[jw] H-Diplo JOURNAL WATCH, J to Z H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review Third Quarter 2015 20 July 2015 Compiled by Lubna Qureshi, Stockholm University The Journal of African History, Vol. 56, Issue 2 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AFH&volumeId=56 &issueId=02&iid=9768037 New Economic Histories • • Johan Fourie and Erik Green, “The Missing People: Accounting for the Productivity of Indigenous Populations in Cape Colonial History,” 195. Jutta Bolt and Erik Green, “Was the Wage Burden Too Heavy? Settler Farming, Profitability, and Wage Shares of Settler Agriculture in Nyasaland, c. 1900-60,” 217. Crafting Political Identities in the Era of Decolonization • • • Elizabeth Foster, “’Entirely Christian and Entirely African’: Catholic African Students in France in the Era of Independence,” 239. Jill Rosenthal, “From ‘Migrants’ to ‘Refugees’: Identity, Aid, and Decolonization in Ngara District, Tanzania,” 261. Justin Willis, “The Southern Problem: Representing Sudan’s Southern Provinces to c. 1970,” 281. Enduring Violence • David Crawford Jones, “Wielding the Epokolo: Corporal Punishment and Traditional Authority in Colonial Ovamboland,” 301. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/3.0/us/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA. H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of American-East Asian Relations, Vol. 22, Issue 1 (2015) http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18765610/22/1 • • Michael A. Schneider, “Mr. Moto: Improbable International Man of Mystery,” 7. Yanqiu Zheng, “A Specter of Extraterritoriality,” 17. • Nguyet Nguyen, “Which Mirror is ‘Truer’?,” 45. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of American History, Vol. 102, No. 1 (June 2015) http://www.journalofamericanhistory.org/issues/1021/ • • • • • • • • • • • Kelly Lytle Hernández, Khalil Gibran Muhammad, and Heather Ann Thompson, “Introduction: Constructing the Carceral State,” 18. Kali Nicole Gross, “African American Women, Mass Incarceration, and the Politics of Protection,” 25. Jeffrey S. Adler, “Less Crime, More Punishment: Violence, Race, and Criminal Justice in Early Twentieth-Century America,” 34. Miroslava Chávez-García, “Youth of Color and California’s Carceral State: The Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility,” 47. Timothy Stewart-Winter, “Queer Law and Order: Sex, Criminality, and Policing in the Late Twentieth-Century United States,” 61. Robert T. Chase, “We Are Not Slaves: Rethinking the Rise of Carceral States through the Lens of the Prisoners’ Rights Movement,” 73. Julilly Kohler-Hausmann, “Guns and Butter: The Welfare State, the Carceral State, and the Politics of Exclusion in the Postwar United States,” 87. Elizabeth Hinton, “’A War within Our Own Boundaries’: Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society and the Rise of the Carceral State,” 100. Alex Lichtenstein, “Flocatex and the Fiscal Limits of Mass Incarceration: Toward a New Political Economy of the Postwar Carceral State,” 113. Matthew D. Lassiter, “Impossible Criminals: The Suburban Imperatives of America’s War on Drugs,” 126. Torrie Hester, “Deportability and the Carceral State,” 141. 2|Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • Micol Seigel, “Objects of Police History,” 152. Donna Murch, “Crack in Los Angeles: Crisis, Militarization, and Black Response to the Late Twentieth-Century War on Drugs,” 162. Edward J. Escobar, “The Unintended Consequences of the Carceral State: Chicana/o Political Mobilization in Post-World War II America,” 174. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of American Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 2 (May 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AMS&volumeId=4 9&issueId=02&iid=9703932 • • • • • • • • • Fionnghuala Sweeney, “’It Will Come at Last’: Acts of Emancipation in the Art, Culture and Politics of the Black Diaspora,” 225. H. Adlai Murdoch, “Locating History within Fiction’s Frame: Re-presenting the Epopée Delgrès in Maximin and Lara,” 241. Karen N. Salt, “Ecological Chains of Unfreedom: Contours of Black Sovereignty in the Atlantic World,” 267. P. Gabrielle Foreman, “New England’s Fortune: An Inheritance of Black Bodies and Bones,” 287. Zoe Trodd, “John Brown’s Spirit: The Abolitionist Aesthetic of Emancipatory Martyrdom in Early Antilynching Protest Literature,” 305. Celeste-Marie Bernier, “A Visual Call to Arms against the ‘Caracature [sic] of My Own Face’: From Fugitive Slave to Fugitive Image in Frederick Douglass’s Theory of Portraiture,” 323. Candace Ward, “’In the Free’: The Work of Emancipation in the Anglo-Caribbean Historical Novel,” 359. Marcus Wood, “Slavery and Syncretic Performance in the Noite do Tambores Silenciosos: Or How Batuque and the Calunga Dance around with the Memory of Slavery,” 383. Harvey G. Cohen, “Recent Music History Scholarship: Pleasures and Drawbacks,” 405. Journal of American Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 3 (August 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=AMS&volumeId=49&seriesId=0&i ssueId=03 3|Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • • David A. Davis, “The Irony of Southern Modernism,” 457. Tao Zhang, “The Start of American Accommodation of the Chinese: Afong Moy’s Experience from 1834 to 1850,” 475. Jay Garcia, “Richard Wright and the Americanism of Lawd Today!,” 505. Stephanie Fuller, “’The Most Notorious Sucker-Trap in the Western Hemisphere’: The Tijuana Story (Leslie Kardos, 1957) and Mythologies of Tijuana in American Cinema,” 523. Nathan Abrams, “A Jewish American Monster: Stanley Kubrick, Anti-Semitism and Lolita (1962),” 541. Say Burgin, “’The Most Progressive and Forward Looking Race Relations Experiment in Existence’: Race ‘Militancy’, Whiteness, and DRRI in the Early 1970s,” 557. Martin Paul Eve, “’Too many goddamn echoes’: Historicizing the Iraq War in Don DeLillo’s Point Omega,” 575. Kun Jong Lee, “The Making of an Asian American Short-Story Cycle: Don Lee’s Yellow: Stories,” 593. • Tom Adam Davies, “The Economics of the Black Freedom Struggle,” 615. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 74, Issue 2 (May 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JAS&volumeId=74 &issueId=02&iid=9720665 • • • • • • Adriana Erthal Abdenur, “China in Africa, Viewed from Brazil,” 257. Kiri Paramore, “’Civil Religion’ and Confucianism: Japan’s Past, China’s Present, and the Current Boom in Scholarship on Confucianism,” 269. Vicente L. Rafael, “The War of Translation: Colonial Education, American English, and Tagalog Slang in the Philippines,” 283. Doreen Lee, “A Troubled Vernacular: Legibility and Presence in Indonesian Activist Art,” 303. Karin Zitzewitz, “Life in Ruins: Materiality, the City, and the Production of Critique in the Art of Naiza Khan,” 323. Faridah Zaman, “Colonizing the Sacred: Allahabad and the Company State, 1797-1857,” 347. 4|Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • Benjamin D. Hopkins, “The Frontier Crimes Regulation and Frontier Governmentality,” 369. Margherita Zanasi, “Frugal Modernity: Livelihood and Consumption in Republican China,” 391. Tessa Morris-Suzuki, “Prisoner Number 600,001: Rethinking Japan, China, and the Korean War 1950-1953,” 411. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of British Studies, Vol. 54, Issue 2 (April 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JBR&volumeId=54 &issueId=02&iid=9651096 • • • • • • • • Peter Lake, “The ‘Political Thought’ of the ‘Monarchical Republic of Elizabeth I,’ Discovered and Anatomized,” 257. Beverly Lemire, “’Men of the World’: British Mariners, Consumer Practice, and Material Culture in an Era of Global Trade, c. 1660-1800,” 288. Maria Zytaruk, “Artifacts of Elegy: The Foundling Hospital Tokens,” 320. David G. Barrie, “Naming and Shaming: Trial by Media in Nineteenth-Century Scotland,” 349. Daniel C.S. Wilson, “J.A. Hobson and the Machinery Question,” 377. Tom Hulme, “’A Nation Depends on Its Children’: School Buildings and Citizenship in England and Wales, 1900-1939,” 406. Deanne van Tol, “The Women of Kenya Speak: Imperial Activism and Settler Society, c. 1930,” 433. Erika Hanna, “Photographs and ‘Truth’ during the Northern Ireland Troubles, 196972,” 457. Journal of British Studies, Vol. 54, Issue 3 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=JBR&volumeId=54&seriesId=0&is sueId=03 • • Eleanor Hubbard, “Reading, Writing, and Initialing: Female Literacy in Early Modern London,” 553. Jacob Selwood, “Left Behind: Subjecthood, Nationality, and the Status of Jews after the Loss of English Surinam,” 578. 5|Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • Tristan Stein, “Passes and Protection in the Making of a British Mediterranean,” 602. Thomas Waters, “Magic and the British Middle Classes, 1750-1900,” 632. Nicola Bishop, “Ruralism, Masculinity, and National Identity: The Rambling Clerk in Fiction, 1900-1940,” 654. Selina Todd, “Phoenix Rising: Working-Class Life and Urban Reconstruction, c. 19451967,” 679. David Matthew Doyle, “Republicans, Martyrology, and the Death Penalty in Britain and Ireland, 1939-1990,” 703. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 17, Issue 2 (Spring 2015) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jcws/17/2 • • • • Robert P. Hager, Jr. and Robert S. Snyder, “The United States and Nicaragua: Understanding the Breakdown in Relations,” 3. James Stocker, “Accepting Regional Zero: Nuclear Weapon Free Zones, U.S. Nonproliferation Policy and Global Security, 1957-1968,” 36. Michelle Denise Getchell, “Revisiting the 1954 Coup in Guatemala: The Soviet Union, the United Nations, and ‘Hemispheric Solidarity’,” 73. Christopher Gunn, “The 1960 Coup in Turkey: A U.S. Intelligence Failure or a Successful Intervention?,” 103. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 59:4 (June 2015) http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/59/4.toc • • • • Pieter Serneels and Marijke Verpoorten, “The Impact of Armed Conflict on Economic Performance: Evidence from Rwanda,” 555. Judith M. Bretthauer, “Conditions for Peace and Conflict: Applying a Fuzzy-Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis to Cases of Resource Scarcity,” 593. Leonardo Baccini and Andreas Dür, “Investment Discrimination and the Proliferation of Preferential Trade Agreements,” 617. Arzu Kibris, “The Conflict Trap Revisited: Civil Conflict and Educational Achievement,” 645. 6|Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • Edy Glozman, Netta Barak-Corren, and Ilan Yaniv, “False Negotiations: The Art and Science of Not Reaching an Agreement,” 671. Timothy M. Peterson, “Insiders versus Outsiders: Preferential Trade Agreements, Trade Distortions, and Militarized Conflict,” 698. Benjamin E. Bagozzi, Daniel W. Hill, Jr., Will H. Moore, and Bumba Mukherjee, “Modeling Two Types of Peace: The Zero-inflated Ordered Probit (ZiOP) Model in Conflict Research,” 728. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 33, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjca20/33/1#.VaLFOygujGo • • • • • • • • • • Nivedita Menon, “Fighting patriarchy and capitalism,” 3. Ayo A. Coly, “Un/clothing African womanhood: colonial statements and postcolonial discourses of the African female body,” 12. Ramola Ramtohul, “Intersectionality and women’s political citizenship: the case of Mauritius,” 27. Francis B. Nyamnjoh, “Beyond an evangelizing public anthropology: science, theory, and commitment,” 48. Rosabelle Boswell, “Falling out of love? A response to Francis Nyamnjoh’s ‘Beyond an evangelizing public anthropology: science, theory, and commitment’,” 64. Browne Onuoha, “Peace and security concerns in the Niger Delta: a persisting struggle for autonomy and self-determination,” 69. Samuel Adams and Joseph Taabazuing, “The promises and realities of Ghana’s decentralization: a case study from the Wenchi district of Ghana,” 88. Monageng Mogalakwe, “An assessment of Botswana’s electoral management body to deliver fair elections,” 105. Elisa Van Waeyenberge and Hanna Bargawi, “Moving beyond the paradox of macroeconomic stability in Uganda?,” 121. Adam Sneyd, Alexander Fomin Legwegoh, and Lauren Q. Sneyd, “Food politics: perspectives on food security in Central Africa,” 141. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Contemporary Asia, Vol. 45, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjoc20/45/3#.VaLMoigujGo 7|Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • • Paul K. Gellert, “Optimism and Education: The New Ideology of Development in Indonesia,” 371. Eduardo Climaco Tadem, “Technocracy and the Peasantry: Martial Law Development Paradigms and Philippine Agrarian Reform,” 394. Duncan McCargo and Peeradej Tanruangporn, “Branding Dissent: Nitirat, Thailand’s Enlightened Jurists,” 419. Yoonkyung Lee, “Sky Protest: New Forms of Labour Resistance in Neo-Liberal Korea,” 443. Devin K. Joshi and Kathleen McGrath, “Political Ideology, Public Policy and Human Development in India: Explaining the Gap Between Gujarat and Tamil Nadu,”465. Vlado Vivoda and Geordan Graetz, “Nuclear Policy and Regulation in Japan after Fukushima: Navigating the Crisis,” 490. Hiroaki Richard Watanabe, “The Struggle for Revitalisation by Japanese Labour Unions: Worker Organising after Labour-Market Deregulation,” 510. Tom Brass, “Free Markets, Unfree Labour: Old Questions Answered, New Answers Questioned,” 531. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Contemporary China, Vol. 24, Issue 94 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjcc20/24/94#.VaLTUygujGo Local Elites in the People’s Republic of China Guest Editor: David S.G. Goodman • • • • Linda Chelan Li and Zhenjie Yang, “What Causes the Local Fiscal Crisis in China: the role of intermediaries,” 573. Graeme Smith, “Getting Ahead in Rural China: the elite-cadre divide and its implications for rural governance,” 594. Minglu Chen, “From Economic Elites to Political Elites: private entrepreneurs in the People’s Political Consultative Conference,” 613. Xiaowei Zang and Nabo Chen, “How Do Rural Elites Reproduce Privileges in Post-1978 China? Local corporatism, informal bargaining and opportunistic parasitism,” 628. Research Articles 8|Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • Zhang Han, “Party Building in Urban Business Districts: organizational adaptation of the Chinese Communist Party,” 644. Xiaoyi Wen and Kevin Lin, “Restructuring China’s State Corporatist Industrial Relations System: the Wenling experience,” 665. Ting Gong, “Managing Government integrity under Hierarchy: anti-corruption efforts in local China,” 684. Mikael Mattlin and Matti Nojonen, “Conditionality and Path Dependence in Chinese Lending,” 701. Qin Gao, Qianwei Ying, and Danglun Luo, “Hidden Income and Occupational Background: evidence from Guangzhou,” 721. Provocation • Rui Pan, “China’s WTO Membership and the Non-Market Economy Status: discrimination and impediment to China’s foreign trade,” 742. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Vol. 23, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjea20/23/2#.VaLYmCgujGo • • • • • • • • Didem Buhari-Gulmez and Chris Rumford, “Locating ‘World Society’ in European Studies,” 169. Barrie Axford, “Macro-lite: Ways to Understand Europe-Making in the Global Era,” 176. Sebastian M. Büttner, “The ‘World-Cultural’ Constitution of Regions: Sub-national Regional Mobilization from a World Society Perspective,” 193. Simona Szakács, “Europeanization qua Institutionalization of World Culture: Examples from Post-1989 Romanian Education,” 208. Shushanik Makaryan, “Construction of Migration Policies in the Eastern Neighbourhood of the European Union,” 222. Philomena Murray, “Europe and the World: The Problem of the Fourth Wall in EUASEAN Norms Promotion,” 238. Ulrike Zschache, “Reflecting the Global? The Common Agricultural Policy and Its Perception in Public Media Discourse,” 253. Vassilis Petsinis, “The ‘New’ Far Right in Hungary: A Political Psychologist’s Perspective,” 272. 9|Page H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • Derek Hawes, “Cohesion or Incompetence? The Brussels Policy Machine Exposed,” 288. Branislav Radeljic, “Accommodating Diversity in Europe: Expectations and Possible Outcomes,” 292. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of the Early Republic, Vol. 35, No. 2 (Summer 2015) http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_early_republic/toc/jer.35.2.html • • • • • • François Furstenberg and David Waldstreicher, “Re-reintroducing the Republican Court,” 165. David S. Shields and Fredrika J. Teute, “The Republican Court and the Historiography of a Women’s Domain in the Public Sphere,” 169. David S. Shields and Fredrika J. Teute, “The Meschianza: Sum of All Fêtes,” 185. Fredrika J. Teute and David S. Shields, “The Confederation Court,” 215. David S. Shields and Fredrika J. Teute, “The Court of Abigail Adams,” 227. Fredrika J. Teute and David S. Shields, “Jefferson in Washington: Domesticating Manners in the Republican Court,” 237. Reflections • • • • Toby L. Ditz, “Masculine Republics and ‘Female Politicians’ in the Age of Revolution,” 263. Sophia Rosenfeld, “’Europe’, Women, and the American Political Imaginary: The 1790s and the 1990s,” 271. Jason Shaffer, “The Arts of War and Peace: Theatricality and Sexuality in the Early Republic,” 279. Amy Hudson Henderson, “Material Matters: Reading the Chairs of the Republican Court,” 287. • Andrew Cayton, “The ‘Rights of Woman’ and the Problem of Power,” 295. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Genocide Research, Vol. 17, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjgr20/17/2#.VaOFQygujGo 10 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • Susan I. Blackbeard, “Acts of severity: colonial settler massacre of amaXhosa and abaThembu on the eastern frontier of the Cape Colony, c. 1826-47,” 107. André Brett, “’The miserable remnant of this ill-used people’: colonial genocide and the Moriori of New Zealand’s Chatham Islands,” 133. Gerhard Wolf, “The Wannsee Conference in 1942 and the National Socialist living space dystopia,” 153. Adam Tyson, “Genocide documentary as intervention,” 177. Hamza Karcic, “Remembering by resolution: the case of Srebrenica,” 201. Surabhi Chopra, “The International Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh: silencing fair comment,” 211. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, Vol. 14, Issue 2 (April 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JGA&volumeId=14 &issueId=02&iid=9645256 • • • • • • Joe Creech, “The Tolerant Populists and the Legacy of Walter Nugent,” 141. Ernest G. Rigney and Timothy C. Lundy, “George Herbert Mead on Terrorism, Immigrants, and Social Settlements: A 1908 Letter to the Chicago Record Herald,” 160. David Monod, “Double-Voiced: Music, Gender, and Nature in Performance,” 173. Carolyn Strange, “The Battlefields of Personal and Public Memory: Commemorating the Battle of Saratoga (1777) in the Late Nineteenth Century,” 194. Mary R. Block and John P. Dunn, “The Mini-Beast – George H. Butler (1838-1886),” 222. Dorothea Browder, “Working Out Their Economic Problems Together: World War I, Working Women, and Civil Rights in the YWCA,” 243. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Global Ethics, Vol. 11, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjge20/11/1#.VaOKSSgujGo Forum: The Sustainable Development Goals • • Eric Palmer, “Introduction: The Sustainable Development Goals Forum,” 3. Sakiko Fukuda-Parr and Desmond McNeill, “Post 2015: a new era of accountability?,” 10. 11 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • Luis Camacho, “Sustainable Development Goals: kinds, connections and expectations,” 18. Shashi Motilal, “Sustainable development goals and human moral obligations: the ends and means relation,” 24. Clara Brandi, “Safeguarding the earth system as a priority for sustainable development and global ethics: the need for an earth system SDG,” 32. Francesca Pongiglione, “The need for a priority structure for the Sustainable Development Goals,” 37. Merata Kawharu, “Aotearoa: shine or shame? A critical examination of the Sustainable Development Goals and the question of poverty and young Maori in New Zealand,” 43. Krushil Watene and Mandy Yap, “Culture and sustainable development: indigenous contributions,” 51. Thomas Pogge and Mitu Sengupta, “The Sustainable Development Goals: a plan for building a better world?,” 56. Guest Edited Section: Global Ethics as Theory and Practice • • • • • • Matti Hayry and Tuija Takala, “Introduction: The theory and practice of global justice,” 65. Martha C. Nussbaum, “Political liberalism and global justice,” 68. Sirkku K. Hellsten, “Ethics: universal or global? The trends of studies in ethics in the context of globalization,” 80. Matti Hayry and Simo Vehmas, “Disability as a test of justice in a globalizing world,” 90. Jukka Mäkinen and Eero Kasanen, “In defense of a regulated market economy,” 99. Claudia Garduño García, “Good design as design for good: exploring how design can be ethically and environmentally sustainable by co-designing an eco-hostel within a Mayan community,” 110. Article • Anke Graness, “Is the debate on ‘global justice’ an global one? Some considerations in view of modern philosophy in Africa,” 126. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ 12 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 Journal of Global History, Vol. 10, Issue 2 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JGH&volumeId=10 &issueId=02&iid=9792192 • • • • • • • Heidi J.S. Tworek and Simone M. Müller, “Editorial – communicating global capitalism,” 203. Peter A. Shulman, “Ben Franklin’s ghost: world peace, American slavery, and the global politics of information before the Universal Postal Union,” 212. Léonard Laborie, “Global commerce in small boxes: parcel post, 1878-1913,” 235. Simone M. Müller and Heidi J.S. Tworek, “’The telegraph and the bank’: on the interdependence of global communications and capitalism, 1866-1914,” 259. Alexander Engel, “Buying time: futures trading and telegraphy in nineteenth-century global commodity markets,” 284. Quinn Slobodian, “How to see the world economy: statistics, maps, and Schumpeter’s camera in the first age of globalization,” 307. James R. Brennan, “The Cold War battle over global news in East Africa: decolonization, the free flow of information, and the media business, 1960-1980,” 333. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 37, Issue 2 ( June 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=HET&volumeId=37 &issueId=02&iid=9732270 • • • • • • Stephen Meardon, “Introduction to the Symposium: American Political Economy from the Age of Jackson to the Civil War,” 161. Steven G. Medema, “Remarks of the General Discussant: A Distinctively American Economics? What We Know, What We Don’t Know, and Why It Matters,” 163. Harro Maas, “Olmsted, De Bow, and the Weight of Evidence on the American Slave South,” 171. Phillip W. Magness, “The American System and the Political Economy of Black Colonization,” 187. Brian Schoen, “The Political Economies of Secession,” 203. James A. Morrison, “This Means (Bank) War! Corruption and Credible Commitments in the Collapse of the Second Bank of the United States,” 221. 13 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • Joseph Persky, “American Political Economy and the Common School Movement: 18201850,” 247. Ariel Ron, “Henry Carey’s Rural Roots, ‘Scientific Agriculture’, and Economic Development in the Antebellum South,” 263. William S. Belko, “’A Tax on the Many, To Enrich a Few’: Jacksonian Democracy vs. the Protective Tariff,” 277. Marc-William Palen, “Free-Trade Ideology and Transatlantic Abolitionism: A Historiography,” 291. Stephen Meardon, “Henry C. Carey’s ‘Zone Theory’ and American Sectional Conflict,” 305. _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 14, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjhr20/14/2#.VaOzKygujGo • • • • • • • Michael A. Santoro, “Introduction: Business and Human Rights in Historical Perspective,” 155. Florian Wettstein, “Normativity, Ethics, and the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: A Critical Assessment,” 162. Toby Whitney, “Conflict Minerals, Black Markets, and Transparency: The Legislative Background of Dodd-Frank Section 1502 and Its Historical Lessons,” 183. Celia R. Taylor, “Using Securities Disclosures to Advance Human Rights: A Consideration of Dodd-Frank Section 1502 and the Securities and Exchange Commission Conflict Minerals Rule,” 201. Nien-hê Hsieh, “Should Business Have Human Rights Obligations?,” 218. Anita Ramasastry, “Corporate Social Responsibility Versus Business and Human Rights: Bridging the Gap Between Responsibility and Accountability,” 237. Jennifer N. Costanza, “Indigenous Peoples’ Rights to Prior Consultation: Transforming Human Rights From the Grassroots in Guatemala,” 260. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Vol. 43, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fich20/43/2#.VaO80ygujGo 14 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • Robert J. Bennett, “Collective Action when Needed: The Kingston Chamber of Commerce in Jamaica, 1778-85,” 165. Kate Lowe and Eugene McLaughlin, “’Caution! The Bread is Poisoned’: The Hong Kong Mass Poisoning of January 1857,” 189. J.E. Lewis, “Empires of Sentiment; Intimacies from Death: David Livingstone and African Slavery ‘at the Heart of the Nation’,” 210. Festus Cole, “Sanitation, Disease and Public Health in Sierra Leone, West Africa, 18951922: Case Failure of British Colonial Health Policy,” 238. Lize-Marié van der Watt and Sandra Swart, “Falling off the Map: South Africa, Antarctica, c. 1919-59,” 267. Roger Arditti and Philip H.J. Davies, “Rethinking the Rise and Fall of the Malayan Security Service, 1946-48,” 292. Ichiro Maekawa, “Neo-Colonialism Reconsidered: A Case Study of East Africa in the 1960s and 1970s,” 317. The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Vol. 43, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fich20/43/3#.VaO-3CgujGo • • • • • • • Paul Moon, “The Influence of ‘Benthamite’ Philosophies on British Colonial Policy on New Zealand in the Era of the Treaty of Waitangi,” 367. Alexander Morrison, “Peasant Settlers on the ‘Civilising Mission’ in Russian Turkestan, 1865-1917,” 387. Hiroaki Osawa, “Wesleyan Methodists, Humanitarianism and the Zulu Question, 187887,” 418. T.W. Roberts, “The Trans-Saharan Railway and the Politics of Imperial Expansion, 1890-1900,” 438. Chris Madsen, “The Long Goodbye: British Agency in the Creation of Navies for India and Pakistan,” 463. Daniel Owen Spence, “Beyond Talwar: A Cultural Reappraisal of the 1946 Royal Indian Navy Mutiny,” 489. Leslie E. James, “’Playing the Russian Game’: Black Radicalism, the Press, and Colonial Office Attempts to Control Anti-Colonialism in the Early Cold War, 1946-50,” 509. 15 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Joseph M. Fernando, “Special Rights in the Malaysian Constitution and the Framers’ Dilemma, 1956-57,” 535. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 46, Issue 1 (Summer 2015) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jinh/46/1 • • • Timothy P. Newfield, “Human-Bovine Plagues in the Early Middle Ages,” 1. Hui-wen Koo, “Weather, Harvests, and Taxes: A Chinese Revolt in Colonial Taiwan,” 39. Tinni Sen, Turk McCleskey, and Atin Basuchoudhary, “When Good Little Debts Went Bad: Civil Litigation on the Virginia Frontier, 1745-1755,” 60. • Joseph Margulies, “Moral Legitimacy, Creedal Narratives, and National Identity,” 90. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 47, Issue 3 (August 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=LAS&volumeId=47 &issueId=03&iid=9808810 • • • • • Stephan Ruderer, “Between Religion and Politics: The Military Clergy During the Late Twentieth-Century Dictatorships in Argentina and Chile,” 463. Victor Figueroa Clark, “The Forgotten History of the Chilean Transition: Armed Resistance against Pinochet and US Policy towards Chile in the 1980s,” 491. Natalia Cosacov and Mariano D. Perelman, “Struggles over the Use of Public Space: Exploring Moralities and Narratives of Inequality. Cartoneros and Vecinos in Buenos Aires,” 521. Regnar Albaek Kristensen, “La Santa Muerte in Mexico City: The Cult and its Ambiguities,” 543. Hernán F. Gómez Bruera, “Securing Social Governability: Party-Movement Relationships in Lula’s Brazil,” 567. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Legal History, Vol. 36, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/flgh20/36/2#.VaPFHigujGo • • Constantin Willems, “Coke, Collusion, and Conveyances: Unearthing the Roots of Twyne’s Case,” 129. Kellen Funk, “Equity without Chancery: The Fusion of Law and Equity in the Field Code of Civil Procedure, New York 1846-76,” 152. 16 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Jonathan Silberstein-Loeb, “The Transatlantic Origins of the Business Trust,” 192. ________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Military Ethics, Vol. 14, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/smil20/14/1#.VaPGTygujGo Special Issue: The American Revolution 240 Years Later: Was It a Just War? • • • • • Henrik Syse and Martin L. Cook, “Editors’ Introduction: Whose Justice?,” 1. Glenn Moots, “Guest Editor’s Introduction: The American Revolution 240 Years Later: Was It a Just War?,” 3. Eric Patterson and Nathan Gill, “The Declaration of the United Colonies: America’s First Just War Statement,” 7. Gregg Frazer, “The American Revolution: Not a Just War,” 35. James Kirby Martin, “A Contagion of Violence: The Ideal of Jus in Bello versus the Realities of Fighting on the New York Frontier during the Revolutionary War,” 57. Holger Hoock, “Jus in bello, Rape and the British Army in the American Revolutionary War,” 74. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ • Journal of Military History, Vol. 79, No. 3 (July 2015) http://www.smh-hq.org/jmh/jmhvols/793.html • • • • • • Kenneth M. Swope, “Manifesting Awe: Grand Strategy and Imperial Leadership in the Ming Dynasty,” 597. Wayne E. Richenbacher, “The Demise of Stonewall Jackson: A Civil War Medical Case Study,” 635. Daniel T. Canfield, “Opportunity Lost: Combined Operations and the Development of Union Military Strategy, April 1861-April 1862,” 657. Christopher M. Bell, “Air Power and the Battle of the Atlantic: Very Long Range Aircraft and the Delay in Closing the Atlantic ‘Air Gap’,” 691. Adam R. Seipp, “Buchenwald Stories: Testimony, Military History, and the American Encounter with the Holocaust,” 721. Ian Phimister, “Developing and Defending Britain and Her Empire: Montgomery’s 1947 Tour of Africa,” 745. 17 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • Jeffrey Stamp, “Aero-Static Warfare: A Brief Survey of Ballooning in Mid-nineteenthcentury Siege Warfare,” 767. Mark Grimsley, “The American Military History Master Narrative: Three Textbooks on the American Military Experience,” 783. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 53, Issue 2 (June 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=MOA&volumeId=5 3&issueId=02&iid=9700074 • • • • Marie Müller-Koné, “Débrouillardise: certifying ‘conflict-free’ minerals in a context of regulatory pluralism in South Kivu, DR Congo,” 145. Julia Grauvogel, “Regional sanctions against Burundi: the regime’s argumentative selfentrapment,” 169. Randi Kaarhus and Stefaan Dondeyne, “Formalising land rights based on customary tenure: community delimitation and women’s access to land in central Mozambique,” 193. Johan Pottier, “Coping with urban food insecurity: findings from Kampala, Uganda,” 217. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Modern Chinese History, Vol. 9, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmoh20/9/1#.VaPrQCgujGo • • • • • • Zhihua Shen, “On the Eighty-Eighth Brigade and the Sino-Soviet-Korean triangular relationship – A glimpse at the international antifascist united front during the war of resistance against Japan,” 3. Min Luo, “Chiang Kai-shek and Vietnam’s post-World War II status,” 26. Wei Song, “Seeking new allies in Africa: China’s policy towards Africa during the Cold War as reflected in the construction of the Tanzania-Zambia railway,” 46. Yuji Sasagawa, “Characteristics of and changes in wartime mobilization in China: A comparison of the Second Sino-Japanese War and the Chinese Civil War,” 66. Lifeng Li, “Rural mobilization in the Chinese Communist Revolution: From the AntiJapanese War to the Chinese Civil War,” 95. Ping Bu, “Dialogues on historical issues concerning East Asia,” 117. 18 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Yingying Gao, “A survey of twenty-first-century studies of the Japanese-occupied areas in China,” 130. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 87, No. 1 (March 2015) http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/680316 • • • • • “The Chester Penn Higby Prize for 2014,” ix. Jonathan Beecher, “The Making and Unmaking of a French Christian Bolshevik: The Soviet Years of Pierre Pascal,” 1. Maxine Berg, “East-West Dialogues: Economic Historians, the Cold War, and Détente,” 36. Leo Lucassen and Jan Lucassen, “The Strange Death of Dutch Tolerance: The Timing and Nature of the Pessimist Turn in the Dutch Migration Debate,” 72. Michael Meng, “Silences about Sarrazin’s Racism in Contemporary Germany,” 102. The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 87, No. 2 (June 2015) http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/681157 • • • • Gabriel Glickman, “Empire, ‘Popery’, and the Fall of English Tangier, 1662-1684,” 247. Elizabeth A. Foster, “’Theologies of Colonization’: The Catholic Church and the Future of the French Empire in the 1950s,” 281. Larry Frohman, “Population Registration, Social Planning, and the Discourse on Privacy Protection in West Germany,” 316. Matthew Hilton, “Ken Loach and the Save the Children Film: Humanitarianism, Imperialism, and the Changing Role of Charity in Postwar Britain,” 357. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Modern Italian Studies, Vol. 20, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmis20/20/3#.VaPxxigujGo • Mark Gilbert and Antonio Varsori, “Italy in European and world politics: new approaches,” 291. Italy in European and World Politics: New Approaches • Antonio Varsori, “The foreign policy of First Republic Italy: new approaches,” 292. 19 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • Lucia Bonfreschi, “Interpreting foreign institutions. How the Italian academic culture dealt with the French Fifth Republic, 1958-1998,” 298. Daniele Caviglia, “Arguing for a worldwide perspective: Italy and the reform of the international monetary system between transatlantic cooperation and European integration (1971-73),” 315. Gabriele D’Ottavio, “Under special surveillance: Italy through German eyes, 1975-76,” 330. Valentine Lomellini, “The PCI and the USA: rehearsal of a difficult dialogue in the era of détente,” 346. Non-special section articles • • Vittorio Coco, “Conspiracy theories in Republican Italy: the Pellegrino Report to the Parliamentary Commission on Terrorism,” 361. Elif Cetin, “The Italian left and Italy’s (evolving) foreign policy of immigration controls,” 377. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 50, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjph20/50/2#.VaP0xCgujGo • • • • • • • • John Gascoigne, “From Science to Religion: Justifying French Pacific Voyaging and Expansion in the Period of the Restoration and the July Monarchy,” 109. Stephanie Mawson, “Rebellion and Mutiny in the Mariana Islands, 1680-1690,” 128. Kirstie Close-Barry, “The Reverend Setareki Tuilovoni: Mobile Pacific Leader in the Decolonisation Era,” 149. Nic Maclellan, “The 2014 Elections in New Caledonia: A Precursor to Selfdetermination?,” 168. Gregory Rawlings, “Lost Files, Forgotten Papers and Colonial Disclosures: The ‘Migrated Archives’ and the Pacific, 1963-2013,” 189. Francis X. Hezel, “From the Archives: Resources on Micronesia,” 213. Bronwen Douglas, “Pasts, Presents and Possibilities of Pacific History and Pacific Studies: As Seen by a Historian from Canberra,” 224. Adrian Muckle, Colin Newbury, Tony Ballantyne, Rob Borofsky, David Armitage, and Alison Bashford, “Pacific Histories: ocean, land, people,” 229. 20 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Alan Ward, “Land is the Price,” 241. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 44, No. 3 (Spring 2015) http://www.palestine-studies.org/jps/issue/175 • • • • Glenn Bowman, “Encystation: Containment and Control in Israeli Ideology and Practice,” 6. Gabriel Piterberg, “Israeli Sociology’s Young Hegelian: Gershon Shafir and the SettlerColonial Framework,” 17. Interview with Ramadan Shallah (Part II), “The Palestinian Resistance – A Reexamination,” 39. Fouad Moughrabi with Elaine Hagoplan, “In Honor of Naseer H. Aruri (1934-2015),” 49. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Policy History, Vol. 27, Special Issue 3 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JPH&volumeId=27 &issueId=03&iid=9760080 The Governance of International Communications: Business, Politics, and StandardSetting in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries • • • • • • Richard R. John, “Projecting Power Overseas: U.S. Postal Policy and International Standard-Setting at the 1863 Paris Postal Conference,” 416. Simone M. Müller, “Beyond the Means of 99 Percent of the Population: Business Interests, State Intervention, and Submarine Telegraphy,” 439. Heidi J.S. Tworek, “The Savior of the Nation? Regulating Radio in the Interwar Period,” 465. Frank Beyersdorf, “Freedom of Communication: Visions and Realities of Postwar Telecommunication Orders in the 1940s,” 492. Hugh Richard Slotten, “International Governance, Organizational Standards, and the First Global Satellite Communication System,” 521. Craig N. Murphy and JoAnne Yates, “Afterword: The Globalizing Governance of International Communications: Market Creation and Voluntary Consensus Standard Setting,” 550. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ 21 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 Journal of Political Science Education, Vol. 11, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/upse20/11/2#.VaQM0CgujGo • • • • • • • • Robert E. Botsch and Carol S. Botsch, “The Advantages of Teaching American Government,” 113. Linda Murstedt, Jonas R. Trostek, and Max Scheja, “Values in Political Science Students’ Contextualizations of Nationalism,” 126. Vesa Koskimaa and Lauri Rapeli, “Political Socialization and Political Interest: The Role of School Reassessed,” 141. Stephanie Bell and J.P. Lewis, “The Place of Civic Engagement in Introductory Canadian Politics and Government Courses in Canadian Universities,” 157. Alasdair Blair, “Similar or Different?: A Comparative Analysis of Higher Education Research in Political Science and International Relations between the United States of America and the United Kingdom,” 174. Philip Cowley and Mark Stuart, “Whipping Them in: Role-Playing Party Cohesion with a Chief Whip,” 190. Roxanna Sjöstedt, “Assessing a Broad Teaching Approach: The Impact of Combining Active Learning Methods on Student Performance in Undergraduate Peace and Conflict Studies,” 204. Matthijs Bogaards and Franziska Deutsch, “Deliberation by, with, and for University Students,” 221. • Samer Abboud, “Teaching the Arab World and the West…As an Arab in the West,” 233. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol. 25, Issue 3 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JRA&seriesId=3&v olumeId=25&issueId=03&iid=9767835 • • • Patrick Wing, “Submission, Defiance, and the Rules of Politics on the Mamluk Sultanate’s Anatolian Frontier,” 377. Muhammad Qasim Zaman, “The Sovereignty of God in Modern Islamic Thought,” 389. Sarah Allan, “’When Red Pigeons Gathered on Tang’s House’: A Warring States Period Tale of Shamanic Possession and Building Construction set at the turn of the Xia and Shang Dynasties,” 419. 22 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • Liang Cai, “The Hermeneutics of Omens: The Bankruptcy of Moral Cosmology in Western Han China (206 BCE-8 CE),” 439. Kaori Abe, “Intermediary Elites in the Treaty Port World: Tong Mow-chee and His Collaborators in Shanghai, 1873-1897,” 461. Roger Parsons, “A Brief Description of the Collection of Rawlinson Papers at the Royal Asiatic Society,” 481. • Roger Parsons, “An Additional Note on the Rawlinson Papers,” 499. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 46, Issue 2 (June 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=SEA&volumeId=46 &issueId=02&iid=9682272 • • • • • Nile Green, “Buddhism, Islam and the religious economy of colonial Burma,” 175. John Ingleson, “Race, class and the deserving poor: Charities and the 1930s Depression in Java,” 205. Upik Djalins, “Becoming Indonesian citizens: Subjects, citizens, and land ownership in the Netherlands Indies, 1930-37,” 227. Shin’ya Ueda, “On the financial structure and personnel organization of the Trinh Lords in seventeenth to eighteenth-century North Vietnam,” 246. Tam T.T. Ngo, “Protestant conversion and social conflict: The case of the Hmong in contemporary Vietnam,” 274. • James Ockey, “Benedict Anderson and Siam Studies,” 293. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 38, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjss20/38/4#.VaQVMygujGo • • • Eric Sangar, “The Weight of the Past(s): The Impact of the Bundeswehr’s Use of Historical Experience on Strategy-Making in Afghanistan,” 411. Bart Van Bezooijen and Eric-Hans Kramer, “Mission Command in the Information Age: A Normal Accidents Perspective on Networked Military Operations,” 445. Adam M. Jungdahl and Julia M. Macdonald, “Innovation Inhibitors in War: Overcoming Obstacles in the Pursuit of Military Effectiveness,” 467. 23 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • Raphael D. Marcus, “Military Innovation and Tactical Adaptation in the IsraeliHizballah Conflict: The Institutionalization of Lesson-Learning in the IDF,” 500. Nina A. Kollars, “War’s Horizon: Soldier-Led Adaptation in Iraq and Vietnam,” 529. • Lawrence Freedman, “Social Science and the Cold War,” 554. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Journal of Transatlantic Studies, Vol. 13, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjts20/13/2#.VaQYVCgujGo • • • • • Frank Groome, “Harry S. Truman and the errand of sacrifice: 1945-1953,” 107. Peter Viggo Jakobsen and Jens Ringsmose, “Size and reputation – why the USA has valued its ‘special relationships’ with Denmark and the UK differently since 9/11,” 135. Peter O’Connor, “The Anglo-American synecdoche? Thomas Jefferson’s British legacy 1800-1865,” 154. Pjer Simunovic, “Making of an Ally – NATO membership conditionality implemented on Croatia,” 175. Andrew N. Wegmann, “The vitriolic blood of a Negro: the development of racial identity and Creole elitism in New Spain and Spanish Louisiana, 1763-1803,” 204. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Labor Studies Journal, 40:1 (March 2015) http://lsj.sagepub.com/content/40/1.toc • • • • • Robert Bruno, “New Models of Worker Representation,” 5. Victor Silverman, “Victory at Pomona College: Union Strategy and Immigrant Labor,” 8. Xóchitl Bada and Shannon Gleeson, “A New Approach to Migrant Labor Rights Enforcement: The Crisis of Undocumented Worker Abuse and Mexican Consular Advocacy in the United States,” 32. Linda Delp and Kevin Riley, “Worker Engagement in the Health and Safety Regulatory Arena under Changing Models of Worker Representation,” 54. Bruce Nissen and Rick Smith, “A Novel Way to Represent and Reframe the Interests of Workers: The People’s Budge Review in St. Petersburg, Florida,” 84. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Middle East Journal, Vol. 69, No. 2 (Spring 2015) https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_middle_east_journal/toc/mej.69.2.html 24 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 Spotlight: Libya After Qadhafi • • • • • Jason Pack and Haley Cook, “The July 2012 Libyan Election and the Origin of PostQadhafi Appeasement,” 171. Edward Randall, “After Qadhafi: Development and Democratization in Libya,” 199. W. Andrew Terrill, “Iran’s Strategy for Saving Asad,” 222. Efrat Ben-Ze’ev, “Blurring the Geo-Body: Mental Maps of Israel/Palestine,” 237. Kjetil Selvik, Jon Nordenson, Tewodros Aragie Kebede, “Print Media Liberalization and Electoral Coverage Bias in Kuwait,” 255. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Middle East Policy, Vol. 22, Issue 2 (Summer 2015) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mepo.2015.22.issue-2/issuetoc Symposium: The Syrian Humanitarian Crisis • Karen AbuZayd, Denis J. Sullivan, Susan M. Akram, and Sara Roy, “The Syrian Humanitarian Crisis: What Is to Be Done?,” 1. Geopolitics • • • • Chas W. Freeman, Jr., “Responding to Failure: Reorganizing U.S. Policies in the Middle East,” 30. Michael B. Bishku, “The South Caucasus Republics: Relations with the U.S. and the E.U.,” 40. Matteo Legrenzi and Fred H. Lawson, “China’s Gulf Policy: Existing Theories, New Perspectives,” 58. Gaess Roger, “Interview: Grahame Morris,” 72. Regional Dynamics • • • Stephen Ellis and Andrew Futter, “Iranian Nuclear Aspirations and Strategic Balancing in the Middle East,” 80. Stephan Rosiny, “The Rise and Demise of the IS Caliphate,” 94. Rashed Lekhraibani, Emilie Rutledge, and Ingo Forstenlechner, “Securing a Dynamic and Open Economy: The UAE’s Quest for Stability,” 108. 25 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 Social Change • • Samar El-Masri, “Tunisian Women at a Crossroads: Cooptation or Autonomy?,” 125. Marc Morjé Howard and Meir R. Walters, “Mass Mobilization and the Democracy Bias,” 145. • Albert B. Wolf, “The Arab Street: Effects of the Six-Day War,” 156. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 51, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fmes20/51/4#.VaQxZSgujGo • • • • • • • Serap Kavas, “’Wardrobe Modernity’: Western Attire as a Tool of Modernization in Turkey,” 515. Kamala Imranli-Lowe, “Reconstruction of the ‘Armenian Homeland’ Notion,” 540. Jens Heibach, “Contesting the Monopoly of Interpretation: The Uneasy Relationship between Ulama and Sunni Parties in Yemen,” 563. Shaul Bartal, “Sheikh Qaradawi and the Internal Palestinian Struggle Issues Preventing Reconciliation Between Fatah and Hamas and the Influence of the Qaradawi Era over the Struggle Between the Organizations,” 585. Uriya Shavit, “The Muslim Brothers’ Conception of Armed Insurrection against an Unjust Regime,” 600. Aziz Çelik, “Turkey’s New Labour Regime Under the Justice and Development Party in the First Decade of the Twenty-First Century: Authoritarian Flexibilization,” 618. Yinon Shlomo, “The Israeli-Syrian Disengagement Negotiations of 1973-74,” 636. • Netanel Avneri, “The Iraqi Coups of July 1968 and the American Connection,” 649. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 3 (May 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=ASS&volumeId=49 &issueId=03&iid=9688184 • • Sandeep Banerjee and Subho Basu, “Secularizing the Sacred, Imagining the NationSpace: The Himalaya in Bengali travelogues, 1856-1901,” 609. Richard S. Weiss, “Print, Religion, and Canon in Colonial India: The publication of Ramalinga Adigal’s Tiruvarutpa,” 650. 26 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • Rizwan Ahmad, “Polyphony of Urdu in Post-colonial North India,” 678. Medha Kudaisya, “Developmental Planning in ‘Retreat’: Ideas, instruments, and contestations of planning in India, 1967-1971,” 711. Indira Arumugam, “’The Old Gods Are Losing Power!’: Theologies of power and rituals of productivity in a Tamil Nadu village,” 753. Paul M. McGarr, “’The Viceroys are Disappearing from the Roundabouts in Delhi’: British symbols of power in post-colonial India,” 787. Forum: Communications Networks in Modern China • • • Wook Yoon, “Dashed Expectations: Limitations of the telegraphic service in the late Qing,” 832. Daqing Yang, “Through a Japanese Prism: Foreign influence and Chinese telecommunications in the early Republican era,” 858. Weipin Tsai, “The Qing Empire’s Last Flowering: The expansion of China’s Post Office at the turn of the twentieth century,” 895. Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 49, Issue 4 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=ASS&volumeId=49&seriesId=0&is sueId=04 • • • • • • Bérénice Guyot-Réchard, “Reordering a Border Space: Relief, rehabilitation, and nation-building in northeastern India after the 1950 Assam earthquake,” 931. Scott Relyea, “Yokes of Gold and Threads of Silk: Sino-Tibetan competition for authority in early twentieth century Kham,” 963. Magnus Marsden, “From Kabul to Kiev: Afghan trading networks across the former Soviet Union,” 1010. C. Ryan Perkins, “A New Pablik: Abdul Halim Sharar, volunteerism, and the Anjuman-e Dar-us-Salam in late nineteenth-century India,” 1049. Bart Klem, “Showing One’s Colours: The political work of elections in post-war Sri Lanka,” 1091. Arjun Subrahmanyan, “Education, Propaganda, and the People: Democratic paternalism in 1930s Siam,” 1122. 27 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • Lauri Paltemaa, “Serve the City! Urban disaster governance in Tianjin city 1958-1962,” 1143. Robert Peckham, “Hygienic Nature: Afforestation and the greening of colonial Hong Kong,” 1177. Julie E. Hughes, “Royal Tigers and Ruling Princes: Wilderness and wildlife management in the Indian princely states,” 1210. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Modern & Contemporary France, Vol. 23, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cmcf20/23/3#.VaT0cygujGo • • • • • Fiona Haig, “De-Stalinisation? Grassroots Responses to the XXth Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in France’s ‘Var rouge’,” 285. Andrew W.M. Smith and James W. Hawkey, “’From the soil we have come, to the soil we shall go and from the soil we want to live’: Language, Politics and Identity in the Grande Révolte of 1907,” 307. Didier Chabanet and Frédéric Royall, “The 2011 Indignés/Occupy Movements in France and Ireland: An Analysis of the Causes of Weak Mobilisations,” 327. Sarah Louise Wood, “Silence, Space and Ecology: Representing the ‘Amerindian’ in Contemporary Guyane,” 351. Kathleen Antonioli, “Classic and Modern: Colette Criticism in the Interwar,” 369. Nathan Bracher, “L’Histoire hors sujet ou Écrire le passé ‘comme Elstir peignait la mer’: le cas de l’Histoire des grands-parents que je n’ai pas eus d’Ivan Jablonka,” 387. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ • Modern Italy, Vol. 20, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cmit20/20/2#.VaT3MigujGo • • • Eileen Ryan, “Violence and the politics of prestige: the fascist turn in colonial Libya,” 123. Mattia Granata, “The economic policies of Italian social democracy in the post-war period (1945-1962),” 137. Giuseppe Scotto, “From ‘emigrants’ to ‘Italians’: what is new in Italian migration to London?,” 153. 28 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • Francesco Della Puppa and Francesco Miele, “Beyond (but not too much) the male breadwinner model: a qualitative study on child care and masculinities in contemporary Italy,” 167. Alex Wilson, “Direct election of regional presidents and party change in Italy,” 185. Nicola D’Elia, “Historiography as a political battlefield (1956-1989): Italian left-wing historians on early German Social Democracy,” 199. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Le Monde Diplomatique (May 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2015/05/ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Serge Halimi, “Comment échapper à la confusion politique,” 1. Rodney Benson, “Quarante ans d’immigration dans les médias en France et aux EtatsUnis,” 1. Rodney Benson, “Plusieurs approches,” 10. Rodney Benson, “Qui a la parole?” Renaud Lambert, “A la recherche du prochain Syriza,” 1. Pierre Rimbert, “Les joies de l’écriture automatique,” 11. Renaud Lambert, “La goutte d’eau irlandaise.” Philippe Descamps, “Gagnant-gagnant?” Kristin Ross, “L’internationalisme au temps de la Commune,” 3. Akram Belkaïd, “Washington débordé par l’affrontement entre Riyad et Téhéran,” 4. Shervin Ahmadi, “Un accord qui ouvre le champ des possibles en Iran,” 5. Cécile Marin, “Pétrole et religion n’expliquent pas tout.” Catherine Locatelli, “Gazprom, le Kremlin et le marché,” 6. Hélène Richard, “South Stream, les raisons d’un abandon.” Sanou Mbaye, “Métamorphoses de la dette africaine,” 7. Cécile Marin, “De désendettement à l’irruption des fonds vautours.” 29 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • Barbara Landrevie, “La Méditerranée empoisonnée,” 8. Dominique Hoppe, “Le coût du monolinguisme,” 9. Janette Habel, “Quand Cuba débat,” 12. Alexia Eychenne, “Grossesse fatale pour les bonnes à Hongkong,” 13. Gérard Mordillat, “Voir ou avoir?,” 14. Lucie Geffroy, “Guérilla littéraire,” 27. Mona Chollet, “Le temps des claustrophiles,” 28. Dossier • • • • • • • “L’Allemagne, puissance sans désir,” 17. Wolfgang Streeck, “Une hégémonie fortuite,” 17. Dominique Vidal, “A droite, du nouveau,” 18. Olivier Cyran, “’Bild’ contre les cyclo-nudistes,” 19. Sabine Kergel, “Ce qu’ont perdu les femmes de l’Est,” 20. Philippe Leymarie, “Embarras autour des ventes d’armes,” 21. Wolfgang Streeck, “Comment l’Allemagne s’est imposée.” Le Monde Diplomatique (June 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2015/06/ • • • • • • • Félix Tréguer, “Feu vert à la surveillance de masse,” 1. Félix Tréguer, “Etats et entreprises à l’assaut de la vie privée,” 4. Félix Tréguer, “Résistance multiforme.” Gilbert Achcar, “La religion peut-elle servir le progrès social?,” 3. Owen Jones, “Au Royaume-Uni, la victoire des bourreaux,” 6. Stelios Kouloglou, “Grèce, le coup d’Etat silencieux,” 7. Bertrand Badie, “Les Nations unies face au conservatisme des grandes puissances,” 8. 30 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • • • • • Gabriel Galice, “La paix par la force ou par le droit,” 8. Anne-Cécile Robert, “Oubli des peuples.” Ana Otasevic, “Faillite de la mission européenne au Kosovo,” 10. Jean-Pierre Chevènement, “Crise ukrainienne, une épreuve de vérité,” 11. Jacques Lévesque, “La crise russo-ukrainienne accouchera-t-elle d’un nouvel ordre européen?” Lori M. Wallach, “Mirages du libre-échange,” 12. Nathalie Alvarado and Carlos Santiso, “Insécurité endémique en Amérique latine,” 13. Gilles Balbastre, “C’est toujours la faute à l’école…,” 14. Pierre Benetti, “Au Burundi, les racines de la colère,” 16. Eric Tandy, “Oï, oï, fais-le tout seul!,” 27. Virginie Bueno, “Le malade virtuel,” 28. Dossier • • • • • • • • • • “Vous avez dit ‘complot’?,” 1. Frédéric Lordon, “Le symptôme d’une dépossession,” 17. Franck Gaudichaud, “De Santiago à Caracas, la main noire de Washington,” 18. Julien Brygo, “’Qui croit à la version officielle?’,” 18. Akram Belkaïd, “Une obsession dans le monde arabe,” 19. Benoît Bréville, “Dix principes de la mécanique conspirationniste,” 20. Marina Maestrutti, “Personne n’est à l’abri,” 21. Evelyne Pieiller, “Aux frontières du réel,” 22. Alain Damasio, “Vos souvenirs sont notre avenir,” 22. Alexandre Sumpf, “Le complot bolchevique et l’a(r)gent allemand.” 31 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 Le Monde Diplomatique, (July 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2015/07/ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Pablo Iglesias, “Podemos, ‘notre stratégie’,” 1. Nada Maucourant, “L’autre combat des femmes kurdes d’Irak,” 1. Florence Beaugé, “Tunisiennes après la révolution,” 8. Serge Halimi, “Fureur à l’Elysée.” Evelyne Pieiller, “Michel Onfray ou l’amour de l’ordre,” 3. “Comment sauver vraiment la Grèce,” 4. Costas Lapavitsas, “Sortie de l’euro, une occasion historique,” 4. Gabriel Colletis, Jean-Philippe Robé, and Robert Salais, “Convertir la dette en investissements,” 4. Pierre Rimbert, “’Syriza delenda est’,” 28. Cecilia Valdez, “En Espagne, un bâillon sur la colère,” 6. Chloé Maurel, “Un passeport pour les apatrides,” 6. Pierre Rimbert, “Les tongs voyagent à l’oeil.” Jean-Arnault Dérens and Laurent Geslin, “Les Balkans, nouvelle ligne de front entre la Russie et l’Occident,” 10. Jean-Arnault Dérens and Laurent Geslin, “La Macédoine au coeur des manoeuvres.” Jean-Arnault Dérens and Laurent Geslin, “Rejouer en Ukraine la guerre des années 1990.” Allan Popelard and Paul Vannier, “Panamá sans les Panaméens,” 12. Christelle Gérand, “Ma maison, ma voiture, mon puits de pétrole,” 13. Guy Scarpetta, “Quand l’art du roman s’empare de l’histoire,” 14. Laura Raim, “Police de la pensée économique à l’Université,” 16. Gilles Rotillon, “Le monde si simple de Jean Tirole,” 16. 32 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • Yifan Ding, “Bientôt des yuans dans toutes les poches?,” 18. Yifan Ding, “En Chine, un réforme financière à haut risque.” Daniel Bertrand, “Conjurer la fragmentation au Mali,” 19. Cécile Marin, “Les acteurs du conflit dans le nord du Mali.” Marylène Patou-Mathis, “Non, les hommes n’ont pas toujours fait la guerre,” 20. Jacques Denis, “Darboussier, mémoire tenace de l’esclavage,” 22. Jacques Denis, “Le combat de Solitude.” • Sébastien Lapaque, “Panaït Istrati, roi des vagabonds,” 27. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Le Monde Diplomatique – Manière de voir (June-July 2015) http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/141/ Libre-échange, la déferlante • Pierre Rimbert, “Un bâton dans la roue.” Nouvelle vague • • • • • • • • • Lori M. Wallach, “Ce typhon qui menace les peuples.” Raoul Marc Jennar and Renaud Lambert, “Mondialisation heureuse, mode d’emploi.” Serge Halimi, “Groupés face au spectre chinois.” Yes Men, “Ces obstacles qui barrent l’autoroute du bonheur.” Benoît Bréville and Martine Bulard, “Des tribunaux pour détrousser les Etats.” Olivier Cyran, “La machine à courdre du monde.” Raoul Marc Jennar, “Cinquante nuances de libéralisation.” Martine Bulard, “Le Far West asiatique.” Jacques Berthelot, “Le baiser de la mort de l’Europe à l’Afrique.” Perseverare diabolicum 33 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • • • • Renaud Lambert, “Et le Paraguay découvrit le libre-échange.” Philip S. Golub, “Asie, le retour.” Alain Roux, “Les guerres de l’opium revisitées.” Antoine Schwartz, “Napoléon III contre les ‘moutons frrrançais.’” Jean Monnet, “L’Union européenne, un super marché.” Yes Men, “Tisser ensemble un monde meilleur.” Alexander Zevin, “’The Economist’, un journal pour la cause.” Serge Halimi, “Un village néo-zélandais à l’heure du marché.” Gilles Caire, “Les bronzés au secours du Sud?” Laurence Tubiana, “La mondialisation contre l’écologie.” • “Alena, des mots magiques, des mots tactiques…” • Akram Belkaïd, “En Tunisie, la mise à niveau pour faire la pilule de l’ouverture.” De la résistance à la reconquête • • • • • • Agnès Sinaï, “Le jour où le Sud se rebiffa.” Bernard Cassen, “Un protectionnisme altruiste.” Susan George, “Quand Keynes pensait un autre monde.” Yes Men, “Un bref instant de lucidité.” Anne-Cécile Robert, “Le plan de Lagos.” Frédéric Lordon, “La démondialisation et ses ennemis.” • Collectif, “’Bon, d’accord. Mais que faire?’” ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, Vol. 21, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fnep20/21/2#.VaVk0CgujGo • Brandon Kendhammer, “Getting Our Piece of the National Cake: Consociational Power Sharing and Neopatrimonialism in Nigeria,” 143. 34 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • Michael Woldemariam, “Partition Problems: Relative Power, Historical Memory, and the Origins of the Eritrean-Ethiopian War,” 166. Licia Cianetti, “Integrating Minorities in Times of Crisis: Issues of Displacement in the Estonian and Latvian Integration Programs,” 191. Emma Ambrose and Cas Mudde, “Canadian Multiculturalism and the Absence of the Far Right,” 213. Eric Rodrigo Meringer, “Protestant Moravianism, Constructions of Anglo Affinity, and the Hidden History of Liberation Theology among Nicaragua’s Indigenous Miskitu People,” 237. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Orbis, Vol. 59, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00304387 • • • • • • • • Derek S. Reveron and Nikolas K. Gvosdev, “(Re)Discovering the National Interest: The Future of U.S. Foreign Policy,” 299. R.D. Hooker, Jr., “Understanding U.S. Grand Strategy,” 317. William Krist, “Negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership: Closing the Deal,” 331. Gilbert Rozman, “Reassessing the U.S. Rebalance to Northeast Asia,” 348. Vincent Wei-cheng Wang, “The U.S. Asia Rebalancing and the Taiwan Strait Rapprochement,” 361. Jason Silver, “China’s Asymmetric Intelligence Advantage: The State Security Law,” 380. Morena Skalamera, “The Ukraine Crisis: The Neglected Gas Factor,” 398. Mackubin Thomas Owens, “Force Planning: The Crossroads of Strategy and the Political Process,” 411. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Review, Vol. 45, No. 3 (January 2015) https://shafr.org/sites/default/files/Passport-01-2015.pdf • Thomas Borstelmann, “Presidential Column: Exploring Borders in a Transnational Era,” 6. 35 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • Jay Sexton, Eliga H. Gould, Shannon E. Duffy, Robert J. Allison, Jeffrey J. Malanson, and Francis D. Cogliano, “A Roundtable on Francis D. Cogliano, Emperor of Liberty: Thomas Jefferson’s Foreign Policy,” 7. Christopher McKnight Nichols and Jeremi Suri, “What is a Public Intellectual?,” 18. Andrew Johnstone, “Before the Water’s Edge: Domestic Politics and U.S. Foreign Relations,” 25. Grant Madsen, “Policy History and Diplomatic History: Together at Last?,” 30. Olivia L. Sohns, “A View from Overseas: Teaching and Reflecting on U.S.-Israel Relations in Jerusalem,” 35. Nicholas Evan Sarantakes and Brian C. Etheridge, “In Search of a Solution: SHAFR and the Jobs Crisis in the History Profession,” 37. Stephen M. Streeter, “Review of Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969-1976, vol. XXI: Chile, 1969-1973,” 40. Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Review, Vol. 46, No. 1 (April 2015) https://shafr.org/sites/default/files/passport-04-2015.pdf • • • • • • • • • Andrew L. Johns, “From the Editor: Book Reviews in SHAFR Publications,” 5. Barbara J. Keys, Richard Ian Kimball, Dennis Merrill, Christine Skwiot, and Scott Laderman, “A Roundtable on Scott Laderman, Empire in Waves: A Political History of Surfing,” 6. Kimber Quinney, “Public Intellectuals, We Need You!: Four Lessons from Max Ascoli for Intellectuals and U.S. Foreign Relations,” 14. Marc J. Selverstone, “Eternal Flaming: The Historiography of Kennedy Foreign Policy,” 22. Alan McPherson, “The Dominican Intervention, 50 Years On,” 31. Molly M. Wood, “Scholars as Teachers: Thoughts on Scholarship in the Classroom,” 35. Andy DeRoche, “’She Did a Lot for Us’: Jean Wilkowski in Zambia,” 38. Kyle Longley, “In Memoriam: Mark Gilderhus,” 55. Molly M. Wood, “In Memoriam: Charles Chatfield,” 58. 36 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Andrew L. Johns, “The Last Word: Things I Think,” 59. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Peace & Change: A Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 40, Issue 3 (July 2015) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pech.2015.40.issue-3/issuetoc • • • • • Steven Garabedian, “’It Don’t Make Sense’: Willie Dixon, The Blues, War, and Peace,” 287. John Idriss Lahai, “From Discontinuity to Continuity: Tertiary Education Institutions, Conflict and Peacebuilding in Sierra Leone,” 313. Brian S. Mueller, “Waging Peace in a Disarmed World: Arthur Waskow’s Vision of a Nonlethal Cold War,” 339. Eric J. Morgan, “His Voice Must Be Heard: Dennis Brutus, the Anti-Apartheid Movement, and the Struggle for Political Asylum in the United States,” 368. Daniel S. Lucks, “Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Riverside Speech and Cold War Civil Rights,” 395. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, Vol. 21, Issue 2 (May 2015) http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/pac/21/2/ • • • • • • • Melinda A. Leonard, Samantha M. Yung, and Ed Cairns, “Predicting intergroup forgiveness from in-group identification and collective guilt in adolescent and adult affiliates of a Northern Irish cross-community organization,” 155. Michelle Billies, “Surveillance threat as embodied psychological dilemma,” 168. Ramzi Suleiman and Yifat Agat-Galili, “Sleeping on the enemy’s couch: Psychotherapy across ethnic boundaries in Israel,” 187. Cristina Jayme Montiel, “Multilayered trauma during democratic transition: A woman’s first-person narrative,” 197. Holly F. Young, Magda Rooze, and Jorien Holsappel, “Translating conceptualizations into practical suggestions: What the literature on radicalization can offer to practitioners,” 212. Todd L. Pittinsky and Nicole Diamante, “Global bystander nonintervention,” 226. Shira Kudish, Smadar Cohen-Chen, and Eran Halperin, “Increasing support for concession-making in intractable conflicts: The role of conflict uniqueness,” 248. 37 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • Mark A. Staal and Carroll H. Greene III, “An examination of ‘adversarial’ operational psychology,” 264. Jean Maria Arrigo, Roy J. Eidelson, and Lawrence P. Rockwood, “Adversarial operational psychology is unethical psychology: A reply to Staal and Greene (2015),” 269. Mark A. Staal and Carroll H. Greene III, “Operational psychology: An ethical practice – A reply to Arrigo, Eidelson, and Rockwood (2015),” 279. Jean Maria Arrigo, Roy J. Eidelson, and Lawrence P. Rockwood, “Adversarial operational psychology: Returning the foundational issues,” 282. Muhammad Kamruzzaman Mozumder and Shamsul Haque, “Stereotypical thoughts and perceptions among Chakma and Settler Bengalis in Southeastern Bangladesh,” 285. Gordon Sammut, Frank Bezzina, and Mohammad Sartawi, “The spiral of conflict: Naïve realism and the black sheep effect in attributions of knowledge and ignorance,” 289. Yossi David and Ifat Maoz, “Gender perceptions and support for compromise in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” 295. • Miki Kashtan, “Risking everything for the common good,” 299. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice, Vol. 27, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cper20/27/2#.VaV29ygujGo Symposium: Gender, Conflict, and Global Environmental Change • • • • • • Christiane Fröhlich and Giovanna Gioli, “Gender, Conflict, and Global Environmental Change,” 137. Adrienne Stork, Cassidy Travis, and Silja Halle, “Gender-Sensitivity in Natural Resource Management in Côte d’Ivoire and Sudan,” 147. Holly Dunn and Richard Matthew, “Natural Resources and Gender in Conflict Settings,” 156. Deepa Joshi, “Gender Change in the Globalization of Agriculture?,” 165. Brittany Ajroud, Kame Westerman, and Janet Edmond, “Men and Women as Conservation Partners in Conflict Settings,” 175. Henri Myrttinen, Jana Naujoks, and Janpeter Schilling, “Gender, Natural Resources, and Peacebuilding in Kenya and Nepal,” 181. 38 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • Kerstin Rosenow-Williams and Katharina Behmer, “Gendered Environmental Security in IDP and Refugee Camps,” 188. Tobias Von Lossow, “Gender in Inter-State Water Conflicts,” 196. Joane Nagel, “Gender, Conflict, and the Militarization of Climate Change Policy,” 202. Other Features • • • • Eric Bonds, “Challenging Global Warming’s New ‘Security Threat’ Status,” 209. Steve Dobransky, “The Tragic Script of Thucydides in Political Science,” 217. Michelle Bentley, “The Problem with the Chemical Weapons Taboo,” 228. John Saroyan, “Suppressed and Repressed Memories among Armenian Genocide Survivors,” 237. • W. John Morgan, “Peace Profile: Waldo Williams,” 244. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Politique Étrangère (2015/2) https://www.cairn.info/revue-politique-etrangere-2015-2.htm La Russie, une puissance faible? Dossier • • • • Fiodor Loukianov, translated from the Russian by Boris Samkov, “La Russie, une puissance révisionniste?,” 11. Thomas Gomart, “Russie: de la ‘grande stratégie’ à la ‘guerre limitée’,” 25. Ioulia Joutchkova and Vladislav Inozemtsev, “La logique non économique de Vladimir Poutine,” 39. Tatiana Kastouéva-Jean, “Le système Poutine: bâti pour durer?,” 53. Contrechamps Climat: avant la Conférence de Paris • • Sunita Narain, translated from the English by Valentine Deville-Fradin, “Climat: l’injustice faite au Sud,” 69. Christian de Perthuis and Raphaël Trotignon, “COP21: quelles chances de succès?, 83. 39 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 Actualités • • • • • Archibald Gallet, “Les enjeux du chaos libyen,” 99. Jean-Loup Samaan, “Israël-Hezbollah: la nouvelle équation stratégique,” 113. Myriam Benraad, “Défaire Daech: une guerre tant financière que militaire,” 125. Marc-André Lagrange, “Soudan du Sud: de l’État en faillite à l’État chaotique,” 137. Marc-Antoine Pérouse de Montclos, “Boko Haram, une exception dans la mouvance djihaidiste?,” 147. Repères • Norbert Gaillard, “Le concept de risque pays,” 161. • Lars Erslev Andersen, “Terrorisme en contre-radicalisation: le modèle danois,” 173. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Raisons Politiques (2015/2) https://www.cairn.info/revue-raisons-politiques-2015-2.htm Éditorial • Éric Fassin, “Les langages de l’intersectionnalité,” 5. Dossier: Les Langages de l’ Intersectionnalité • • • • • • Éric Fassin, “D’un langage l’autre: l’intersectionnalité comme traduction,” 9. Urmila Goel, “From Methodology to Contextualisation. The Politics and Epistemology of Intersectionality,” 25. Mara Viveros Vigoya, “L’intersectionnalité au prisme du féminisme latino-américain,” 39. Sébastien Chauvin and Alexandre Jaunait, “L’intersectionnalité contre l’intersection,” 55. Sarah Mazouz, “Faire des différences. Ce que l’ethnographie nous apprend sur l’articulation des modes pluriels d’assignation,” 75. Nira Yuval-Davis, “Situated Intersectionality and Social Inequality,” 91. Varia 40 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 Thomas Boccon-Gibod, “Vérité du pouvoir et puissance de l’autorité Foucault et les voies de la critique,” 101. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ • Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice, Vol. 19, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rrhi20/19/3 • • • • • • • • • Alun Munslow, “Rethinking history,” 323. Alun Munslow, “Rethinking Metahistory: The Historical imagination in nineteenth century Europe,” 324. Adam Kozuchowski, “More than true: the rhetorical function of counterfactuals in historiography,” 337. Deborah Mayersen, “One hundred days of horror: portraying genocide in Rwanda,” 357. Katalin Eszter Morgan, “Learning empathy through school history textbooks? A case study,” 370. Angelos Mouzakitis, “From narrative to action: Paul Ricoeur’s reflections on history,” 393. Catherine Baker, “Beyond the island story?: The opening ceremony of the London 2012 Olympic Games as public history,” 409. Peter J. Beck, “For historians, even ‘historians of a postmodernist kind’, ‘presentation’ is the word,” 429. Herman Paul, “Relations to the past: a research agenda for historical theorists,” 450. Lincoln Film Section • • • • • Louise Spence, “Forum: Lincoln: Introduction,” 459. Peter Almond and Stephen Brier, “’Untold Stories’,” 463. Alison Landsberg, “’This isn’t usual, Mr. Pendleton, this is history’: Spielberg’s Lincoln and the production of historical knowledge,” 482. Mary Niall Mitchell, “Seeing Lincoln: Spielberg’s film and the visual culture of the nineteenth century,” 493. Willem Hesling, “Lincoln: a man for too many seasons?,” 506. 41 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Andrea Foroughi, “’Your household accounts have always been so interesting’: family relations and gender politics in Lincoln’s two ‘houses’,” 512. • Robert Burgoyne and John Trafton, “Haunting in the historical biopic: Lincoln,” 525. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Review of Faith & International Affairs, Vol. 13, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rfia20/13/2#.VaYqJygujGo • • • • • • • Brian J. Grim, “The Modern Chinese Secret to Sustainable Economic Growth: Religious Freedom and Diversity,” 1. Robert P. Weller, “Global Religious Changes and Civil Life in Two Chinese Societies: A Comparison of Jiangsu and Taiwan,” 13. Sarah Cornelison, “Conditions and Mechanisms for Terrorist Mobilization: Applying the Chechen Case to the Uighur Question,” 25. Fabio Petito and Scott M. Thomas, “Encounter, Dialogue, and Knowledge: Italy as a Special Case of Religious Engagement in Foreign Policy,” 40. Cenap Çakmak, “The Arab Spring and the Shiite Crescent: Does Ongoing Change Serve Iranian Interests?,” 52. Jill Olivier and Quentin Wodon, “Religion, Reproductive Health, and Sexual Behavior in Ghana: Why Statistics from Large Surveys Don’t Tell the Whole Story,” 64. Todd M. Johnson, Gina A. Zurlo, and Albert W. Hickman, “Embezzlement in the Global Christian Community,” 74. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Review of International Studies, Vol. 41, Issue 3 (July 2015) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=RIS&volumeId=41 &issueId=03&iid=9708976 • • • James Brassett and Lena Rethel, “Sexy money: the hetero-normative politics of global finance,” 429. Lisa Maria Dellmuth and Jonas Tallberg, “The social legitimacy of international organisations: Interest representation, institutional performance, and confidence extrapolation in the United Nations,” 451. Luke Cooper, “The international relations of the ‘imagined community’: Explaining the late nineteenth-century genesis of the Chinese nation,” 477. 42 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • Shiera S. el-Malik, “Why Orientalism still matters: Reading ‘casual forgetting’ and ‘active remembering’ as neoliberal forms of contestation in international politics,” 503. David Hughes, “Unmaking an exception: A critical genealogy of US exceptionalism,” 527. Jason Ralph and Adrian Gallagher, “Legitimacy faultlines in international society: The responsibility to protect and prosecute after Libya,” 553. Gregorio Bettiza, “Constructing civilisations: Embedding and reproducing the ‘Muslim world’ in American foreign policy practices and institutions since 9/11,” 575. Kilian Spandler, “The political international society: Change in primary and secondary institutions,” 601. Tom Bentley, “The sorrow of empire: Rituals of legitimation and the performative contradictions of liberalism,” 623. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Revolutionary Russia, Vol. 28, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/frvr20/28/1#.VaZFrygujGo • • • Paul du Quenoy, “In the ‘Most Uncompromising Russian Style’: The Russian Repertoire at the Metropolitan Opera, 1910-1947,” 1. George Gilbert, “Rightist Ritual, Memory and Identity Commemoration in Late Imperial Russia,” 22. Yiannis Kokosalakis, “’Merciless War’ against Trifles: The Leningrad Party Organisation After the Fall of the Zinoviev Opposition,” 48. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine (2015/1) https://www.cairn.info/revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2015-1.htm L’Eau, le Climat et les Hommes • • Kenneth Pomeranz, translated from English by Guillaume Ratel, “Les eaux de l’Himalaya: barrages géants et risques environnementaux en Asie contemporaine,” 7. Jean-Baptiste Fressoz and Fabien Locher, “L’agir humain sur le climat et la naissance de la climatologie historique, XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles,” 48. La Confession des Objets 43 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • Marc Mudrak, “La construction matérielle du catholicisme allemand au début de la Réforme,” 79. Antoine Roullet, “Le soin du vêtement au couvent, entre uniforme et distinction: les carmélites déchaussées espagnoles, années 1560-1630,” 104. La Cohésion des Sujets • Fabrice Micallef, “Guerre civile et épreuve délibérative. Les assemblées provençales au début des troubles de la Ligue (1585-1588),” 127. Monnaie et Crédit en France Eric Monnet, “La politique de la Banque de France au sortir des Trente Glorieuses: un tournant monétariste?,” 147. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ • Revue Français de Science Politique (2015/2) https://www.cairn.info/revue-francaise-de-science-politique-2015-2.htm • • • Florence Faucher and Colin Hay, “Les rituels de vote en France et au Royaume-Uni,” 213. Pierre-Louis Mayaux, “La production de l’acceptabilité sociale: Privatisation des services d’eau et normes sociales d’accès en Amérique latine,” 237. Hélène Dufournet, “Le piège rhétorique: une contrainte par la morale? Réflexions sur l’emprise des ‘arguments moraux’ dans les processus d’action publique,” 261. Ève Seguin, “Pourquoi les exoplanètes sont-elles politiques? Pragmatisme et politicité des sciences dans l‘oeuvre de Bruno Latour,” 279. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ • Revue Internationale et Stratégique (2015/2) https://www.cairn.info/revue-internationale-et-strategique-2015-2.htm Autre Regard • Interview with Yassine Belattar by Pascal Boniface and Marc Verzeroli, “Le rire, arme de l’engagement,” 7. Éclairages • Éric Mottet, “Géopolitique du Laos: Des ressources naturelles au service d’une intégration régionale,” 16. 44 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • Jean-Jacques Kourliandsky, “L’érosion d’une influence: le cas des relations entre l’Espagne et l’Amérique latine,” 26. Olga Alexeeva, Frédéric Lasserre, and Pierre-Louis Têtu, “Vers l’affirmation d’une stratégie chinoise agressive en Arctique?,” 38. Dossier: Devenirs Humanitaires • • • • • • • • • • • • • Michel Maietta and Stéphanie Stern, “L’humanitaire du XXIe siècle,” 49. Michel Maietta, “Origine et évolution des ONG dans le système humanitaire international,” 53. Interview with Fabrice Weissman by Stéphanie Stern and Marc Verzeroli, “État des lieux du secteur humanitaire,” 61. Amar Thioune, “Quels rôles pour les ONG du Sud?,” 73. Jean-Marie Stratigos, “Anthropologie et aide humanitaire, une relation à (re)définer,” 83. Mike Penrose, “Futur proche et lointain de la réponse humanitaire,” 93. Stéphanie Stern, “Le secteur privé représente-t-il une menace pour le secteur humanitaire?,” 103. Boris Martin, “BRAC: un modèle d’entreprise sociale venu du Sud,” 113. Jean-Bernard Véron, “Les humanitaires face aux enjeux du XXIe siècle,” 121. Jean-François Mattéi, “Renouveler la pensée humanitaire par une approche éthique,” 129. Kristin Bergtora Sandvik and Maria Gabrielsen Jumbert, “Les drones humanitaires,” 139. Djamel Misraoui, “Islam et humanitaire,” 147. Interview with Jean-Baptiste Jeangène Vilmer by Stéphanie Stern and Marc Verzeroli, “La difficile définition du cadre de l’intervention humanitaire,” 157. Françoise Sivignon, “Repenser l’implication des usagers l’implication dans les programmes de santé des ONG internationales,” 167. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ • The Royal United Services Institute Journal, Vol. 160, No. 2 (April 2015) https://www.rusi.org/publications/journal/issue:I5540EA8CF329F/ 45 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • • • • • • • Michael Fallon, Ed Miliband, and Nick Clegg, “UK General Election: Defense Perspectives.” Martin N. Murphy, “Triple Barrels: The Economic, Financial and Maritime Warfare Nexus in the Twenty-First Century.” Euan Graham, “Maritime Security and Threats to Energy Transportation in Southeast Asia.” Alessio Patalano, “Beyond the Gunboats: Rethinking Naval Diplomacy and Humanitarian Assistance Disaster Relief in East Asia.” Peter Roberts, “The Future of Amphibious Forces.” Nicola Contessi, “Traditional Security in Eurasia: The Caspian Caught between Militarisation and Diplomacy.” John Louth and Justin Bronk, “Science, Technology and the Generation of the Military Instrument.” Tamir Libel and Emily Boulter, “Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in the Israel Defense Forces: A Precursor to a Military Robotic Revolution?” Heather Campbell, “Lessons to be Learnt? The Third Anglo-Afghan War.” Captain Garth Neville Walford VC (deceased April 1915) and Commander Alexander Spearman, RN (deceased June 1915), “Great War Stories.” Andrew Glazzard, “Adam Curtis’s Bitter Lake: Nightmares of Modernity.” The Royal United Services Institute Journal, Vol. 160, No. 3 (June 2015) https://www.rusi.org/publications/journal/issue:I5582DDAC6178A/ • • • • • Patrick Porter, “Why Distance Matters: Putting the ‘Geo’ Back into Politics.” Alessio Patalano, “Nightmare Nostrum? Not Quite: Lessons from the Italian Navy in the Mediterranean Crisis.” John Baron, “Time to Recognise the Danger, Or: Whatever Happened to the ChinaWatchers?” Richard D. Hooker, Jr., “Operation Baltic Fortress, 2016: NATO Defends the Baltic States.” Tom Parker, “It’s a Trap: Provoking an Overreaction is Terrorism 101.” 46 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • Sophie Lefeez, “Versatility and Technology: A Case Study of the Milan and Javelin.” John Louth, “Logistics as Force Enabler: The Future Operational Imperative.” Beatrice Heuser, “Waterloo: A Strange Defeat.” Jasper Heinzen, “The Forgotten Victory: Germans and the Battle of Waterloo, 18152015.” Graciela Iglesias Rogers, “Waterloo, the Napoleonic Wars and the Recasting of the Global Iberian World.” • Emma De Angelis, “Painting Images of the Past out of the Embers of War.” ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Scandinavian Economic History Review, Vol. 63, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/sehr20/63/2#.VaZryygujGo • • • Joerg Baten and Stefan Priwitzer, “Social and intertemporal differences of basic numeracy in Pannonia (first century BCE to third century BCE),” 110. Johan Söderberg, “Oceanic thirst? Food consumption in mediaeval Sweden,” 135. Dan Johansson, Mikael Stenkula, and Gunnar Du Rietz, “Capital income taxation of Swedish households, 1862-2010,” 154. • Karl Stern, “Implementation of non-tariff measures in Estonia in the 1930s,” 178. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Scandinavian Journal of History, Vol. 40, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/shis20/40/3#.VaZtWCgujGo • • • • Seija Jalagin, Inger Marie Okkenhaug, and Maria Småberg, “Introduction: Nordic missions, gender and humanitarian practices: from evangelizing to development,” 285. Heini Hakosalo, “Modest witness to modernization: Finland meets Ovamboland in mission doctor Selma Rainio’s family letters, 1921-1932,” 298. Karina Hestad Skeie, “Gender, Mission and Work: The complex relationship between formal rights and missionary agency in the Norwegian Lutheran China Mission Association,” 332. Thomas G. Oey, “Towards translocal development: Swedish-American Baptist Minnie Johnson Hanson and her context of the mission to the Kachins of Burma (Myanmar),” 357. 47 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • Malin Gregersen, “Protecting people in protected places: Gender, perceptions of protection, and the Scandinavian women of YWCA Changsha, China, 1917-1927,” 382. Maria Småberg, “On mission in the cosmopolitan world: Ethics of care in the Armenian refugee crisis, 1929-1947,” 405. Inger Marie Okkenhaug, “Religion, relief and humanitarian work among Armenian women refugees in Mandatory Syria, 1927-1934,” 432. Seija Jalagin, “A Nordic Hebrew Christian centre in Jerusalem? Relief work, education and Nordic neutrality in Palestine, 1943-1946,” 455. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Security Studies, Vol. 24, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fsst20/24/2#.VaaEECgujGo Process Tracing: A Symposium • • • • • Colin Elman and John M. Owen, “Symposium on Process Tracing: Note to Readers,” 199. James Mahoney, “Process Tracing and Historical Explanation,” 200. Nina Tannenwald, “Process Tracing and Security Studies,” 219. Andrew Bennett, “Using Process Tracing to Improve Policy Making: The (Negative) Case of the 2003 Intervention in Iraq,” 228. David Waldner, “Process Tracing and Qualitative Causal Inference,” 239. Original Articles • • • • Stefano Recchia, “Soldiers, Civilians, and Multilateral Humanitarian Intervention,” 251. Daniel Altman, “The Strategist’s Curse: A Theory of False Optimism as a Cause of War,” 284. Erik Gartzke and Jon R. Lindsay, “Weaving Tangled Webs: Offense, Defense, and Deception in Cyberspace,” 316. Alex Braithwaite, “Transnational Terrorism as an Unintended Consequence of a Military Footprint,” 349. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 96, Issue 2 (June 2015) 48 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ssqu.2015.96.issue-2/issuetoc Ethos, Polls, and Modern Living • • • • Susan Saegert, Andrew Greer, Emily P. Thaden, and Donald L. Anthony, “Longing for a Better American Dream: Homeowners in Trouble Evalaute Shared Equity Alternatives,” 297. Justin T. Denney, Tim Wadsworth, Richard G. Rogers, and Fred C. Pampel, “Suicide in the City: Do Characteristics of Place Really Influence Risk?,” 313. Rebecca Wickes, Renee Zahnow, Melanie Taylor, and Alex R. Piquero, “Neighborhood Structure, Social Capital, and Community Resilience: Longitudinal Evidence From the 2011 Brisbane Flood Disaster,” 330. Verena Dill, Uwe Jirjahn, and Georgi Tsertsvadze, “Residential Segregation and Immigrants’ Satisfaction with the Neighborhood in Germany,” 354. Sports and Society • • James N. Druckman, Mauro Gilli, Samara Klar, and Joshua Robison, “Measuring Drug and Alcohol Use Among College Student-Athletes,” 369. Charles T. Clotfelter, “Die-Hard Fans and the Ivory Tower’s Ties that Bind,” 381. Research on Movements • Aaron M. McCright and Riley E. Dunlap, “Comparing Two Measures of Social Movement Identity: The Environmental Movement as an Example,” 400. • Francesca Spina, “Environmental Justice and Patterns of State Inspections,” 417. Politics • • • • • Daniel Stockemer and Rodrigo Praino, “Blinded by Beauty? Physical Attractiveness and Candidate Selection in the U.S. House of Representatives,” 430. Liza G. Steele, “Income Inequality, Equal Opportunity, and Attitudes about Redistribution,” 444. Alessandro Nai, “The Maze and the Mirror: Voting Correctly in Direct Democracy,” 465. Emily K. Vraga, “How Party Affiliation Conditions the Experience of Dissonance and Explains Polarization and Selective Exposure,” 487. Richard W. Waterman, John Bretting, and Joseph Stewart, “The Politics of U.S. Ambassadorial Appointments: From the Court of St. James to Burkina Faso,” 503. 49 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Jason Enia and Patrick James, “Regime Type, Peace, and Reciprocal Effects,” 523. Racial & Ethnic Politics in the U.S. • • • • Alex Street, Chris Zepeda-Millán, and Michael Jones-Correa, “Mass Deportations and the Future of Latino Partisanship,” 540. John Szmer, Robert K. Christensen, and Erin B. Kaheny, “Gender, Race, and Dissensus on State Supreme Courts,” 553. Anne R. Williamson and Michael J. Scicchitano, “Minority Representation and Political Efficacy in Public Meetings,” 576. Seth C. McKee and Melanie J. Springer, “A Tale of ‘Two Souths’: White Voting Behavior in Contemporary Southern Elections,” 588. Measurement Issues and Societal Challenges • • • • Reuben Allen, “Alternative Methods to Enumerate Data on Race in Puerto Rico,” 608. Didier Ruedin, “Increasing Validity by Recombining Existing Indices: MIPEX as a Measure of Citizenship Models,” 629. Thomas Craemer, “Estimating Slavery Reparations: Present Value Comparisons of Historical Multigenerational Repartions Policies,” 639. Seo-Young Cho, “Measuring Anti-Trafficking Policy – Integrating Text and Statistical Analyses,” 656. _______________________________________________________________________________________________ South African Historical Journal, Vol. 67, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rshj20/67/1#.VaaroSgujGo • • • • Scott Everett Couper, “’Where Men Fail, Women Take Over’: Inanda Seminary’s Rescue by its Own,” 1. Jo-Ansie van Wyk and Anna-Mart van Wyk, “From the Nuclear Laager to the NonProliferation Club: South Africa and the NPT,” 32. Chari Blignaut, “’Die hand aan die wieg regeer die land [The hand that rocks the cradle rules the land]’: Exploring the Agency and Identity of Women in the Ossewa-Brandwag, 1939-1954,” 47. Brett M. Bennett, “Margaret Levyns and the Decline of Ecological Liberalism in the Southwest Cape, 1890-1975,” 64. 50 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • Shula Marks, “Response to Anne Digby, ‘Debating the Gluckman Commission: A Final Rejoinder’,” 85. Anne Digby, “Debating the Gluckman Commission: A Final Rejoinder,” 91. Obituary • Catherine Burns, “Jeff Guy: A Life – Historian, Teacher, Passionate Citizen and Gifted Writer,” 106. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, Vol. 38, Issue 2 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/csas20/38/2#.VaavaCgujGo • • • • • Bob van der Linden, “Pre-Twentieth-Century Sikh Sacred Music: The Mughals, Courtly Patronage and Canonisation,” 141. Oliver Godsmark, “Citizenship, Reservations and the Regional Alternative in the AllIndia Services, ca. 1928-1950,” 156. Ravi Arvind Palat, “Empire, Food and the Diaspora: Indian Restaurants in Britain,” 171. Sudheesh Ramapurath Chemmencheri, “Subaltern Struggles and the Global Media in Koodankulam and Kashmir,” 187. John Gray, “Representations of Unity and Diversity of Women in Panchayat and PostPanchayat Nepal,” 200. Special Section: Beyond the Metropolis – Regional Globalisation and Town Development in India. Guest Editor: Timothy J. Scrase • • • • Timothy J. Scrase, Mario Rutten, Ruchira Ganguly-Scrase, and Trent Brown, “Beyond the Metropolis – Regional Globalisation and Town Development in India: An Introduction,” 216. Sanderien Verstappen and Mario Rutten, “A Global Town in Central Gujarat, India: Rural-Urban Connections and International Migration,” 230. Ruchira Ganguly-Scrase and Timothy J. Scrase, “Darjeeling Re-Made: The Cultural Politics of Charm and Heritage,” 246. Trent Brown, “Youth Mobilities and Rural-Urban Tensions in Darjeeling, India,” 263. Special Section: Northeast India: Reflections on Geography, Violence, Sport and Fermented Soya. Guest Editor: Duncan McDuie-Ra 51 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • Yengkhom Jilangamba, “Beyond the Ethno-Territorial Binary: Evidencing the Hill and Valley Peoples in Manipur,” 276. Sanjay Barbora, “Uneasy Homecomings: Political Entanglements in Contemporary Assam,” 290. Duncan McDuie-Ra, “’Is India Racist?’: Murder, Migration, and Mary Kom,” 304. Dolly Kikon, “Fermenting Modernity: Putting Akhuni on the Nation’s Table in India,” 320. Ian Copland, “Donald Anthony Low (1927-2015),” 336. • Thomas Weber, “Narayan Desai (1924-2015),” 339. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Strategic Analysis, Vol. 39, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsan20/39/4#.VabH9SgujGo • • • • Satish Chandra and Rahul Bhonsle, “National Security: Concept, Measurement and Management,” 337. Rajeev Ranjan Chaturvedy, “South China Sea: India’s Maritime Gateway to the Pacific,” 360. Reshmi Kazi, “Nuclear Security in Asia: Problems and Challenges,” 378. Rohit Karki and Lekhnath Paudel, “Challenges to the Revision of the Nepal-India 1950 Peace and Friendship Treaty,” 402. Commentary • • • • Keshab Chandra Ratha and Sushanta Kumar Mahapatra, “Interpreting China’s Third Plenum,” 417. Jan Kallberg, “Bringing Fear to the Perpetrators: Humanitarian Cyber Operations as Evidence Gathering and Deterrence,” 423. Samuel Oyewole, “Boko Haram: Insurgency and the War against Terrorism in the Lake Chad Region,” 428. Aslam Khan, “Boko Haram: The Multifaceted Story of Terror and Cultism,” 433. Policy 52 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • The “Maritime Security in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR)” Working Group of the Strategic Studies Network (SSN), “Harnessing Opportunities and Overcoming Challenges: Maritime Security in the Indian Ocean Region,” 438. Review Essay • Udai Bhanu Singh, “Role of Historical Legacy in India’s Relations with Territories to its East,” 453. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 38, Issue 5 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/38/5#.VabLiigujGo • • • • • R. Kim Cragin, “Semi-Proxy Wars and U.S. Counterterrorism Strategy,” 311. Marion Van San, “Striving in the Way of God: Justifying Jihad by Young Belgian and Dutch Muslims,” 328. Marco Nilsson, “Foreign Fighters and the Radicalization of Local Jihad: Interview Evidence from Swedish Jihadists,” 343. Veronica Strandh and Niklas Eklund, “Swedish Counterterrorism Policy: An Intersection Between Prevention and Mitigation?,” 359. Liana Eustacia Reyes and Shlomi Dinar, “The Convergence of Terrorism and Transnational Crime in Central Asia,” 380. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 38, Issue 6 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/38/6#.VabNFigujGo • • • • Joel A. Capellan, “Lone Wolf Terrorist or Deranged Shooter? A Study of Ideological Active Shooter Events in the United States, 1970-2014,” 395. Matteo Vergani and Sean Collins, “Radical Criminals in the Grey Area: A Comparative Study of Mexican Religious Drug Cartels and Australian Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs,” 414. Jeff Gruenewald, Kayla Allison-Gruenewald, Brent R. Klein, “Assessing the Attractiveness and Vulnerability of Eco-Terrorism Targets: A Situational Crime Prevention Approach,” 433. Martin Jander, “German Leftist Terrorism and Israel: Ethno-Nationalist, ReligiousFundamentalist, or Social-Revolutionary?,” 456. 53 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Diego Muro, “Healing through Action? The Political Mobilization of Victims of Al Qaeda-Inspired Violence in Spain and the United Kingdom,” 478. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 38, Issue 7 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/38/7#.VabOrygujGo • • • • • Anita Peresin and Alberto Cervone, “The Western Muhajirat of ISIS,” 495. Natalie Delia Deckard, Atta Barkindo, and David Jacobson, “Religiosity and Rebellion in Nigeria: Considering Boko Haram in the Radical Tradition,” 510. Matthew Testerman, “Removing the Crutch: External Support and the Dynamics of Armed Conflict,” 529. Kenneth Pennington and Orla Lynch, “Counterterrorism, Community Policing and the Flags Protests: An Examination of Police Perceptions of Northern Ireland’s Operation Dulcet,” 543. Haroro J. Ingram, “An Analysis of the Taliban in Khurasan’s Azan (Issues 1-5),” 560. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 38, Issue 8 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/38/8#.VabQIigujGo • • • • • Daniel Byman, “The Homecomings: What Happens When Arab Foreign Fighters in Iraq and Syria Return?,” 581. Timothy Holman, “Belgian and French Foreign Fighters in Iraq 2003-2005: A Comparative Case Study,” 603. Shawn Teresa Flanigan and Cheryl O’Brien, “Service-Seeking Behavior, Perceptions of Armed Actors, and Preferences Regarding Governance: Evidence from the Palestinian Territories,” 622. Brandon M. Boylan, “Sponsoring Violence: A Typology of Constituent Support for Terrorist Organizations,” 652. Alexander Knorr, “Economic Factors for Piracy: The Effect of Commodity Price Shocks,” 671. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Studies in Political Economy: A Socialist Review, Vol. 95 (2015) http://spe.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/spe/issue/view/1616/showToc • Meg Luxton, “Reclaiming Marxist Feminism: A Response.” 54 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Sharon R. Roseman, Pauline Gardiner Barber, and Barbara Neis, “Towards a Feminist Political Economy Framework for Analyzing Employment-Related Geographical Mobility.” Forum: Regulating Care • • • • • • • Susan Braedley and Rosemary Warskett, “Regulating Care: An Introduction.” Albert Banerjee and Pat Armstrong, “Centring Care: Explaining Regulatory Tensions in Residential Care for Older Persons.” Tamara Daly, “Dancing the Two-Step in Ontario’s Long-Term Care Sector: Deterrence Regulation=Consolidation.” Susan Braedley and Gillian Martel, “Dreaming of Home: Long-Term Residential Care and (In)Equities by Design.” Martha MacDonald, “Regulating Individual Charges for Long-Term Residential Care in Canada.” Laura O’Neill, “Regulating Hospital Social Workers and Nurses: Propping Up an ‘Efficient’ Lean Health Care System.” Donna Baines and Tamara Daly, “Resisting Regulatory Rigidities: Lessons from FrontLine Care Work.” ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Terrorism and Political Violence, Vol. 27, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ftpv20/27/3#.VabUXSgujGo Foreign Fighters Research • • • • • Cerwyn Moore, “Introductory Comments to Foreign Fighters Research: Special MiniSeries,” 393. Cerwyn Moore, “Foreign Bodies: Transnational Activism, the Insurgency in the North Caucasus and ‘Beyond’,” 395. Jasper L. de Bie, Christianne J. de Poot, and Joanne P. van der Leun, “Shifting Modus Operandi of Jihadist Foreign Fighters From the Netherlands Between 2000 and 2013: A Crime Script Analysis,” 416. Richard Bach Jensen, “Anarchist Terrorism and Global Diasporas, 1878-1914,” 441. David Malet, “Foreign Fighter Mobilization and Persistence in a Global Context,” 454. 55 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 Original Articles • • • • • Elena Pokalova, “Legislative Responses to Terrorism: What Drives States to Adopt New Counterterrorism Legislation?,” 474. Oliver J. Walther and Dimitris Christopoulos, “Islamic Terrorism and the Malian Revolution,” 497. Daniel Baracskay, “The Evolutionary Path of Hamas: Examining the Role of Political Pragmatism in State Building and Activism,” 520. Muhammad Sohail Anwar Malik, Michael Sandholzer, M. Zubair Khan, and Sajjad Akbar, “Identification of Risk Factors Generating Terrorism in Pakistan,” 537. Håvard Mokleiv Nygård and Michael Weintraub, “Bargaining Between Rebel Groups and the Outside Option of Violence,” 557. Review Essay • Ryan Shaffer, “The Terrorism, Ideology, and Transformations of Al-Qaeda,” 581. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Third World Quarterly, Vol. 36, Issue 3 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/36/3#.VabYSCgujGo Special Issue: Food Sovereignty: convergence and contradictions, condition and challenges • • • • • • Alberto Alonso-Fradejas, Saturnino M. Borras, Jr., Todd Holmes, Eric Holt-Giménez, and Martha Jane Robbins, “Food sovereignty: convergence and contradictions, conditions and challenges,” 431. Martha Jane Robbins, “Exploring the ‘localisation’ dimension of food sovereignty,” 449. Christopher M. Bacon, “Food sovereignty, food security and fair trade: the case of an influential Nicaraguan smallholder cooperative,” 469. Tanya M. Kerssen, “Food sovereignty and the quinoa boom: challenges to sustainable re-peasantisation in the southern Altiplano of Bolivia,” 489. Giuliano Martiniello, “Food sovereignty as praxis: rethinking the food question in Uganda,” 508. Wendy Godek, “Challenges for food sovereignty policy making: the case of Nicaragua’s Law 693,” 526. 56 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • Louis Thiemann, “Operationalising food sovereignty through an investment lens: how agro-ecology is putting ‘big push theory’ back on the table,” 544. A. Haroon Akram-Lodhi, “Accelerating towards food sovereignty,” 563. Clara Mi Young Park, Ben White, and Julia, “We are not all the same: taking gender seriously in food sovereignty discourse,” 584. Saturnino M. Borras, Jr., Jennifer C. Franco, and Sofia Monsalve Suárez, “Land and food sovereignty,” 600. Zoe W. Brent, Christina M. Schiavoni, and Alberto Alonso-Fradejas, “Contextualising food sovereignty: the politics of convergence among movements in the USA,” 618. Third World Quarterly, Vol. 36, Issue 4 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/36/4#.VabbfygujGo • • • • • Peter Marcus Kristensen, “How can emerging powers speak? On theorists, native informants and quasi-officials in International Relations discourse,” 637. Sydney Calkin, “Post-Feminist Spectatorship and the Girl Effect: ‘Go ahead, really imagine her’,” 654. Rajesh Venugopal, “Democracy, development and the executive presidency in Sri Lanka,” 670. Naser Ghobadzdeh and Shahram Akbarzadeh, “Sectarianism and the prevalence of ‘othering’ in Islamic thought,” 691. Stacy Banwell, “Globalisation masculinities, empire building and forced prostitution: a critical analysis of the gendered impact of the neoliberal economic agenda in postinvasion/occupation Iraq,” 705. Uganda Focus • • Jon Harald Sande Lie, “Developmentality: indirect governance in the World BankUganda partnership,” 723. Sophie King, “Political capabilities for democratisation in Uganda: good governance or popular organisation building?,” 741. Turkey Focus • Meltem Yilmaz Sener, “How the World Bank manages social risks: implementation of the Social Risk Mitigation Project in Turkey,” 758. 57 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Hakki Tas, “Turkey – from tutelary to delegative democracy,” 776. Tribute • Seifudein Adem, “Ali A. Mazrui: a great man, a great scholar,” 792. Viewpoint • Marcin Wojciech Solarz and Malgorzata Wojtaszczyk, “Population Pressures and the North-South Divide between the first century and 2100,” 802. Third World Quarterly, Vol. 36, Issue 5 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/36/5#.Vabe_igujGo • • • • • • • • • • • • Caroline Hughes, Joakim Öjendal and Isabell Schierenbeck, “The struggle versus the song – the local turn in peacebuilding: an introduction,” 817. Hanna Leonardsson and Gustav Rudd, “The ‘local turn’ in peacebuilding: a literature review of effective and emancipatory local peacebuilding,” 825. Roger Mac Ginty, “Where is the local? Critical localism and peacebuilding,” 840. Thania Paffenholz, “Unpacking the local turn in peacebuilding: a critical assessment towards an agenda for future research,” 857. Stefanie Kappler, “The dynamic local: delocalisation and (re-)localisation in the search for peacebuilding identity,” 875. Sandra Pogodda and Oliver P. Richmond, “Palestinian unity and everyday state formation: subaltern ‘ungovernmentality’ versus elite interests,” 890. Caroline Hughes, “Poor people’s politics in East Timor,” 908. Joakim Öjendal and Sivhouch Ou, “The ‘local turn’ saving liberal peacebuilding? Unpacking virtual peace in Cambodia,” 929. Malin Hasselskog and Isabell Schierenbeck, “National policy in local practice: the case of Rwanda,” 950. Anna K. Jarstad and Kristine Höglund, “Local violence and politics in KwaZulu-Natal: perceptions of agency in a post-conflict society,” 967. Christian Arandel, Derick W. Brinkerhoff, and Marissa M. Bell, “Reducing fragility through strengthening local governance in Guinea,” 985. Goran Hyden, “Rethinking justice and institutions in African peacebuilding,” 1007. 58 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Isabell Schierenbeck, “Beyond the local turn divide: lessons learnt, relearnt and unlearnt,” 1023. Third World Quarterly, Vol. 36, Issue 6 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/36/6#.VadhsigujGo • Louiza Odysseos and Anna Selmeczi, “The power of human rights/the human rights of power: an introduction,” 1033. Subjects and struggles • • • • • Louiza Odysseos, “The question concerning human rights and human rightlessness: disposability and struggle in the Bhopal gas disaster,” 1041. Lara Montesinos Coleman, “Struggles, over rights: humanism, ethical dispossession and resistance,” 1060. Anna Selmeczi, “Who is the subject of neoliberal rights? Governmentality, subjectification and the letter of the law,” 1076. Joe Hoover, “The human right to housing and community empowerment: home occupation, eviction defense and community land trusts,” 1092. Judith Renner, “Producing the subjects of reconciliation: the making of Sierra Leoneans as victims and perpetrators of past human rights violations,” 1110. Rights, states, borders • • • Jarmila Rajas, “Disciplining the human rights of immigrants: market veridiction and the echoes of eugenics in contemporary EU immigration policies,” 1129. Raffaela Puggioni, “Border politics, right to life and acts of dissensus: voices from the Lampedusa borderland,” 1145. Arladna Estévez, “The Endriago subject and the dislocation of state attribution in human rights discourse: the case of Mexican asylum claims in Canada,” 1160. Power, privilege and change • • Jane K. Cowan and Julie Billaud, “Between learning and schooling: the politics of human rights monitoring at the Universal Periodic Review,” 1175. Daniel Tagliarina, “Power, privilege and rights: how the powerful and powerless create a vernacular of rights,” 1191. 59 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • Shadi Mokhtari, “Human rights and power amid protest and change in the Arab world,” 1207. Politicisation and depoliticisation • • • Serif Onur Bahçecik, “The power effects of human rights reforms in Turkey: enhanced surveillance and depolitisation,” 1222. Eva Hilberg, “Promoting health or securing the market? The right to health and intellectual property between radical contestation and accommodation,” 1237. Mathias Großklaus, “Appropriation and the dualism of human rights: understanding the contradictory impact of gender norms in Nigeria,” 1253. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 26, Issue 2 (June 2015) http://tcbh.oxfordjournals.org/content/26/2.toc • • • • • • Max Jones, “’National Hero and Very Queer Fish’: Empire, Sexuality and the British Remembrance of General Gordon, 1918-72,” 175. Lise Butler, “Michael Young, the Institute of Community Studies, and the Politics of Kinship,” 203. Jack Saunders, “The Untraditional Worker: Class Re-Formation in Britain 1945-65,” 225. Gordon Pentland, “Edward Heath, the Declaration of Perth and the Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party, 1966-70,” 249. Gareth Millward, “Social Security Policy and the Early Disability Movement – Expertise, Disability, and the Government, 1965-77,” 274. Neil Armstrong, “Divorce and the English Clergy c. 1970-1990,” 298. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Washington Quarterly, Vol. 38, Issue 1 (2015) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwaq20/38/1#.VadrwygujGo Provocations • Mathew Burrows, “The Emerging Global Middle Class – So What?,” 7. 60 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 • • • • • George Perkovich and Toby Dalton, “Modi’s Strategic Choice: How to Respond to Terrorism from Pakistan,” 23. Robert Einhorn, “Ukraine, Security Assurances, and Nonproliferation,” 47. Vipin Narang, “Nuclear Strategies of Emerging Nuclear Powers: North Korea and Iran,” 73. Yoel Guzansky, “The Saudi Nuclear Genie is Out,” 93. Stephen Watts and Sean Mann, “Determining U.S. Commitments in Afghanistan,” 107. RAD (Reassurance, Assurance, and Deterrence) in Asia • • • • Mira Rapp Hooper, “Uncharted Waters: Extended Deterrence and Maritime Disputes,” 127. David Santoro and John K. Warden, “Assuring Japan and South Korea in the Second Nuclear Age,” 147. Jeffrey Hornung, “Japan’s Pushback of China,” 167. Eric Heginbotham and Jacob L. Heim, “Deterring without Dominance: Discouraging Chinese Adventurism under Austerity,” 185. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ The William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 72, No. 2 (April 2015) http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5309/willmaryquar.72.issue-2 • • • • Alison Games, “Cohabitation, Suriname-Style: English Inhabitants in Dutch Suriname after 1667,” 195. Nicholas Radburn, “Guinea Factors, Slaves Sales, and the Profits of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in Late Eighteenth-Century Jamaica: The Case of John Tailyour,” 243. Zachary Dorner, “’No one here knows half so much of this matter as yourself’: The Deployment of Expertise in Silvester Gardiner’s Surgical, Druggist, and Land Speculation Networks, 1734-83,” 287. Joseph Hall, “Glimpses of Roanoke, Visions of New Mexico, and Dreams of Empire in the Mixed-Up Memories of Gerónimo de la Cruz,” 323. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Women’s History Review, Vol. 24, Issue 4 (2015) 61 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwhr20/24/4#.VadxEygujGo • • • • • • • • Barbara Caine, “Introduction: Letters between Mothers and Daughters,” 483. Clare Monagle, “Poor Maternity: Clare of Assisi’s letter to Agnes of Prague,” 490. James Daybell, “Social Negotiations in Correspondence between Mothers and Daughters in Tudor and Early Stuart England,” 502. Carolyn James, “What’s Love Got to Do with It? Dynastic Politics and Motherhood in the Letters of Eleonora of Aragon and her Daughters,” 528. Susan Broomhall, “’My daughter, my dear’: the correspondence of Catherine de Médicis and Elisabeth de Valois,” 548. Diana G. Barnes, “Tenderness, Tittle-tattle and Truth in Mother-Daughter Letters: Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Mary Wortley Montagu Stuart, Countess of Bute, and Lady Louisa Stuart,” 570. Pauline Nestor, “’A conscientious and well-informed Victorian mother’: Elizabeth Gaskell’s letters to her daughters,” 591. Barbara Caine, “From ‘Dearest Mama’ to ‘Dear Mother’: changing styles in early twentieth-century letters from daughters to mothers,” 603. ________________________________________________________________________________________________ World Policy Journal, 32:2 (June 2015) http://wpj.sagepub.com/content/32/2.toc Editor’s Note • The Editors, “Climate’s Cliff,” 1. Upfront • • • • Admire Nyamwanza, Ali Kerem Kayhan, Maharaj K. Pandit, and Afroza Haque, Christopher Riedy, Jennifer Doherty-Bigara, Ibon Galarraga, and Erica Dingman, “The Big Question: Climate’s Biggest Losers: Who has the most to lose from climate change in your country?,” 3. Lester R. Brown, “Fossil to Solar & Wind,” 9. “Anatomy: Unveiling Espionage: World’s Driest Nations,” 14. “Map Room: Arctic Militarization,” 16. 62 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2015 Climate’s Cliff • • • • Subhankar Banerjee, “In the Warming Arctic Seas,” 18. Ted Andersen, “Nicaragua’s Big Dig,” 28. Qiu Xiaolong, “China’s Smoke-Smothered Sky,” 40. David Andelman and Guy Deutscher, “Kicking the Oil Addiction: Facts and Fiction,” 53. Conversation • “A Light Bulb Goes Off: A Conversation with Hiroshi Amano,” 63. Poet-in-Residence • Eliza Griswold, “Ovid on Climate Change,” 69. Portfolio • Jeremy Suyker, “Iran’s House of Strength,” 70. Features • • • • Ravi Krishnani, “Indian Women: No Friends Online,” 85. Jas Singh, “India’s Right Turn,” 93. Aliza Goldberg, “Fear in Istanbul, Relief in Prague,” 105. Thierry Vircoulon, “Cameroon: Africa’s Pivot,” 113. Coda • David A. Andelman, “Coda: Feeding the World,” 120. Copyright © 2015 The Authors This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License. 63 | P a g e
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