What the New Southern Studies Does Now,” 861.
• Ted Ownby, “The New Southern Studies and Rethinking the Question, ‘Is There Still a South?’,” 871.
Roundtable
• Anthony J. Stanonis, Hugh Wilford, Andrew Hartman, Sheila Hones, Stephen Tuck, and Michael Heale, “Nicholas Barreyre, Michael Heale, Stephen Tuck, and Cécile Vidal (eds.), Historians across Borders: Writing American History in a Global Age,” 879.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 74, Issue 4 (November 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JAS&volumeId=74&issueId=04&iid=10061788
• John Delury, Sheila A. Smith, Maria Repnikova, and Srinath Raghavan, “Looking Back on the Seventieth Anniversary of Japan’s Surrender,” 797.
• Mrinalini Sinha, “Premonitions of the Past,” 821.
• Sanjay Joshi, “Juliet Got It Wrong: Conversion and the Politics of Naming in Kumaon, ca.
1850-1930,” 843.
• Daniel Chirot, “The Long Struggle: Enlightenment, Counter-Enlightenment, and the Importance of Ideas in Democratization,” 863.
• Mark R. Thompson, “Democracy with Asian Characteristics,” 875.
• Edward Aspinall, “The Surprising Democratic Behemoth: Indonesia in Comparative
Asian Perspective,” 889.
• Elizabeth J. Perry, “The Populist Dream of Chinese Democracy,” 903.
• Ashutosh Varshney, “Asian Democracy through an Indian Prism,” 917.
• Gaerrang (Kabzung), “Development as Entangled Knot: The Case of the Slaughter Renuniciation Movement in Tibet, China,” 927.
• Erik Esselstrom, “Red Guards and Salarymen: The Chinese Cultural Revolution and
Comic Satire in 1960s Japan,” 953.
• Dorothy J. Solinger, “Three Welfare Models and Current Chinese Social Assistance: Confucian Justifications, Variable Applications,” 977.
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Journal of British Studies, Vol. 55, Issue 1 (January 2016) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JBR&volumeId=55&issueId=01&iid=10096138
• Philip Loft, “Involving the Public: Parliament, Petitioning, and the Language of Interest, 1688-1720,” 1.
• Stephanie Koscak, “The Royal Sign and Visual Literacy in Eighteenth-Century London,” 24.
• Gregory Conti, “What’s Not in On Liberty: The Pacific Theory of Freedom of Discussion
in the Early Nineteenth Century,” 57.
• Peter Jones and Steven King, “Voices from the Far North: Pauper Letters and the Provision of Welfare in Sutherland, 1845-1900,” 76.
• Brett Holman, “The Phantom Airship Panic of 1913: Imagining Aerial Warfare in
Britain before the Great War,” 99.
• Becky Taylor, “’Their Only Words of English Were “Thank You”’: Rights, Gratitude, and ‘Deserving’ Hungarian Refugees to Britain in 1956,” 120.
• Ezequiel Mercau, “War of the British Worlds: The Anglo-Argentines and the Falklands,”
145. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 17, Issue 4 (Fall 2015) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jcws/17/4
• David Patrick Houghton, “Spies and Boats and Planes: An Examination of U.S. Decision-Making during the Pueblo Hostage Crisis of 1968,” 4.
• Tommaso Piffer, “Office of Strategic Services versus Special Operations Executive:
Competition for the Italian Resistance, 1943-1945,” 41.
• Kevin W. Martin, “’Behind Cinerama’s Aluminum Curtain’: Cold War Spectacle and Propaganda at the First Damascus International Exposition,” 59.
• Zachary Shore, “Provoking America: Le Duan and the Origins of the Vietnam War,” 86.
• Thomas K. Robb and David James Gill, “The ANZUS Treaty during the Cold War: A
Reinterpretation of U.S. Diplomacy in the Southwest Pacific,” 109.
• Archie Brown, “The End of the Soviet Union,” 158.
• Gary Kern, “Father, Son, and the Bomb,” 166. _________________________________________________________________________________________________
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The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 59:8 (December 2015) http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/59/8.toc
• David Shirk and Joel Wallman, “Understanding Mexico’s Drug Violence,” 1348.
• Angelica Duran-Martinez, “To Kill and Tell? State Power, Criminal Competition, and Drug Violence,” 1377.
• Javier Osorio, “The Contagion of Drug Violence: Spatiotemporal Dynamics of the
Mexican War on Drugs,” 1403.
• Viridiana Rios, “How Government Coordination Controlled Organized Crime: The Case of Mexico’s Cocaine Markets,” 1433.
• Gabriela Calderón, Gustavo Robles, Alberto Díaz-Cayeros, and Beatriz Magaloni, “The
Beheading of Criminal Organizations and the Dynamics of Violence in Mexico,” 1455.
• Benjamin Lessing, “Logics of Violence in Criminal War,” 1486.
• Stathis N. Kalyvas, “How Civil Wars Help Explain Organized Crime – and How They Do Not,” 1517.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 33, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjca20/33/3#.VpKB7Cge_zY
• Leith Mullings, “Blurring boundaries: post-racialism, inequality, and the anthropology of race,” 305.
• Janis van der Westhuizen and Karen Smith, “Pragmatic internationalism: public
opinion on South Africa’s role in the world,” 318.
• Ivan Turok, “Turning the tide? The emergence of national urban policies in Africa,” 348.
• A. Carl LeVan, “Parallel institutionalism and the future of representation in Nigeria,”
370.
• Niamh Gaynor, “Poverty amid plenty: structural violence and local governance in western Congo,” 391.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Contemporary Asia, Vol. 46, Issue 1 (2016) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjoc20/46/1
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• Michael D. Barr, “Ordinary Singapore: The Decline of Singapore Exceptionalism,” 1.
• Michele Ford, Michael Gillan, and Htwe Htwe Thein, “From Cronyism to Oligarchy? Privatisation and Business Elites in Myanmar,” 18.
• Sarah Turner, Thomas Kettig, Dinh Thi Diêu, and Pham Van Cu, “State Livelihood
Planning and Legibility in Vietnam’s Northern Borderlands: The ‘Rightful Criticisms’ of Local Officials,” 42.
• Tamara Jacka and Wu Chengrui, “Village Self-Government and Representation in
Southwest China,” 71.
• Youngwon Cho, “When $262 Billion is Not Enough: Rethinking Reserve Accumulation in South Korea,” 95.
• Serhat Ünaldi, “A Kingdom in Crisis – What’s All the Fuss About?,” 120.
• Jihyun Kim, “Understanding the Hermit Kingdom As It is and As It is Becoming: The
Past, Present, and Future of North Korea,” 130. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ A Journal of Contemporary China, Vol. 25, Issue 97 (2016) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjcc20/25/97
• David S.G. Goodman, “Locating China’s Middle Classes: social intermediaries and the Party-State,” 1.
• Jiang Chang and Hailong Ren, “Television News as Political Ritual: Xinwen Lianbo and
China’s journalism reform within the Party-State’s orbit,” 14.
• Yuchao Zhu and Dongyan Blachford, “’Old Bottle, New Wine’? Xinjiang Bingtuan and China’s ethnic frontier governance,” 25.
• Dongya Huang and Chuanmin Chen, “Revolving out of the Party-State: the Xiahai
entrepreneurs and circumscribing government power in China,” 41. Local Party Discipline Inspection Committees and Anti-Corruption Campaign in China
• Yukyung Yeo, “Complementing the local discipline inspection commissions of the CCP: empowerment of the central inspection groups,” 59.
• Fenfei Li and Jinting Deng, “The Limits of the Arbitrariness in Anticorruption by China’s
Local Party Discipline Inspection Committees,” 75. Foreign Direct Investments in and out of China
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• Friedrich Wu and Andreas Bakke Frøystadvåg, “China Investment Corporation’s Forays into Europe and the United States: explaining the different receptions,” 91.
• Ka Zeng, “Understanding the Institutional Variation in China’s Bilateral Investment
Treaties (BITs): the complex interplay of domestic and international influences,” 112.
• Xianming Wu, Xingrui Yang, Haibin Yang, and Hao Lei, “Cross-Border Mergers and Acquisitions by Chinese Firms: value creation or value destruction?,” 130.
Research Note
• Eun Kyong Choi, “The Politics of Central Tax Collection in China since 1994: local collusion and political control,” 146.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Vol. 23, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjea20/23/4#.VpKZxyge_zY Editorial
• Anthony Cooper, “Where are Europe’s New Borders? Ontology, Methodology, and Framing,”447.
Articles
• Dorte J. Andersen, Olivier Thomas Kramsch, and Marie Sandberg, “Inverting the Telescope on Borders that Matter: Conversations in Café Europa,” 459.
• Rodrigo Bueno Lacy and Henk Van Houtum, “Lies, Damned Lies & Maps: The EU’s
Cartopolitical Invention of Europe,” 477.
• Alexandria J. Innes, “The Never-Ending Journey? Exclusive Jurisdictions and Migrant Mobility in Europe,” 500.
• Catarina Kinnvall, “Borders and Fear: Insecurity, Gender, and the Far Right in Europe,”
514.
• Pablo Calderón Martínez, “The EU and Democratic Leverage: Are There Still Lessons to Be Learnt from the Spanish Transition to Democracy?,” 530.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 75, Issue 4 (December 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JEH&volumeId=75&issueId=04&iid=10063547
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• William J. Collins and Marianne H. Wanamaker, “The Great Migration in Black and White: New Evidence on the Selection and Sorting of Southern Migrants,” 947.
• Giovanni Federico and Michelangelo Vasta, “What Do We Really Know about Protection
Before the Great Depression: Evidence from Italy,” 993.
• Leonardo Weller, “Government versus Bankers: Sovereign Debt Negotiations in Porfirian Mexico, 1888-1910,” 1030.
• Guido Alfani, “Economic Inequality in Northwestern Italy: A Long-Term View
(Fourteenth to Eighteenth Centuries),” 1058.
• Peter Scott and Nicolas Ziebarth, “The Determinants of Plant Survival in the U.S. Radio Equipment Industry During the Great Depression,” 1097.
• Richard B. Baker, “From the Field to the Classroom: The Boll Weevil’s Impact on
Education in Rural Georgia,” 1128.
• Carl Kitchens and Price Fishback, “Flip the Switch: The Impact of the Rural Electrification Administration 1935-1940,” 1161.
• Timothy W. Guinnane and Jochen Streb, “Incentives that (Could Have) Saved Lives:
Government Regulation of Accident Insurance Associations in Germany, 1884-1914,” 1196.
Essays – The Future of Economic History
• William J. Collins, “Looking Forward: Positive and Normative Views of Economic History’s Future,” 1228.
• Kris James Mitchener, “The 4D Future of Economic History: Digitally-Driven Data
Design,” 1234.
• Ran Abramitzky, “Economics and the Modern Economic Historian,” 1240.
• Naomi Lamoreaux, “The Future of Economic History Must Be Interdisciplinary,” 1251. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Genocide Research, Vol 17, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjgr20/17/4#.VpKgiCge_zY Introduction
• Andrew Woolford and Jeff Benvenuto, “Canada and colonial genocide,” 373.
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Review Article
• Matthew Wildcat, “Fearing social and cultural death: genocide and elimination in settler colonial Canada – an indigenous perspective,” 391.
Articles
• David B. MacDonald, “Canada’s history wars: indigenous genocide and public memory in the United States, Australia, and Canada,” 411.
• Tricia Logan, “Settler colonialism in Canada and the Métis,” 433.
• Seth Adema, “Not told by victims: genocide-as-story in aboriginal prison writings in
Canada, 1980-96,” 453.
• Robyn Green, “The economics of reconciliation: tracing investment in indigenous-settler relations,” 473.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Global Ethics, Vol. 11, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjge20/11/3 Forum: The Sustainable Development Goals
• Eric Palmer, “Introduction: The 2030 Agenda,” 262.
• Paula Casal and Nicole Selamé, “Sea for the landlocked: a sustainable development goal?,” 270.
• Scott Wisor, “On the structure of global development goals,” 280.
• Frances Stewart, “The Sustainable Development Goals: a comment,” 288.
• Johannes M. Waldmueller, “Agriculture, knowledge, and the ‘colonial matrix of power’:
approaching sustainabilities from the Global South,” 294. Articles
• Jaakko Kuosmanen, “Repackaging human rights: on the justification and the function of the right to development,” 303.
• Gwilym David Blunt, “Justice in assistance: a critique of the ‘Singer Solution’,” 321.
• Paul B. Thompson, “From world hunger to food sovereignty: food ethics and human
development,” 336.
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjge20/11/3
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• Yvonne A. Braun, Michael C. Dreiling, Matthew P. Eddy, and David M. Dominguez, “Up against the wall: ecotourism, development, and social justice in Costa Rica,” 351.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 37, Issue 4 (December 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=HET&volumeId=37&issueId=04&iid=10034203
• James R. Wible and Kevin D. Hoover, “Mathematical Economics Comes to America: Charles S. Peirce’s Engagement with Cournot’s Recherches sur les Principes Mathématiques de la Théorie des Richesses,” 511.
• Terence C. Mills and Kerry Patterson, “Carmichael’s Arctan Trend: Precursor of Smooth
Transition Functions,” 537.
• Christopher S. Martin, “Equity, Besides: Adam Smith and the Utility of Poverty,” 559.
• Natsuka Tokumaru, “Wieser’s Unity of Thought,” 583.
• Carlo Cristiano, “Theories of the Firm in England before Coase: Stemming the Tide of ‘Rationalization’ on the Eve of ‘The Nature of the Firm’,” 597.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 14, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjhr20/14/4#.VpLA2yge_zY
• Gearoid Millar, “’We Have No Voice for That’: Land Rights, Power, and Gender in Rural Sierra Leone,” 445.
• Eduard Jordaan, “Rising Power and Human Rights: The India-Brazil-South Africa
Dialogue Forum at the UN Human Rights Council,” 463.
• Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick, “From Rescue to Representation: A Human Rights Approach to the Contemporary Antislavery Movement,” 486.
• Moira Katherine Lynch, “A Theory of Human Rights Accountability and Emergency
Law: Bringing in Historical Institutionalism,” 504.
• Anja Mihr, “Why Holocaust Education is Not Always Human Rights Education,” 525.
• Sebastian Wogenstein, “Holocaust Education and Human Rights Education Reconsidered: A Response to Anja Mihr,” 545.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Vol. 43, Issue 5 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fich20/43/5
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• Ross Nedervelt, “Caught between Realities: The American Revolution, the Continental
Congress, and Political Turmoil in the Bahama Islands,” 747.
• Sara ElGaddari, “Her Majesty’s Agents: The British Consul at Tripoli, 1795-1832,” 770.
• Kirsten McKenzie, “’The Laws of his Own Country’: Defamation, Banishment, and the Problem of Legal Pluralism in the 1820s Cape Colony,” 787.
• Jim Tomlinson, “Orientalism at Work? Dundee’s Response to Competition from
Calcutta, circa 1870-1914,” 807.
• Jonas Fossli Gjersø, “The Scramble for East Africa: British Motives Reconsidered, 1884-95,” 831.
• Helen Bones, “’A book is a book, all the world over’: New Zealand and the Colonial
Writing World 1890-1945,” 861.
• Jonathan Hyslop, “A British Strike in an African Port: The Mercantile Marine and Dominion Politics in Durban, 1925,” 882.
• Iain E. Johnston, “The British Commonwealth Air Training Plan and the Shaping of
National Identities in the Second World War,” 903. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 46, Issue 3 (Winter 2016) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jinh/46/3
• B. Zorina Khan, “The Impact of War on Resource Allocation: ‘Creative Destruction’, Patenting, and the American Civil War,” 315.
• Geoff Cunfer and Fridolin Krausmann, “Adaptation on an Agricultural Frontier: Socio-
Ecological Profiles of Great Plains Settlement, 1870-1940,” 355.
• Stijn Ronsse and Glenn Rayp, “What Determined the Location of Industry in Belgium, 1896-1961?,” 393.
• Simon Nicholson, “The Birth of Free-Market Fundamentalism,” 421.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Military Ethics, Vol. 14, Issue 3-4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/smil20/14/3-4 Editorial Introduction
• Henrik Syse and Martin L. Cook, “’The Just Soldier’ – Who is It?,” 201.
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Articles
• Jesse Kirkpatrick, “Drones and the Martial Virtue Courage,” 202.
• Robert Sparrow, “Martial and Moral Courage in Teleoperated Warfare: A Commentary on Kirkpatrick,” 220.
• Jesse Kirkpatrick, “Reply to Sparrow: Martial Courage – or Merely Courage?,” 228.
• Michelle Schut and René Moelker, “Respectful Agents: Between the Scylla and
Charybdis of Cultural and Moral Incapacity,” 232. Book Symposium: The Ethics of Insurgency
• Michael L. Gross, “The Ethics of Insurgency: A Brief Overview,” 248.
• George R. Lucas, Jr., “Response to Michael Gross: Military Ethics, Insurgency, and the Rise of ‘Soft War’,” 251.
• David Whetham, “Response to Michael Gross: Human Shields, Participatory Liability,
and Different Sets of Rules,” 255.
• Valerie Morkevicius, “Response to Michael Gross: Between Reality and Restraint,” 260.
• Michael L. Gross, “In Response to the Commentators,” 266. Case Study
• Paul Lushenko, “Coining an Ethical Dilemma: The Impunity of Afghanistan’s Indigenous Security Forces,” 272.
Case Study Commentary and Analysis
• Paul Robinson, “Determining the Limits of Moral Compromise: The Case of the Impunity of Afghanistan’s Indigenous Security Forces,” 276.
• James Cook, “A Moral Tower of Babel?,” 280.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Military History, Vol. 80, No. 1 (January 2016) http://www.smh-hq.org/jmh/jmhvols/801.html
• Thomas Dodman, “1814 and the Melancholy of War,” 31.
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• Jacques Hantraye, “The Silence of the Woods: The 1815 Murder of a Prussian Soldier in Western France,” 57.
• Stéphane Calvet, “The Painful Demobilization of the Napoleonic Grande Armée’s
Officers,” 77.
• Christopher Tozzi, “Soldiers without a Country: Foreign Veterans in the Transition from Empire to Restoration,” 93.
• Jennifer Heuer, “Soldiers as Victims or Villains? Demobilization, Masculinity, and
Family in French Royalists Pamphlets, 1814-1815,” 121.
• Morten Nordhagen Ottosen, “Ending War and Making Peace in Scandinavia, 1814-1848: ‘Peace Crisis’, Demobilization, and Reconciliation,” 145.
• Petter Wulff, “Artillery, Light and Heavy: Sardinia-Piedmont and Sweden in the
Nineteenth Century,” 173.
• William S. Dudley, “A Soldier, His Family, and the Impact of the Pacific War, 1942-1945,” 187.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 53, Issue 4 (December 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=MOA&volumeId=53&issueId=04&iid=10029191
• Caitriona Dowd, “Grievances, governance, and Islamist violence in sub-Saharan Africa,” 505.
• Tijo Salverda, “(Dis)unity in Diversity: How Common Beliefs about Ethnicity Benefit the
White Mauritian Elite,” 533.
• Giulia Piccolino, “Does democratisation foster effective taxation? Evidence from Benin,” 557.
• Meike J. De Goede, “’Mundele, it is because of you’ : History, Identity, and the Meaning of
Democracy in the Congo,” 583.
• Peter Albrecht, “The Chiefs of Community Policing in Rural Sierra Leone,” 611.
• Luisa Enria, “Love and Betrayal: The Political Economy of Youth Violence in Post-War Sierra Leone,” 637.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Modern Chinese History, Vol. 9, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmoh20/9/2
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• Shiwei Chen, “Intellectual preparedness: Dr. Hu Shih, Lake Forest College, and Chinese
diplomacy during World War II,” 153.
• Dandan Chen, “The state in the shadow of war: reexamining Zhang Junmai’s thoughts on democratic politics and state building,” 175.
• Lin-chun Wu, “Partnership across the Pacific: Sino-American collaboration in maritime
transportation during World War I,” 199.
• Yiwei Cheng, “Coping with parallel authorities: the early diplomatic negotiations of Soviet Russia and China on the Chinese Eastern Railway, 1917-1925,” 223.
• Wennan Liu, “’Historical research is like retrying an old case’: an interview with Shen
Zhihua, June 17, 2015,” 244.
• Yuhe Zuo, “Oral history studies in contemporary China,” 259. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 87, No. 4 (December 2015) https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/682417
• Michael P. Breen, “’An Uncertain, Useless, and Disgraceful Means of Proof’: Marriage, Law, and Authority in the Épreuve du Congrès,” 771.
• Christian Bailey, “Honor among Peers? A Comparative History of Honor Practices in
Postwar Britain and West Germany,” 809.
• James Mark and Péter Apor, “Socialism Goes Global: Decolonization and the Making of a New Culture of Internationalism in Socialist Hungary, 1956-1989,” 852.
• Camille Robcis, “Catholics, the ‘Theory of Gender’, and the Turn to the Human in
France: A New Dreyfus Affair?,” 892. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Modern Italian Studies, Vol. 20, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmis20/20/4 Special section: Italy after the 2013 elections
• Daniele Albertazzi and Arianna Giovanni, “Surviving the perfect storm: Italy after the 2013 elections,” 427.
• Gianfranco Pasquino and Marco Valbruzzi, “The impact of the 2013 general election on
the Italian political system: the end of bipolarism?,” 438.
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• Fabio Bordignon and Luigi Ceccarini, “The Five-Star Movement: a hybrid actor in the net of state institutions,” 454.
• Antonella Seddone and Fulvio Venturino, “The Partito Democratico after the 2013
elections: all change?,” 474. Non-special section articles
• Giampaolo Salice, “The Greek mirror: philhellenism and southern Italian patriotisms (1750-1861),” 491.
• David I. Kertzer, “Interview with Romano Prodi. Part Two: from the fall of the first
Prodi government (1998), Prodi’s term as President of the European Commission (1999-2004), the second Prodi government (2006-08) and Italy’s 2013 presidential elections,” 508.
• Alexander Grab, “Secondary schools in Napoleonic Italy (1802-14),” 527.
• Davide Gianluca Bianchi, “Trasformismo in Italian regional assemblies: a systemic
interpretation,” 547.
• Mary Gibson, “Through Partisan Eyes: My Friendships, Literary Education, and Political Encounters in Italy (1956-2013) with Sidelights on My Experiences in the United States, France, and the Soviet Union. Review and commemoration of Frank Rosengarten,” 567.
• Peter Jones, “Painting and politics: Renato Guttuso at the Estorick Collection,” 571.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 50, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjph20/50/4
• Matthew G. Allen and Sinclair Dinnen, “Solomon Islands in Transition?,” 381.
• Jon Fraenkel, “The Teleology and Romance of State-building in Solomon Islands,” 398.
• Clive Moore, “Honiara: Arrival City and Pacific Hybrid Living Space,” 419.
• Rebecca Monson, “From Taovia to Trustee: Urbanisation, Land Disputes, and Social Diffentiation in Kakabona,” 437.
• Debra McDougall, “Customary Authority and State Withdrawal in Solomon Islands:
Resilience or Tenacity?,” 450.
• Edvard Hviding, “Big Money in the Rural: Wealth and Dispossession in Western Solomons Political Economy,” 473.
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• David Akin, “Maasina Rule beyond Recognition,” 486.
• Joseph Foukona, “Urban Land in Honiara: Strategies and Rights to the City,” 504.
• David Lawrence, Kylie Moloney, and Christine Bryan, “From the Archives: The Charles
Morris Woodford Papers and Photographs at the Pacific Manuscripts Bureau and the Pacific Research Archives, Australian National University,” 519.
• Christopher Chevalier, “Obituary: John Roughan,” 533.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 44, No. 3 (Spring 2015) http://www.palestine-studies.org/jps/issue/175
• Glenn Bowman, “Encystation: Containment and Control in Israeli Ideology and Practice,” 6.
• Gabriel Piterberg, “Israeli Sociology’s Young Hegelian: Gershon Shafir and the Settler-
Colonial Framework,” 17.
• “The Palestinian Resistance – A Reexamination: Interview with Ramadan Shallah (Part II),” 39.
• Fouad Moughrabi with Elaine Hagopian, “In Honor of Naseer H. Aruri (1934-2015),”
49. Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 44, No. 4 (Summer 2015) http://www.palestine-studies.org/jps/issue/176
• Mazen Masri, “The Two-State Model and Israeli Constitutionalism: Impact on the Palestinian Citizens of Israel,” 7.
• Interview by Nehad Khader, “Elia Suleiman: The Power of Ridicule,” 21.
• Stathis Gourgouris, “Dream-Work of Dispossession: The Instance of Elia Suleiman,” 32.
• Avraham Burg, “The Way Forward: Full Citizenship for Israel’s Palestinian Minority,”
48.
• Linda Butler, “Eric Rouleau: Journalist Extraordinaire, Champion of the Palestinian Cause,” 57.
• Compiled by the Editorial Staff, “The Iran Nuclear Negotiations: Israel and the U.S.
Congress,” 68. _________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Journal of Policy History, Vol. 28, Issue 1 (January 2016) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JPH&volumeId=28&issueId=01&iid=10069616
• Paul Sabin, “’Everything has a price’: Jimmy Carter and the Struggle for Balance in Federal Regulatory Policy,” 1.
• Johann N. Neem, “Path Dependence and the Emergence of Common Schools: Ohio to
1853,” 48.
• Dennie Oude Nijhuis, “Low Pay, Wage Relativities, and Labour’s First Attempt to Introduce a Statutory National Minimum Wage in the United Kingdom,” 81.
• Lin Poyer, Laurence M. Carucci, and Suzanne Falgout, “Micronesian Chiefs under
American Rule: Military Occupation, Democracy, and Trajectories of Traditional Leadership,” 105.
• Doron Avraham, “The Religious and Moral Origins of German Conservative Social
Policy,” 133.
• Olivier Burtin, “’A One-Woman Tea Party’: Tax Resistance, Feminism, and Conservatism in the Life of Vivien Kellems,” 162.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Political Science Education, Vol. 11, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/upse20/11/4
• Ian G. Anson, “Assessment Feedback using Screencapture Technology in Political Science,” 375.
• Michael K. Baranowski and Kimberly A. Weir, “Political Simulations: What We Know,
What We Think We Know, and What We Still Need to Know,” 391.
• Ryan L. Claassen and J. Quin Monson, “Does Civic Education Matter?: The Power of Long-Term Observation and the Experimental Method,” 404.
• David Menefee-Libey, “High School Civics Textbooks: What We Know versus What We
Teach about American Politics and Public Policy,” 422.
• Sara R. Rinfret and Michelle C. Pautz, “Understanding Public Policy Making through the Work of Committees: Utilizing a Student-Led Congressional Hearing Simulation,” 442.
• Carolyn Forestiere, “Promoting Civic Agency through Civic-Engagement Activities: A
Guide for Instructors New to Civic-Engagement Pedagogy,” 455.
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• Heather K. Evans and Victoria Cordova, “Lecture Videos in Online Courses: A Follow-Up,” 472.
• Jonathan Benjamin-Alvarado, “Internationalizing ‘Engaged’ Learning: Enhancing Travel
Study in Cuba,” 483. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 47, Issue 1 (February 2016) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=SEA&volumeId=47&issueId=01&iid=10081177
• Lisa Arensen, “’All newcomers now’: Narrating social and material aspects of post-war resettlement in northwest Cambodia,” 24.
• Robert Dayley and Attachak Sattayanurak, “Thailand’s last peasant,” 42.
• Brendan Luyt, “Empire forestry and its failure in the Philippines: 1901-1941,” 66.
• Anthony Reid, “Two hiterto unknown Indonesian tsunamis of the seventeenth century:
Probabilities and context,” 88.
• Olivier Évrard, Thomoas O. Pryce, Guido Sprenger, and Chanthaphilith Chiemsisouraj, “Of myths and metallurgy: Archaeological and ethnological approaches to upland iron production in 9th century C.E. northwest Laos,” 109.
• Albert Lau, “In Memoriam: Dr. Cheah Boon Kheng,” 141.
________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Tourism History, Vol. 7, Issue 1-2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjth20/7/1-2 Winner 2015 John K. Walton Prize
• Michalis Nikolakakis, “Representations and social practices of alternative tourists in post-war Greece to the end of the Greek military junta,” 5.
Original Articles
• Gaetano Cerchiello and José Fernando Vera-Rebollo, “Steamboats and pleasure travels: success and failure of the first Spanish initiatives in the mid-nineteenth century,” 18.
• Michael Vargas, “’Catalonia is not Spain’: projecting Catalan identity to tourists in and
around Barcelona,” 36.
• Tammy S. Gordon, “’Take Amtrak to Black History’: marketing heritage tourism to African Americans in the 1970s,” 54.
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• Clive D. Field, “Fun, faith, and fellowship: British Methodism and tourism in the
twentieth century,” 75.
• Shelley Baranowski Christopher Endy, Waleed Hazbun, Stephanie Malia Hom, Gordon Pirie, Trevor Simmons, and Eric G.E. Zuelow, “Tourism and empire,” 100.
• Trevor M. Simmons, “New Tourism Archives: The records of the East African
Professional Hunters’ Association,” 131.
• Bertram M. Gordon, “Touring the field: the infrastructure of tourism history scholarship,” 135.
• Adam T. Rosenbaum, “Leisure travel and real existing socialism: new research on
tourism in the Soviet Union and communist Eastern Europe,” 157.
• Gerald McFarland, “In Memoriam: Dr. Richard H. Gassan, 1958-2015,” 177. Journal of Tourism History, Vol. 7, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjth20/7/3
• Andrew Wigley, “Against the wind: the role of Belgian colonial tourism marketing in resisting pressure to decolonise from Africa,” 193.
• Colin Symes, “Motion pictures: an analysis of the posters of Victorian Railways during
the 1920s and 1930s,” 210.
• Hamish Bremmer, “Battle lines in the Hot Lakes District, New Zealand, c. 1900: tourism development and the contested nature of place,” 228.
• Pedro Alexandre Guerreiro Martins, “Sea bathing and seaside tourism in Portugal in
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: an overview,” 246.
• Scott Moranda, “The emergence of an environmental history of tourism,” 268. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Transatlantic Studies, Vol. 13, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjts20/13/3
• Peter J. Hugill, “Closing the Atlantic gap: the symbiotic development of civil and military aviation technology through the 1930s,” 235.
• James L. Gormly, “Opening and closing doors: U.S. postwar aviation policy: 1943-1963,”
251.
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• Peter Svik, “East-West relations in the civil aviation sector between 1945 and 1963,” 263.
• Alexandre Vautravers, “Fighting for oil in the skies? The case of the KC-X programme,”
279. Journal of Transatlantic Studies, Vol. 13, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjts20/13/4 Special Issue: Diplomacy on Campus: The Political Dimensions of Academic Exchange in the North Atlantic
• Thomas Adam and Charlotte A. Lerg, “Diplomacy on campus: the political dimensions of academic exchange in the North Atlantic,” 299.
• Tomás Irish, “From international to inter-allied: transatlantic university relations in
the era of the First World War, 1905-1920,” 311.
• Kenneth Bertrams, “The domestic uses of Belgian-American ‘mutual understanding’: the commission for relief in Belgium educational foundation, 1920-1940,” 326.
• Whitney Walton, “National interests and cultural exchange in French and American
educational travel, 1914-1970,” 344.
• Molly Bettie, “Ambassadors unaware: the Fulbright program and American public diplomacy,” 358.
Roundtable
• Victoria Bazin, “Restless subjects/careless people: re-reading The Great Gatsby,” 373.
• Joseph Eaton, “New Insights into Gatsby and the Jazz Age,” 377.
• Constance J. Post, “Review of Careless People,” 379.
• Sarah Churchwell, “Literary spirits,” 382. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Labor Studies Journal, 40:3 (September 2015) http://lsj.sagepub.com/content/40/3.toc Interactive Issue: 40 Years Later, the Impact of Harry Braverman’s Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century Guest editor: Joe Berry
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• Chris Smith, “Continuity and Change in Labor Process Analysis Forty Years after Labor and Monopoly Capital,” 222.
• Robert Ovetz, “When Hephaestus Fell to Earth: Harry Braverman and the New Division of Academic Labor,” 243.
• R. Jamil Jonna, “Monopoly Capital and Labor: The Work of Braverman, Baran, and
Sweezy as a Dialectical Whole,” 262.
• Robert Ovetz, “Response to R. Jamil Jonna and Chris Smith,” 275. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Middle East Journal, Vol. 69, No. 4 (Autumn 2015) https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_middle_east_journal/toc/mej.69.4.html
• Jérôme Drevon, “The Emergence of Ex-Jihadi Political Parties in Post-Mubarak Egypt,” 511.
• Khalil al-Anani, “Upended Path: The Rise and Fall of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood,” 527.
• Alam Saleh and Hendrik Kraetzschmar, “Politicized Identities, Securitized Politics:
Sunni-Shi’a Politics in Egypt,” 545.
• Mona Tajali, “Islamic Women’s Groups and the Quest for Political Representation in Turkey and Iran,” 563.
• Kurtulus Cengiz, Önder Küçükural, and Etrit Shkreli, “At the Borders of Public and
Private: The Oturmalar of Kayseri,” 582. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Middle East Policy, Vol. 22, Issue 4 (Winter 2015) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mepo.2015.22.issue-4/issuetoc U.S. Interventions
• Brian Katulis, Siwar al-Assad, and William Morris, “One Year Later: Assessing the Coalition Campaign against ISIS,” 1.
• Leila Hudson, “Liquidating Syria, Fracking Europe,” 22.
• Katherine Blue Carroll, “The Strangest Tribe: U.S. Military Claims in Iraq,” 40.
• Timo Kivimäki, “First Do No Harm: Do Air Raids Protect Civilians?,” 55.
• Chas W. Freeman, “Lessons from America’s Misadventures in the Middle East,” 65.
Turkey and the Kurds
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• M. Hakan Yavuz and Nihat Ali Özcan, “Turkish Democracy and the Kurdish Question,”
73.
• Kilic Kanat and Kadir Ustun, “U.S.-Turkey Realignment on Syria,” 88.
• Mustafa Kibaroglu and Selim C. Sazak, “Business as Usual: The U.S.-Turkey Security Partnership,” 98.
The Gulf
• Richard J. Schmierer, “The Sultanate of Oman and the Iran Nuclear Deal,” 113.
• Makio Yamada, “Saudi Arabia’s Look-East Diplomacy: Ten Years On,” 121.
• William A. Rugh, “Problems in Yemen, Domestic and Foreign,” 140. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 52, Issue 1 (2016) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fmes20/52/1
• Yonatan Mendel, “From German Philology to Local Usability: The Emergence of ‘Practical’ Arabic in the Hebrew Reali School in Haifa 1913-48,” 1.
• Katherine Ranharter and Gareth Stansfield, “Acknowledging the Suffering Caused by
State-Mandated Sexual Violence and Crimes: An Assessment of the Iraqi High Tribunal,” 27.
• Ahmet Serdar Aktürk, “Female Cousins and Wounded Masculinity: Kurdish Nationalist
Discourse in the Post-Ottoman Middle East,” 46.
• Dogan Gürpinar and Ceren Kenar, “The Nation and its Sermons: Islam, Kemalism, and the Presidency of Religious Affairs in Turkey,” 60.
• Anat Kidron, “Separatism, coexistence, and the landscape: Jews and Palestinian-Arabs
in mandatory Haifa,” 79.
• Guy Bracha, “A letter from Iraq: the writing of Iraqi correspondents in al-‘Alam al-‘Isra’ili and Isra’ïl,” 102.
• Erdem Sönmez, “From kanun-i kadim (ancient law) to umumun kuvveti (force of
people): historical context of the Ottoman constitutionalism,” 116.
• Muhammad Suwaed, “The Wadi al-Hawarith affair (Emek Hefer): disputed land and the struggle for ownership: 1929-33,” 135.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 50, Issue 1 (January 2016) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=ASS&volumeId=50&issueId=01&iid=10089550
• Sanjay Subrahmanyam, “One Asia, or Many? Reflections from connected history,” 5.
• Edmund Herzig, “A response to ‘One Asia, or Many? Reflections from connected history’,” 44.
• Simon Schaffer, “Origins and Barriers: Reflections on Subrahmanyam,” 52.
• Craig Clunas, “Connected Material Histories: A response,” 61.
• Willem van Schendel, “A War within a War: Mizo rebels and the Bangladesh liberation
struggle,” 75.
• Agnieszka Joniak-Lüthi, “Roads in China’s Borderlands: Interfaces of spatial representations, perceptions, practices, and knowledges,” 118.
• Amy King, “Reconstructing China: Japanese technicians and industrialization in the
early years of the People’s Republic of China,” 141.
• Indrani Chatterjee, “Women, Monastic Commerce, and Coverture in Eastern India circa 1600-1800 C.E.,” 175.
• C.J. Fuller, “Anthropologists and Viceroys: Colonial knowledge and policy making in
India, 1871-1911,” 217.
• Joan-Pau Rubiés and Manel Ollé, “The Comparative History of a Genre: The production and circulation of books on travel and ethnographies in early modern Europe and China,” 259.
• Maria Misra, “The Indian Machiavelli: Pragmatism versus morality, and the reception of
the Arthasastra in India, 1905-2014,” 310.
• Faisal Chaudhry, “A Rule of Proprietary Right for British India: From revenue settlement to tenant right in the age of classical legal thought,” 345.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Modern & Contemporary France, Vol. 23, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cmcf20/23/4
• Elise Hugueny-Léger and Caroline Verdier, “Toutes ensemble? Femmes et société: intégration et marginalisation,” 431.
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• Isabelle Charpentier, “De la difficulté (sexuelle) d’être une femme célibataire au Maghreb: une étude de témoignages et d’oeuvres d’écrivaines algériennes et marocaines,” 435.
• Julie Landour, “Les collectifs de ‘Mompreneurs’, une solidarité professionellement
porteuse?,” 457.
• Anne-Laure Garcia, “Solitudes maternelles, solidarités publiques et entraides privées: les mères célibataires dans la France de la fin du vingtième siècle,” 475.
• Sarah Waters, “Suicide as Protest in the French Workplace,” 491.
• Jeremy F. Lane, “’Come you spirits unsex me!’ Representations of the Female Executive
in Recent French Film and Fiction,” 511. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Modern Italy, Vol. 20, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cmit20/20/4
• Pierluigi Erbaggio, “#GomorraLaSerie: Converging audience and enhanced authorship on twenty-first century Italian screens,” 335.
• Stefania Rampello, “Italian anti-Fascism in London, 1922-1934,” 351.
• Fabio Bulfone, “The Eurozone crisis and Italian corporate governance: the end of
blockholding?,” 365.
• Joanne Lee, “Political utopia or Potemkin village? Italian travellers to the Soviet Union in the early Cold War,” 379.
• Michelangelo Vercesi, “Owner parties and party institutionalisation in Italy: is the
Northern League exceptional?,” 395.
• Rhiannon Evangelista, “The particular kindness of friends: ex-Fascists, clientage, and the transition to democracy in Italy, 1945-1960,” 411.
• Guri Schwarz, “The moral conundrums of the historian: Claudio Pavone’s A Civil War
and its legacy,” 427. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Le Monde Diplomatique (November 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2015/11/
• Serge Halimi, “Éditorial: Dégringolade de la France,” 1.
• Olivier Zajec, “Basculement stratégique au Proche-Orient,” 1.
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• Alexeï Malachenko, “Le pari syrien de Moscou,” 6.
• Guillaume Barou, “’Le Monde diplomatique’ en CinémaScope,” 2.
• Maxime Carvin, “Robespierre sans masque,” 3.
• Martine Bulard, “Paysans chinois entre cueillette et Internet,” 4.
• Martine Bulard, “Les limites de la décollectivisation,” 4.
• Martine Bulard, “Au village des Zha.”
• Aziz El Massassi, “La presse égyptienne mise au pas,” 8.
• Marie Bénilde, “Joyeuse colonisation numérique,” 9.
• Marie Bénilde, “Google Actualités, marqueur de l’incohérence européenne,” 9.
• Lamia Oualalou, “Au Brésil, ‘trois cents voleurs avec des titres de docteur’,” 10.
• Anne Vigna, “Des collectionneurs d’art très courtisés,” 10.
• Henri Leridon, “L’Afrique, énigme démographique,” 12.
• Léa Ducré and Margot Hemmerich, “Les Pays-Bas ferment leurs prisons,” 20.
• Léa Ducré and Margot Hemmerich, “Succès des libérations conditionnelles en Suède,” 20.
• Pierre Rimbert, “La guerre des bougons,” 22.
• Serge Halimi, “Quelques îlots résistent…,” 23.
• “Les comptes du ‘Monde diplomatique’ en 2014,” 23.
• Sébastien Lapaque, “Eblouissements de Pasolini,” 27.
• Dan Bouk, “Ainsi nos jours sont comptés,” 28.
Dossier: Comment éviter le chaos climatique?
• Philippe Descamps, “De la science à la politique,” 13.
• Dominique Raynaud, “Au commencement étaient les bulles d’air de l’Antarctique,” 14.
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• Eric Martin, “Deux degrés de plus, deux degrés de trop,” 14.
• Christophe Bonneuil, “Tous responsables?,” 16.
• Ferdinand Moeck, “Et la couche d’ozone fut sauvée,” 16.
• Jean Gadrey, “Croissance, un culte en voie de disparition,” 18.
• Agnès Sinaï, “Le théâtre d’ombres des négociations internationales,” 18.
• “Un ‘Fonds vert’ toujours anémique,” 18. Supplément: Transmettre les valeurs de la solidarité
• Amélie Zaccour, “’Après le camp de vacances, nous avons eu envie d’aider les gens’,” ii.
• Sébastien Deslandes, “Chailles, un village ouvert sur le monde,” ii.
• Julien Laupêtre, “Plus que jamais, les droits de l’enfant,” iii.
• Claire Brisset, “Le droit des enfants, une utopie fondatrice,” v. Supplément: Les océans, grands oubliés du climat
• Jean-Pierre Gattuso and Alexandre Magnan, “Acteurs et victimes du réchauffement de la planète,” i.
• Ferdinand Moeck, “Cinq mille aires marines protégées dans le monde,” i.
• Sébastien Deslandes, “La bataille gagnée des Rapa Nui à l’île de Pâques,” ii.
• Dan Laffoley, “Premiers par vers une ‘économie bleue’,” ii.
• Alexandre Magnan, Teresa Ribera, and Julien Rochette, “En quête de règles
internationales,” iv.
• Torsten Thiele, “Les clés d’un sauvetage,” iv. Le Monde Diplomatique (December 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2015/12/
• Joël Gombin, “Les trois visages du vote FN,” 1.
• Bernard Friot and Christine Jakse, “Une autre histoire de la Sécurité sociale,” 3.
• Raphaël Kempf, “’Prions pour notre shérif et sa victoire aux élections’,” 4.
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• Maurice Lemoine, “Qui a peur de la vérité en Colombie?,” 8.
• Renaud Egreateau, “La Birmanie en liberté surveillée,” 10.
• Lena Bjurström, “Indonésie 1965, mémoire de l’impunité,” 11.
• Tierno Monénembo, “En Afrique, le retour des présidents à vie,” 12.
• Gérard Le Puill, “Et si les vaches mangeaient de l’herbe…,” 21.
• Richard Monvoisin and Nicolas Pinsault, “La kinésithérapie piégée par les mages,” 22.
• Akram Belkaïd, “De Jésus à Mahomet,” 23.
• Pablo Jensen, “La vérité scientifique et le saut du tigre,” 27.
• Ignacio Ramonet, “Délateurs en pantoufles,” 28.
Dossier: Dans l’engrenage de la terreur
• Serge Halimi, “L’art de la guerre imbécile,” 1.
• Nabil Mouline, “Genèse du djihadisme,” 1.
• Pierre Conesa, “Cinq conflits entremêlés,” 14.
• Akram Belkaïd, “En Syrie, une issue politique bien incertaine,” 16.
• Patrick Baudoin, “Perdre en liberté sans gagner en sécurité,” 16.
• Pierre Rimbert, “’A force de lantiponner…’,” 17.
• Hicham Alaoui, “’Printemps arabe’, autant en emporte le vent?,” 18.
• Gilles Balbastre, “Experts en treillis,” 18.
• Renaud Lambert, “Priorités,” 19.
• Ibrahim Warde, “Périls saoudiens,” 20.
• Ibrahim Warde, “Trafics et donations,” 20. Le Monde Diplomatique (January 2016) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2016/01/
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• Serge Halimi, “Éditorial: Le Front national verrouille l’ordre social,” 1.
• Benoît Bréville, “Haro sur Schengen,” 1.
• Rachel Saada, “Le code du travail, garant de l’emploi,” 3.
• Martine Bulard, “La réunification de la Corée aura-t-elle lieu?,” 4.
• Sung Ilkwon, “Virage autoritaire à Séoul,” 4.
• Laura-Maï Gaveriaux, “Kasserine ou la Tunisie abandonnée,” 6.
• Thierry Brésillon, “Alliance conservatrice à l’ombre de la menace djihadiste,” 6.
• Sabine Cessou, “Le Bénin carbure à la contrebande,” 8.
• Frédéric Lemaire and Dominique Plihon, “Finance, Bruxelles rallume la mèche,” 9.
• Anne-Cécile Robert, “L’édifiant destin de la directive européenne sur le congé maternité,” 10.
• Cécile Marin and Anne-Cécile Robert, “Toutes les mères n’ont pas les mêmes droits.”
• Jean-Jacques Gandini, “Vers un état d’exception permanent,” 12.
• Bhaskar Sunkara, “Un socialiste à l’assaut de la Maison Blanche,” 16.
• Gilles Bouvaist, “Un syndicat pour les détenus allemands,” 23.
• Guy Scarpetta, “Fulgurance de Tadeusz Kantor,” 27.
• Gérard Mordillat, “’Le sujet! le sujet! le sujet!’,” 28.
Dossier: Nouvelle donne en Amérique latine
• Renaud Lambert, “Amérique latine, pourquoi la panne?,” 1.
• Alvaro Garcia Linera, “Sept leçons pour la gauche,” 17.
• Gregory Wilpert, “Avis de tempête au Venezuela,” 20.
• Yoletty Bracho and Julien Rebotier, “La révolution bolivarienne par sa base,” 20.
• Angeline Montoya, “Transsexualité, l’Argentine en pointe,” 22.
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• Renaud Lambert, “Une dépendance aux matières premières jamais résolue,” 18.
• Renaud Lambert, “Contre l’originalité à outrance,” 18.
• “La force des choses,” 20.
• Renaud Lambert, “Trahison?,” 21. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Le Monde Diplomatique – Manière de voir (December 2015-January 2016) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/144/ Environnement, climat: désordres et combats
• Jean-Michel Dumay, “Après nous le déluge?” Désordres planétaires
• Donatien Garnier, “Partir à cause du climat.”
• Anne Vigna, “Coupes d’arbres et coupures d’eau.”
• Frédéric Ojardias, “Revivre à Fukushima?”
• Farid Benhammou and Rémy Marion, “Périls en la demeure de l’ours polaire.”
• Maxime Robin, “Sous le joug du ‘roi charbon’.”
• Gergely Simon, “Mortelles boues rouges de Hongrie.”
• Maurice Lemoine, “Au Paraguay, le soja sème la zizanie.”
• Jean-Sébastien Mora, “La mer malade de l’aquaculture.”
• Razmig Keucheyan, “Catastrophes naturelles cotées en Bourse.”
• René Dumont, “Repenser notre civilisation.” Terre(s) de combat
• Serge Quadruppani, “Unis contre le monde tel qu’il va.”
• Agnès Sinaï, “Zones à défendre.”
• Emmanuel Raoul, “Vade retro, gaz de schiste!”
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/144/
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• Warda Mohamed, “Des Algériens contre le ‘don de Dieu’.”
• Patrick Herman, “La victoire douchée des victimes de l’amiante.”
• Philippe Pons, “En 1970, la flambée japonaise antipollution.”
• Eric Klinenberg, “’Justice écologique’ pour les minorités.”
• Olivier Cyran, “Métamorphose des Verts allemands.”
• Bernard Cassen, “La balle dans le camp des politiques.” Sauve qui peut (la planète et l’humain)
• Ian Angus, “Le capitalisme, marqueur géologique?” • Anne-Cécile Robert, “Le cercle vicieux des inégalités.”
• Aurélien Bernier, “Ci-gît le réquisitoire oublié de Cocoyoc.”
• Agnès Sinaï, “Une couche de vert sur la société de marché.”
• Philippe Bovet, “Energiques résistances.”
• Eric Dupin, “La croissance mise en examen.”
• Renaud Lambert, “Dans l’ombre de la Pachamana.”
• André Gorz, “’Que voulons-nous?’”
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ National Identities, Vol. 18, Issue 1 (2016) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cnid20/18/1
• Barbara Lüthi, Francesca Falk, and Patricia Purtschert, “Colonialism without colonies: examining blank spaces in colonial studies,” 1.
• Gunlög Fur, “Colonial fantasies – American Indians, indigenous, peoples and a Swedish
discourse of innocence,” 11.
• Kristin Loftsdóttir, “’The Danes don’t get this’: the economic crash and Icelandic postcolonial engagements,” 35.
• Patricia Purtschert, “Aviation skills, manly adventures and imperial tears: the
Dhaulagiri expedition and Switzerland’s techno-colonialism,” 53.
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cnid20/18/1
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• Christine Whyte, “Between empire and colony: American imperialism and Pan-African colonialism in Liberia, 1810-2003,” 71.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, Vol. 21, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fnep20/21/4#.VpZDsCge_zY
• Dejan Stjepanovic, “Dual Substate Citizenship as Institutional Innovation: The Case of Bosnia’s Brcko District,” 379.
• Dominik Tolksdorf, “The European Union as a Mediator in Constitutional Reform
Negotiations in Bosnia and Herzegovina: The Failure of Conditionality in the Context of Intransigent Local Politics,” 401.
• Anna Krasteva, “Religion, Politics, and Nationalism in Postcommunist Bulgaria: Elastic
(Post)Secularism,” 422.
• Heribert Adam, “Xenophobia, Asylum Seekers, and Immigration Policies in Germany,” 446.
• Marie-Sophie Heinelt, “Collective Rights, Mobilization, and Accessibility: Towards a
Comparative Framework for Explaining Minority Influence on Decision Making in Multiethnic Latin America – with Empirical Reference to Case Studies in Colombia and Panama,” 465.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Orbis, Vol. 60, Issue 1 (2016) http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00304387
• Colin Dueck, “Hoover and Offshore Foreign Policy, 1921-1933,” 4.
• Isabelle Duyvesteyn and Jeffrey H. Michaels, “Revitalizing Strategic Studies in an Age of Perpetual Conflict,” 22.
• John R. Deni, “Still the One? The Role of Europe in American Defense Strategy,” 36.
• T.X. Hammes, “Raising and Mentoring Security Forces in Iraq and Afghanistan,” 52.
• Deborah Brown and Tun-jen Cheng, “The Vatican and the Chinese Party-State: Where
do the Parallels End?,” 73.
• Michael D. Beevers, “U.S. Domestic Regulation of Global Conflict Resources,” 87.
• Stephen Blank and Younkyoo Kim, “Does Russo-Chinese Partnership Threaten America’s Interests in Asia?,” 112.
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fnep20/21/4#.VpZDsCge_zYhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00304387
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• Viljar Veebel and Raul Markus, “At the Dawn of a New Era of Sanctions: Russian-Ukrainian Crisis and Sanctions,” 128.
• Thomas R. McCabe, “A Strategy for the ISIS Foreign Fighter Threat,” 140.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Review, Vol. 46, No. 2 (September 2015) https://shafr.org/sites/default/files/passport-09-2015.pdf
• “A Tribute to Peter Hahn,” 7.
• Marie Elise Sarotte, Luke A. Nichter, David Farber, Mark Atwood Lawrence, William Glenn Gray, and Daniel J. Sargent, “A Roundtable on Daniel J. Sargent, A Superpower Transformed: The Remaking of American Foreign Relations in the 1970s,” 10.
• Amanda C. Demmer and Lauren F. Turek, “Building a Brighter Future: How SHAFR Can
Best Support Graduate Students,” 28.
• Hamza Karcic, “A View from Overseas: The Congressional Commemoration of the Bosnian Genocide,” 31.
• Barbara Keys, Roland Burke, and Guoqi Xu, “The Entangled Histories of Human Rights
and the Olympic Games,” 33. Two Perspectives on the Zivotofsky v. Kerry Decision, 22
• Mary L. Dudziak, “’A Delicate Subject’: The Supreme Court, Congress, and the President’s Foreign Relations Power.”
• John Yoo, “Zivotofsky and the ‘Invitation to Struggle’.”
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Peace & Change, Vol. 40, Issue 4 (October 2015) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pech.2015.40.issue-4/issuetoc
• Donald W. Maxwell, “’These Are the Things You Gain If You Make Our Country Your Country’: U.S.-Vietnam War Draft Resisters and Military Deserters and the Meaning of Citizenship in North America in the 1970s,” 437.
• Merav Perez and Orna Sasson-Levy, “Avoiding Military Service in a Militaristic Society:
A Chronicle of Resistance to Hegemonic Masculinity,” 462. Special Forum Articles
https://shafr.org/sites/default/files/passport-09-2015.pdfhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pech.2015.40.issue-4/issuetoc
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• Kathleen Kennedy and Kathleen Z. Young, “Introduction: The Body in Pain at Thirty,” 489.
• Nicole R. McClure, “Injured Bodies, Silenced Voices: Reclaiming Personal Trauma and the Narration of Pain in Northern Ireland,”497.
• K. Frances Lieder, “Lights Out and an Ethics of Spectatorship, or Can the Subaltern
Scream?,” 517.
• Jason A. Springs, “To Let Suffering Speak: Can Peacebuilding Overcome the Unrepresentability of Suffering? Elaine Scarry and the Case of Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” 539.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, Vol. 21, Issue 4 (November 2015) http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/pac/21/4/
• Richard N. Lalonde, Jorida Cila, Evelina Lou, and Robert A. Cribbie, “Are we really that different from each other? The difficulties of focusing on similarities in cross-cultural research,” 525.
• Lisa Rosenthal, Sheri R. Levy, Margarita Katser, and Cartney Bazile, “Polyculturalism
and attitudes toward Muslim Americans,” 535.
• Donald M. Taylor and Frank J. Kachanoff, “Managing cultural diversity without a clearly defined cultural identity: The ultimate challenge,” 546.
• William J. Froming, “Healing in a postgenocidal country,” 560.
• Dominic Bryan, “Parades, flags, carnivals, and riots: Public space, contestation, and
transformation in Northern Ireland,” 565.
• Michael G. Wessells, David F.M. Lamin, Dora King, Kathleen Kostelny, Lindsay Stark, and Sarah Lilley, “The limits of top-down approaches to managing diversity: Lessons from the case of child protection and child rights in Sierra Leone,” 574.
• Craig Zelizer, “The role of conflict resolution graduate education in training the next
generation practitioners and scholars,” 589.
• Rezarta Bilali and Johanna Ray Vollhardt, “Do mass media interventions effectively promote peace in contexts of ongoing violence? Evidence from Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo,” 604.
• Jon D. Unruh, “The structure and function of keywords in the development of civil
wars: Opportunities for peace building?,” 621.
http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/pac/21/4/
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• J. Christopher Cohrs, Andrew McNeill, and Johanna Ray Vollhardt, “The two-sided role of inclusive victimhood for intergroup reconciliation: Evidence from Northern Ireland,” 634.
• P.J. Henry, Geoffrey Wetherell, and Mark J. Brandt, “Democracy as a legitimizing
ideology,” 648.
• Brandt A. Smith and Michael A. Zárate, “The effects of religious priming and persuasion style on decision-making in a resource allocation task,” 665.
• Katy Hayward, “Scene from a different angle: Attempts to internationalize Northern
Ireland’s conflict experience,” 669.
• Tobias Greiff, “Radicalized,” 673.
• Eric C. Marcus, “How to begin understanding and working with potentially destructive conflict,” 675.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice, Vol. 27, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cper20/27/4
• Marjorie Cohn and Jeanne Mirer, “Armed Drones Violate the Right to Peace,” 411.
• Jeffrey Bachman, “Drones Are Bringing the Warzone to a Theater Near You,” 418.
• John R. Emery and Daniel R. Brunstetter, “Drones as Aerial Occupation,” 424.
• Steven P. Lee, “Human Rights and Drone ‘Warfare’,” 432.
• Laurie Calhoun, “Drone Killing and the Disastrous Doctrine of Double Effect,” 440.
• Doga Ulas Eralp, “The Role of U.S. Drones in the Roboski Massacre,” 448.
• Kai Chen, “Invisible Victims of Drone Strikes in Afghanistan,” 456.
• James Tsabora, “The African Peace Agenda in the Drone Warfare Era,” 461.
• Jennifer Ang, “Technologizing War and Peace,” 469.
• James DeShaw Rae, “Drones and a Culture of Death,” 477.
• Anna Cornelia Beyer, “Insights from Para-Psychology for International Relations,” 484.
• Stephen Zunes, “U.S.-Georgian Relations and the 2008 Conflict with Russia,” 492.
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cper20/27/4
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• Danielle Poe, “Joy and Justice,” 499.
• Willita Sanguma, “Conflict and its Effect on Urbanization,” 507.
• Whitney McIntyre Miller and Michael Wundah, “Peace Profile: Christiana Thorpe,” 515. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Politique Étrangère (2015/4) http://www.cairn.info/revue-politique-etrangere-2015-4.htm Justice Pénale Internationale: Un Bilan
• Joël Hubrecht, “La justice pénale internationale a 70 ans: entre âge de fer et âge d’or,” 11.
• Jean-Arnault Dérens, “Le Tribunal pénal international pour l’ex-Yougoslavie: une faillite annoncée?,” 25.
• Hélène Dumas, “Rwanda: comment juger un génocide?,” 39.
• Jules Guillaumé, “Le droit à réparation devant la CPI: promesses et incertitudes,” 51.
Actualités
• Marie-Claire Aoun, “Une ère nouvelle d’abondance pétrolière?,” 65.
• Laurence Nardon, “Présidentielles américaines: ce que nous disent les primaires,” 77.
• Barbara Kunz, “Le débat allemand sur la securité: changement du discours, maintien du paradigme,” 91.
Repères
• Alain Gascon, “L’Éthiopie, une puissance africaine?,” 105.
• Jean-Yves Haine, “Le Partenariat atlantique à l’épreuve de la multipolairité: la fin des illusions,” 119.
• Juliette Genevaz, “La Chine et les opérations de maintien de la paix de l’ONU: défendre la
souveraineté,” 131.
• Arnaud Odier, “De la diplomatie financière à la géopolitique de la finance,” 145.
• Olivier Kempf, “L’indirection de la guerre ou le retour de la guerre limitée,” 157.
• Asiem El Difraoui and Milena Uhlmann, “Prévention de la radicalisation et déradicalisation: les modèles allemand, britannique et danois,” 171.
http://www.cairn.info/revue-politique-etrangere-2015-4.htm
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_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Raisons Politiques (2015/3) https://www.cairn.info/revue-raisons-politiques-2015-3.htm Dossier: Restorative Justice: The Institutional Turn/La justice restaurative: le tournant institutionnel
• Andrei Poama, “Restorative Justice: The Institutional Turn,” 7.
• Victoria McGeer and Philip Pettit, “The Desirability and Feasibility of Restorative Justice,” 17.
• John Braithwaite, “Deliberative Republican Hybridity through Restorative Justice,” 33.
• Albert W. Dzur, “Public Restorative Justice: The Participatory Democratic Dimensions
of Institutional Reform,” 51.
• Thom Brooks, “Punitive Restoration: Rehabilitating Restorative Justice,” 73.
• Jennifer M. Page, “Many Men are Good Judges in their Own Case: Restorative Justice and the Nemo Iudex Principle in Anglo-American Law,” 91.
• Jacques Faget, “Les dynamiques de transfert des idées restauratives,” 109.
Varia
• Ivan Manokha, “The Conundrum of Economics: Uncompromisng Empiricism alongside Blind Faith in the ‘Magic’ of the ‘Invisible Hand’,” 121.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Renewal: A Journal of Social Democracy, Vol. 23, No. 4 (2015) http://renewal.org.uk/issues/vol-23-no-4-2015
• Ben Jackson, “Editorial: Labour’s ideology: towards common ground.”
• Joe Guinan, “Bring back the Institute for Workers’ Control.”
• Thomas Ferretti, “Mondragon in five points: advantages and challenges of worker co-operatives.”
• Chloe McLellan, “Socialism through the lens of Alasdair MacIntyre: post-war Labour
visions and Blue Labour.”
• Rob Manwaring, “A false grail? Labour and the pursuit of democracy.”
https://www.cairn.info/revue-raisons-politiques-2015-3.htmhttp://renewal.org.uk/issues/vol-23-no-4-2015
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• Ashraf Ahmed, “Corbyn, Sanders, and a transatlantic left?” _________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Review of Faith & International Affairs, Vol. 13, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rfia20/13/3
• Quentin Wodon, “Child Marriage, Family Law, and Religion: An Introduction to the Fall 2015 Issue,” 1.
• Minh Cong Nguyen and Quentin Wodon, “Global and Regional Trends in Child
Marriage,” 6.
• Jennifer Parsons, Jeffrey Edmeades, Aslihan Kes, Suzanne Petroni, Maggie Sexton, and Quentin Wodon, “Economic Impacts of Child Marriage: A Review of the Literature,” 12.
• Elisa Scolaro, Aleksandra Blagojevic, Brigitte Filion, Venkatraman Chandra-Mouli, Lale
Say, Joar Svanemyr, and Marleen Temmerman, “Child Marriage Legislation in the Asia-Pacific Region,” 23.
• Paul Scott Prettitore, “Family Law Reform, Gender Equality, and Underage Marriage: A
view from Morocco and Jordan,” 32. • Regina Gemignani and Quentin Wodon, “Child Marriage and Faith Affiliation in Sub-
Saharan Africa: Stylized Facts and Heterogeneity,” 41.
• Judith-Ann Walker, “Engaging Islamic Opinion Leaders on Child Marriage: Preliminary Results from Pilot Projects in Nigeria,” 48.
• Azza Karam, “Faith-Inspired Initiatives to Tackle the Social Determinants of Child
Marriage,” 59.
• Jennifer McCleary-Sills, Lucia Hanmer, Jennifer Parsons, and Jeni Klugman, “Child Marriage: A Critical Barrier to Girls’ Schooling and Gender Equality in Education,” 69.
• Quentin Wodon, “Islamic Law, Women’s Rights, and State Law: The Cases of Female
Genital Cutting and Child Marriage,” 81. The Review of Faith & International Affairs, Vol. 13, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rfia20/13/4 Articles
• Melissa Crouch, “Constructing Religion by Law in Myanmar,” 1.
• Tharaphi Than, “Nationalism, Religion, and Violence: Old and New Wunthanu Movements in Myanmar,” 12.
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rfia20/13/3http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rfia20/13/4
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• Susan Hayward, “The Double-Edged Sword of ‘Buddhist Democracy’ in Myanmar,” 25.
• Matthew J. Walton, Melyn McKay, and Daw Khin Mar Mar Kyi, “Women and Myanmar’s ‘Religious Protection Laws’,” 36.
• Nyi Nyi Kyaw, “Alienation, Discrimination, and Securitization: Legal Personhood and
Cultural Personhood of Muslims in Myanmar,” 50.
• Benedict Rogers, “The Contribution of Christianity to Myanmar’s Social and Political Development,” 60.
• Saw Hlaing Bwa, “Why Interfaith Dialogue is Essential for Myanmar’s Future,” 71.
Essays
• Seng Mai Aung, “Responding to Child Abuse in Myanmar: Poverty, Ethnicity, and Religion in Pathein,” 79.
• Owen Frazer, “International Engagement on Buddhist-Muslim Relations in Myanmar,”
82.
• Tina L. Mufford, “Burma’s Distinct yet Flawed Approach to Religious Freedom: A Comparative Perspective,” 87.
• Cardinal Charles Maung Bo, “Toward a Future of Justice, Peace, and Development in
Myanmar: a Christian Perspective,” 91. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Review of International Studies, Vol. 41, Issue 5 (December 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=RIS&volumeId=41&issueId=05&iid=10039302
• André Broome and Joel Quirk, “The politics of numbers: the normative agendas of global benchmarking,” 813.
• André Broome and Joel Quirk, “Governing the world at a distance: the practice of global
benchmarking,” 819.
• Alexandra Homolar, “Human security benchmarks: Governing human wellbeing at a distance,” 843.
• Tony Porter, “Global benchmarking networks: the cases of disaster risk reduction and
supply chains,” 865.
• Leonard Seabrooke and Duncan Wigan, “How activists use benchmarks: Reformist and revolutionary benchmarks for global economic justice,” 887.
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=RIS&volumeId=41&issueId=05&iid=10039302http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=RIS&volumeId=41&issueId=05&iid=10039302
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• Genevieve LeBaron and Jane Lister, “Benchmarking global supply chains: the power of
the ‘ethical audit’ regime,” 905.
• James Harrison and Sharifah Sekalala, “Addressing the compliance gap? UN initiatives to benchmark the human rights performance of states and corporations,” 925.
• Liam Clegg, “Benchmarking and blame games: Exploring the contestation of the
Millenium Development Goals,” 947.
• Caroline Kuzemko, “Climate change benchmarking: Constructing a sustainable future?,” 969.
• Ole Jacob Sending and Jon Harald Sande Lie, “The limits of global authority: World
Bank benchmarks in Ethiopia and Malawi,” 993. Review of International Studies, Vol. 42, Issue 1 (January 2016) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=RIS&volumeId=42&seriesId=0&issueId=01
• Nicholas Guilhot, “The Kuhning of reason: Realism, rationalism, and political decision in IR theory after Thomas Kuhn,” 3.
• Samuel Knafo, “Bourdieu and the dead end of reflexivity: On the impossible task of
locating the subject,” 25.
• Matthew Fluck, “Theory, ‘truthers’, and transparency: Reflecting on knowledge in the twenty-first century,” 48.
• Milan Babík, “’X’ ten years on: The fictions of George F. Kennan’s recent factual
representations,” 74.
• Naomi Head, “A politics of empathy: Encounters with empathy in Israel and Palestine,” 95.
• Leonie Holthaus and Jens Steffek, “Experiments in international administration: The
forgotten functionalism of James Arthur Salter,” 114.
• Shmuel Nili, “Liberal global justice and social science,”136.
• Astrid H.M. Nordin, “Futures beyond ‘the West’? Autoimmunity in China’s harmonious world,” 156.
• Morten Skumsrud Andersen, “Semi-cores in imperial relations: The cases of Scotland
and Norway,” 178. _________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Revista Brasileira de Política Internacional, Vol. 58, No. 2 (July-December 2015) http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_issuetoc&pid=0034-732920150002&lng=en&nrm=iso
• Rogério de Souza Farias and Haroldo Ramanzini Júnior, “Reviewing horizontalization: the challenge of analysis in Brazilian foreign policy.”
• Luísa Cruz Lobato and Kai Michael Kenkel, “Discourses of cyberspace securitization in
Brazil and in the United States.”
• Luis Mah, “Reshaping European Union development policy: collective choices and the new global order.”
• Boris Vukicevic, “Pope Francis and the challenges of inter-civilization diplomacy.”
• Norma Breda dos Santos and Eduardo Uziel, “Forty Years of the United Nations General
Assembly Resolution 3379 (XXX) on Zionism and Racism: the Brazilian Vote as an instance of United States-Brazil relations.”
• Felipe Pereira Loureiro, Feliciano de Sá Guimarães, and Adriana Schor, “Public opinion
and foreign policy in João Goulart’s Brazil (1961-1964): Coherence between national and foreign policy perceptions?”
• Maria Helena de Castro and Ulysses Tavares Teixeira, “Interests and Values in Obama’s
foreign policy: Leading from Behind?”
• German A. de la Reza, “The 1623 Plan for Global Governance: the obscure history of its reception.”
_________________________________________________________________________________________________ Revista de Historia Económica/Journal of Iberian and La