72
Compiled by Scott Rausch for H-Diplo Intelligence & National Security, Vol. 23, No. 1 (February 2008) http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=02684527&volume=23&issue =1 Special Issue: Spying in Film and Fiction “Introduction: Spying in film and fiction,” by Stan A. Taylor, 1- “Spies in the American Movies: Hollywood's take on Lese Majesté,” by Loch K. Johnson, 5- “Hollywood, don't you go disrespectin' my culture: The Good Shepherd versus real CIA history,” by Nicholas Dujmovic, 25- “Intelligence in fiction,” by Charles McCarry, 42- “The truth of espionage is stranger than fiction,” by Frederick P. Hitz, 55- “The depiction of congressional oversight in spy film and fiction: Is congress the new meddler?” by Stan A. Taylor, 61- “Crack in the lens: Hollywood, the CIA and the African-American response to the ‘Dark Alliance’ series,” David Bewley-Taylor, 81- “The Bourne actuality: A look at reality's role in the Bourne Identity novel and film,” by [jw] h-diplo JOURNAL WATCH, I to Z H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review www.h-net.org/~diplo/journals/ Second Quarter 2008 10 May 2008 Copyright © 2008 H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online. H-Net permits the redistribution and reprinting of this work for non-profit, educational purposes, with full and accurate attribution to the author(s), web location, date of publication, H-Diplo, and H-Net: Humanities & Social Sciences Online. For other uses, contact the H-Diplo editorial staff at [email protected] .

JournalWatch-May2008-ItoZ

  • Upload
    statt

  • View
    129

  • Download
    9

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Compiled by Scott Rausch for H-Diplo

Intelligence & National Security, Vol. 23, No. 1 (February 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=02684527&volume=23&issue=1

Special Issue: Spying in Film and Fiction

“Introduction: Spying in film and fiction,” by Stan A. Taylor, 1-

“Spies in the American Movies: Hollywood's take on Lese Majesté,” by Loch K. Johnson,5-

“Hollywood, don't you go disrespectin' my culture: The Good Shepherd versus real CIAhistory,” by Nicholas Dujmovic, 25-

“Intelligence in fiction,” by Charles McCarry, 42-

“The truth of espionage is stranger than fiction,” by Frederick P. Hitz, 55-

“The depiction of congressional oversight in spy film and fiction: Is congress the newmeddler?” by Stan A. Taylor, 61-

“Crack in the lens: Hollywood, the CIA and the African-American response to the ‘DarkAlliance’ series,” David Bewley-Taylor, 81-

“The Bourne actuality: A look at reality's role in the Bourne Identity novel and film,” by

[jw]

h-diploJOURNAL WATCH, I to ZH-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review

www.h-net.org/~diplo/journals/Second Quarter 200810 May 2008

Copyright © 2008 H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online.

H-Net permits the redistribution and reprinting of this work for non-profit, educationalpurposes, with full and accurate attribution to the author(s), web location, date of publication,H-Diplo, and H-Net: Humanities & Social Sciences Online. For other uses, contact the H-Diploeditorial staff at [email protected].

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

2 | P a g e

Shannon Mollie Epps, 103-

“The real Cold War was hot: The global struggle for the Third World,” by Mark T.Berger, 112-

Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 23, No. 2 (April 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=0268-4527&volume=23&issue=2

“The Interpretation of Probability in Intelligence Estimation and Strategic Assessment,”by Joab Rosenberg, 139-

“International Cooperation and Bureaucratic In-fighting: American and BritishEconomic Intelligence Sharing and the Strategic Bombing of Germany, 1939–41,” byMichael E. Weaver, 153-

“Taps and Terrorism: A German Approach?” by Niels C. Sorrells, 176-

“The Church Committee Investigation of 1975 and the Evolution of Modern IntelligenceAccountability,” by Loch K. Johnson, 198-

“The Intelligence Chief who went Fishing in the Cold: How Maj. Gen. (res.) Eli ZeiraExposed the Identity of Israel's Best Source Ever,” by Uri Bar-joseph, 226-

“Intelligence Studies on the Continent,” by David Kahn, 249-

International Affairs, Vol. 84, No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/toc/inta/84/1

Ethical Power Europe?

“Introduction: ethical power Europe?” by Lisbeth Aggestam, pages 1–11

“Good citizen Europe,” by Tim Dunne, pages 13–28

“A ‘tragic actor’? A realist perspective on ‘ethical power Europe’” by Adrian Hyde-Price,pages 29–44

“The normative ethics of the European Union,” Ian Manners, pages 45–60

“Is it still called ‘Chinese Whispers’? The EU's rhetoric and action as a responsible globalinstitution,” by Hartmut Mayer, pages 62–79

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

3 | P a g e

“The EU as a modest ‘force for good’: the European Neighbourhood Policy,” by EstherBarbé, Elisabeth Johansson-Nogués, pages 81–96

“The challenge of multiculturalism in European foreign policy,” by Lisbeth Aggestamand Christopher Hill, pages 97–114

“The EU and a ‘better world’: what role for the European Security and Defence Policy?”by Alyson J. K. Bailes, pages 115–130

“Much ado about little: the EU and human security,” by Janne Haaland Matlary. pages131–143

International Affairs, Vol. 84, No. 2 (March 2008)http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/toc/inta/84/2

Original Articles

“The war on terror in American grand strategy,” by Michael J. Boyle, pages 191–209

“All the way? The evolution of German military power,” by Timo Noetzel And BenjaminSchreer, pages 211–221

“Difficulties facing the Chemical Weapons Convention,” by J. P. Perry Robinson, pages223–239

“‘New Cold War’ or twenty years’ crisis? Russia and international politics,” by RichardSakwa, pages 241–267

“The Kosovo and Montenegro effect,” by Rick Fawn, pages 269–294

“Securitizing infectious disease,” by Sara E. Davies, pages 295–313

“Tropical forests in the global states system,” by Andrew Robert Cock, pages 315–333

“International Relations after the Cold War,” by Adam Roberts, pages 335–350

“From colonialism to theology: encounters with Martin Wight's international thought,”by Robert Jackson, pages 351–364

Review article

“The teaching of history in Putin's Russia,” by David Wedgwood Benn, pages 365–370

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

4 | P a g e

International Interactions: Empirical and Theoretical Research in InternationalRelations, Vol. 34, No. 1 (2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=03050629&volume=34&issue=1

“Southern Democracy in the Long Run: A Systemic Analysis,” by Rafael Reuveny;William R. Thompson, 1-

“Deciding to Intervene: An Analysis of International and Domestic Influences on UnitedStates Interventions in Intrastate Disputes,” by Mark J. Mullenbach; Gerard P. Matthews,25-

“Means, Motives and Opportunities in Ethno-Nationalist Mobilization,” by GregorySaxton; Michelle Benson, 53-

“The Effects of Majority State Ownership of Significant Economic Sectors on Corruption:A Cross-Regional Comparison,” by John James Quinn, 84

International Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 5, No. 1 (January 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=ASI&volumeId=5&issueId=01

Asian monetary history revisited

“Currency And Credit In Medieval Japan,” by Eiji Sakurai, 53-70

Law, State, and Society in China

“Aspects Of Chinese Legal Culture – The Articulation Of Written Law, State, And Society:A Review (Part Two). Private Law And Private Lawyers: A Discussion On The “Fields” OfLaw,” by Jérôme Bourgon, 71-86

“Taiwanese Studies Of Trade Ceramics: At The Intersection Of Indigenous AndInternational Historiography,” by Takashi Sakai, 97-108

The International Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 12, No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g789108777

“Death Penalty Abolition and the Ratification of the Second Optional Protocol,” by EricNeumayer, 3-

“Human Rights, Social Space and Power: Why do some NGOs Exert More Influence thanOthers?” by Neve Gordon, 23-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

5 | P a g e

“The Politics of Human Rights: Indigenous Peoples and the Conflict on Collective HumanRights,” by Ulf Johansson Dahre, 41-

“‘Child Soldiers’ as ‘Non-Combatants’: The Inapplicability of the Refugee ConventionExclusion Clause,” by Sonja Grover, 53-

“Trafficking in Women and Forced Migration: Moving Victims Across the Border ofCrime into the Domain of Human Rights,” by Bernadette Mcsherry and Susan Kneebone,67-

“International Protection of Human Rights: The United Nations System,” by Ngozi F.Stewart, 89-

“Human Rights Pitted Against Man,” by Jakob Cornides, 107-

“Reflections on Who Believes in Human Rights?” by Kirsty Hughes, 135-

“The Hague Programme,” by Wyn Rees, 141-

“Human Rights in Indian Culture: A Bird's Eye View,” by S. N. Sabat, 143-

The International Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 12, No. 2 (April 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=13642987&volume=12&issue=2

“The Significance of Different Approaches to Human Rights Monitoring: A Case Study ofChild Rights,” by Tara M. Collins, 159-

“Human Rights and Customer Satisfaction with Public Services: A RelationshipDiscovered,” by Theo Gavrielides, 189-

“Capabilities Approach to Youth Rights in East Africa,” by Sahaya G. Selvam, 205-

“The ‘Politics’ of Children's Rights and Child Labour in India: A Social ConstructionistPerspective,” by Gurchathen S. Sanghera, 215

“Engaging in Human Rights Diplomacy: The Australia–China Bilateral DialogueApproach,” by Caroline Fleay, 233-

“A Consideration of Three Types of Burglars: Based on the Thinking of Herbert Packer,Rawls, Norval Morris, and Samuel Donnelly,” by Dominic S. Depersis and Alfred Lewis,253-

“The Disabilities Convention: Towards a Holistic Concept of Rights,” by Frédéric Mégret,261

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

6 | P a g e

“Laws For Beggars, Justice for Whom: A Critical Review of the Bombay Prevention ofBegging Act 1959,” by Dyutimoy Mukherjee, 279

“Representative Politics in the European Parliament?” by Simon Lightfoot, 289

“Federal Law and Indian Rights,” by Zia Akhtar, 297

International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence, Vol. 21, No. 2 (Summer2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=08850607&volume=21&issue=2

“U.S. Intelligence Estimates of the Soviet Collapse: Reality and Perception,” by Bruce D.Berkowitz, 237-

“Russia and the Intelligence Services of Central Asia,” by Stéphane Lefebvre and RogerN. McDermott, 251

“Using Economic Intelligence to Achieve Regional Security Objectives,” by Jeffrey OwenHerzog, 302-

“Systematic Analysis in Counterterrorism: Messages on an Islamist Internet-Forum,” byMarc A. Renfer; Henriette S. Haas, 314

“Improving All-Source Intelligence Analysis: Elevate Knowledge in the Equation,” byBowman H. Miller, 337

“Art-Intelligence Programs: The Relevance of the Clandestine Art World to ForeignIntelligence,” by Erik Nemeth, 355

“British Intelligence and the Cyprus Insurgency, 1955–1959,” by Panagiotis Dimitrakis,375-

International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 40, No. 1 (February 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=MES&volumeId=40&issueId=01

“A Look Forward And A Look Back,” by Judith E. Tucker, 1-5

“Euro-Egyptian Romance in Turn of the Century Cairo,” by Mario M. Ruiz, 7-8

“Save Sabbatai Sevi House from Oblivion,” by Cengiz Sisman, 9-11

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

7 | P a g e

“The Surprising Results of the Saudi Arabian 2004 Demographic Census,” by OnnWinckler, 12-15

“Question: How Have Middle East Scholars Contributed to the Broader Field of Genderand Women's Studies?” by valentine m. Moghadam, 16-18

“Pensée 2: We've Come a Long Way, Baby—But We've Got a Long Way to Go,” by JudithE. Tucker, 19-21

“Wealth And Inequality In 18th-Century Kastamonu: Estimations For The MuslimMajority,” by Boaç A. Ergene and Ali Berker, 23-46

“Policing The Countryside: Gendarmes Of The Late 19th-Century Ottoman Empire(1876–1908),” by Nadir Özbek, 47-67

“Negotiating Ottomanism In Times Of War: Jerusalem During World War I Through TheEyes Of A Local Muslim Resident,” by Abigail Jacobson, 69-88

“Notorious Subjects, Invisible Citizens: North Caucasian Resistance To The TurkishNational Movement In Northwestern Anatolia, 1919–23,” by Ryan Gingeras, 89-108

“Reassessing Egypts Dual System Of Education Under Isma Il: Growing Ilm And ShiftingGround In Egypts First Educational Journal, Rawdat Al-Madaris 1870–77,” by Hoda A.Yousef, 109-130

International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 40, No. 2 (May 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=MES&volumeId=40&issueId=02

“Excerpt From ‘The Naim–Andonian Documents’,” by Judith E. Tucker, 171-179

“Censorship and Its Changing Taboos on the Egyptian Stage—From Politics andReligion to Sexual Frustration,” by Dina Amin, 181-184

“The Impact of Aid on the Economy of Northern Cyprus,” by Ahmet Özyigit, 185-187

“Question: How Should Middle East Studies Address the Issues of Academic Freedomand Academic Boycotts?” by Laurie A. Brand, 188-190

“Pensée 2: Egregious Abuses Warrant a Boycott,” by George Bisharat, 191-192

“Pensée 3: Free Speech and the Question of Israel: A British Perspective,” by Avi Shlaim,193-194

“Reconfiguring The “Mixed Town”: Urban Transformations Of Ethnonational RelationsIn Palestine And Israel,” by Dan Rabinowitz and Daniel Monterescu, 195-226

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

8 | P a g e

“a naha of charitable organizations? Health service provision and the politics of aid inpalestine,” by Benoît Challand, 227-247

“To Banish The “Levantine Dunghill“ From Within: Toward A Cultural Understanding OfIsraeli Anti-Iran Phobias,” by Haggai Ram, 249-268

“Empire And The Hajj: Pilgrims, Plagues, And Pan-Islam Under British Surveillance,1865–1908,” by Michael Christopher Low, 269-290

“When Memory Repeats Itself: The Politics Of Heritage In Post Civil War Lebanon,” byLucia Volk, 291-314

International Organization, Vol. 62, No. 02 (April 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=INO&volumeId=62&issueId=02

“International Organization, Moral Limit and Possibility in World Politics,” by RichardPrice, 191-220

“Assessing the Complex Evolution of Norms: The Rise of International ElectionMonitoring,” by Judith Kelley, 221-255

“The Logic of Practicality: A Theory of Practice of Security Communities,” by VincentPouliot, 257-288

“Traders, Teachers, and Tyrants: Democracy, Globalization, and Public Investment inEducation,” by Ben W. Ansell, 289-322

“Monetary Institutions, Partisanship, and Inflation Targeting,” by Bumba Mukherjee andDavid Andrew Singer, 323-358

“The European Union, Capacity Building, and Transnational Networks: CombatingViolence Against Women Through the Daphne Program,” by Celeste Montoya, 359-372

International Peacekeeping, Vol. 15, No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1353-3312&volume=15&issue=1

Special Issue: The US Role in Contemporary Peace Operations: A Double-Edged Sword?

“Introduction: The US Role in Contemporary Peace Operations: A Double-EdgedSword?” by Ian Johnstone and Ethan Corbin, 1-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

9 | P a g e

“The Origins and Evolution of US Policy Towards Peace Operations,” by Victoria K. Holtand Michael G. Mackinnon, 18-

“US Doctrine for Peace Operations,” by William Flavin, 35-

“Police in Peace and Stability Operations: Evolving US Policy and Practice,” by Robert M.Perito, 51-

“Towards a More Professional Approach to Nation-building,” by James F. Dobbins, 67-

“The United States and Peacekeeping Policy in Europe and Latin America: An UncertainCatalyst?” by Richard Gowan, 84-

“Keeping Middle East Peace?” by Bruce Jones and Andrew Hart, 102-

“US Peace Operations Policy in Africa: From ACRI to AFRICOM,” by A. Sarjoh Bah andKwesi Aning, 118-

“A Return to Realism? The United States and Global Peace Operations since 9/11,” byStewart Patrick, 133-

International Peacekeeping, Vol. 15, No. 2 (April 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=13533312&volume=15&issue=2

“L'Oeuvre au Noir : The Shadow Economy of Kosovo's Independence,” by FrancescoStrazzari, 155

“Promises and Challenges of a Sub-Regional Force for the Horn of Africa,” by AllehoneMulugeta, 171-

“Liberal Peacebuilding in Timor Leste: The Emperor's New Clothes?” by Oliver P. Richmondand Jason Franks, 185

“Dutch Peacekeepers and Host Environments in the Balkans: An EthnographicPerspective,” by Liora Sion, 201-

“A Contradictory Mission? NATO from Stabilization to Combat in Afghanistan,” by AstriSuhrke, 214

“From Neo-Colonialism to a ‘Light-Footprint Approach’: Restoring Justice Systems,” byMatteo Tondini, 237

“Playing with Fire? The International Community's Democratization Experiment inAfghanistan,” by Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh and Michael Schoiswohl, 252

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

10 | P a g e

International Relations, Vol. 22, No. 1 (March 2008)http://ire.sagepub.com/content/vol22/issue1/?etoc

“Reduced to Bad Sex: Narratives of Violent Women from the Bible to the War onTerror,” by Laura Sjoberg and Caron E. Gentry, 5-23

“Dissecting Darfur: Anatomy of a Genocide Debate,” by Darren Brunk, 25-44

“Seeking `Legitimate' Great Power Status in Post-Cold War International Society:China's and Japan's Participation in UNPKO,” by Shogo Suzuki, 45-63

“Consensual Hegemony: Theorizing Brazilian Foreign Policy after the Cold War,” bySean W. Burges, 65-84

“Engaging with Extremists,” by Maleiha Malik, 85-104

“Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction: The Case of Libya,” by Gawdat Bahgat,105-126

“Tragedy, World Politics and Ethical Community,” by Richard Beardsworth, 127-137

International Security, Vol. 32, No. 4 (Spring 2008)http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/isec/32/4

“The Rise of Afghanistan's Insurgency: State Failure and Jihad,” by Seth G. Jones, 7-40.

“No Sign until the Burst of Fire: Understanding the Pakistan-Afghanistan Frontier,” byThomas H. Johnson and M. Chris Mason, 41-77.

“What Terrorists Really Want: Terrorist Motives and Counterterrorism Strategy,” byMax Abrahms, 78-105.

“Postconflict Reconstruction in Africa: Flawed Ideas about Failed States,” by PierreEnglebert and Denis M. Tull, 106-139.

“Partitioning to Peace: Sovereignty, Demography, and Ethnic Civil Wars,” by CarterJohnson, 140-170.

“The Role of Hierarchy in International Politics,” by Paul K. MacDonald and David A.Lake, 171-180.

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

11 | P a g e

International Spectator, Vol. 43, No.1 (March 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=03932729&volume=43&issue=1

“Turkey: The Year of Living Dangerously,” by Soli Ozel, 5-

“Sarkozy's Foreign Policy: Substance or Style?” by Anne-Marie Le Gloannec, 15-

“Gordon Brown Comes to Brussels (Reluctantly),” by Brendan Donnelly, 23

“Europe's Future Foreign Service,” by Graham Avery, 29-

“Beyond the Deadlock: How Europe Can Contribute to UN Reform,” by UlrichRoos, Ulrich Franke, and Günther Hellmann, 43-

“Promoting Regional Cooperation: The EU in South Eastern Europe,” by AlessandroRotta, 57-

“World Order Re-founded: The Idea of a Concert of Democracies,” by EmilianoAlessandri, 73-

“Conflicting International Policies and the Western Sahara Stalemate,” by HakimDarbouche and Yahia H. Zoubir, 91

“In Search of the Right War,” by Roberto Menotti, 107-

“A Neo-liberal Agenda for America,” by Emiliano Alessandri, 110-

“Ancient and Modern Empires: The United States as the New Rome,” by RiccardoMonaco, 113-

“Moral and Strategic Dimensions of Humanitarian Military Intervention,” by CostantinoPischedda, 116-

International Studies, Vol. 44, No. 3 (July 2007)http://isq.sagepub.com/current.dtl

A.J.R. Groom, “Foreign Policy Analysis: From Little Acorn to Giant Oak?” 195-215

Sarabjit Kaur, “Institutional Development as a Challenge to Democratic Sustenance inNigeria,” 217-233

Saumyajit Ray, “Politics over Official Language in the United States: Aspects ofConstitutional Silence on the Status of English,” 235-252

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

12 | P a g e

Chandra Jeet, “International Criminal Justice: Issues and Perspectives,” 253-263

ISP Pedagogy Forum: Mainstreaming Gender into the IR Curriculum

Charli Carpenter, “Introduction,” pages 315–316

Jamie Frueh, “Teaching Complexity with Gender,” pages 317–319

Joshua Goldstein, “Gender in the IR Textbook and Beyond,” pages 320–322

Julie Mertus, “Teaching Gender in International Relations,” 323–325

Joel E. Oestreich, “Teaching Gender and International Relations,” 326–329

James Richter, “Two Steps Forward, One Step Back?” 330–335

Laura Sjoberg, “Gender and Personal Pedagogy: Some Observations,” 336–339

Charli Carpenter, “Conclusion and Rejoinder,” 340–343

International Studies Perspectives, Vol. 9, No. 1 (February 2008)http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/toc/insp/9/1

“Ending Wars and Building Peace: International Responses to War-Torn Societies,” byCharles T. Call and Elizabeth M. Cousens, pages 1–21

“Consolidating the Gains Made in Diplomacy Studies: A Taxonomy,” by Stuart Murray,pages 22–39

“The Deal: The Balance of Power, Military Strength, and Liberal Internationalism in theBush National Security Strategy,” by Adam Quinn, pages 40–56

“Beyond the Prisoners’ Dilemma: Making Game Theory a Useful Part of UndergraduateInternational Relations Classes,” by George Ehrhardt, pages 57–74

“Evaluating Hypotheses about Active Learning,” by Leanne C. Powner and Michelle G.Allendoerfer, pages 75–89

“International Relations, Paleontology, and Scientific Progress: Parallels betweenDemocratic Peace Studies and the Meteor Impact Extinction Hypothesis,” by FredChernoff, pages 90–98

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

13 | P a g e

“Hunting for Fossils in International Relations,” by Patrick Thaddeus Jackson, pages 99–105

“Rejoinder: It Is Just Not That Complicated,” by Douglas A. Van Belle, pages 106–110

International Studies Perspectives, Vol. 9, No. 2 (May 2008)http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/toc/insp/9/2

“A Global, Community Building Language?” by Amitai Etzioni, pages 113–127

“Linking Purpose and Tactics: America and the Reconsideration of the Laws of WarDuring the 1990s,” by Stephanie Carvin, pages 128–143

“Protecting Civilians or Soldiers? Humanitarian Law and the Economy of Risk in Iraq,”by Thomas W. Smith, pages 144–164

“It’s Time to Stop Running: A Model of the Apprehension of Suspected War Criminals,”by James Meernik, pages 165–182

“ ‘Coalition of the Bribed and Bullied?’ U.S. Economic Linkage and the Iraq WarCoalition,” by Randall Newnham, pages 183–200

“Turkey’s Accession to the European Union: The Impact of the EU’s Internal Dynamics,”by Meltem Müftüler-Baç, pages 201–219

Pedagogy “Role-Playing International Intervention in Conflict Areas: Lessons from Bosnia for

Northern Ireland Education,” by Roberto Belloni, pages 220–234

International Studies Quarterly, Vol. 52, No. 1 (March 2008)http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/toc/isqu/52/1

Original Articles

“Preventive War and Democratic Politics,” Presidential Address to the InternationalStudies Association, March 1, 2007, Chicago, by Jack S. Levy, pages 1–24

“Information, Bias, and Mediation Success,” by Burcu Savun, pages 25–47

“The Moral Hazard of Humanitarian Intervention: Lessons from the Balkans,” by Alan J.Kuperman, pages 49–80

“Bilateral Trade in the Shadow of Armed Conflict,” by Andrew G. Long, pages 81–101

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

14 | P a g e

“The Deficits of Discourse in IPE: Turning Base Metal into Gold?” by Andreas Bieler andAdam David Morton, pages 103–128

“Normative Change from Within: The International Monetary Fund’s Approach toCapital Account Liberalization,” by Jeffrey M. Chwieroth, pages 129–158

“Natural Disasters and the Risk of Violent Civil Conflict,” by Philip Nel and MarjoleinRigharts, pages 159–185

“Shame on You: The Impact of Human Rights Criticism on Political Repression in LatinAmerica,” by James C. Franklin, pages 187–211

International Studies Review, Vol. 10, No.1 (March 2008)http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/toc/misr/10/1

“Managing Transboundary Crises: What Role for the European Union?” by Arjen Boinand Mark Rhinard, pages 1–26

“Tilly Tally: War-Making and State-Making in the Contemporary Third World,” by BrianD. Taylor and Roxana Botea, pages 27–56

“Coalition Cabinet Decision Making: Institutional and Psychological Factors,” by JulietKaarbo, pages 57–86

Featured Book Reviews

“Mapping Trends in the Study of Political Institutions,” by Arjen Boin, pages 87–92

“Dancing at the Edge of Culture,” by Salih Bicakci, pages 93–96

“Re-exploring the Foundations of World Order,” by Sylvia I. Karlsson, pages 97–99

Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1369801X&volume=10&issue=1

Special Issue: Under Which Flag? Revisiting James Connolly

“Editorial: Ten Years of Interventions,” p. 1

“Postcolonial Connolly,” by Catherine Morris and Spurgeon Thompson, 4

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

15 | P a g e

“Indigenous Theory: James Connolly And The Theatre Of Decolonization,” by SpurgeonThompson, 7-

“Under Which Flag?” by James Connolly, 26-

“Connolly, The Archive, And Method,” by Gregory Dobbins, 48-

“'More Useful Washed And Dead': James Connolly, W. B. Yeats, And The Sexual PoliticsOf 'Easter, 1916,'” by Margot Gayle Backus, 67-

“Ancient Erin, Modern Socialism: Myths, Memories And Symbols Of The Irish Nation InThe Writings Of James Connolly,” by Jonathan Githens-Mazer, 86-

“A Contested Life: James Connolly In The Twenty-First Century,” by Catherine Morris,102-

“Why Read Connolly?” by David Lloyd, 116-

Issues & Studies, An International Quarterly on China, Taiwan, and East Asian Affairs,Vol. 43, No.4 (December 2007)http://iir.nccu.edu.tw/oldwebsite/ise/ise200704

“Mobilizing for War: China’s Limited Abilityto Cope with the Soviet Threat, by DavidBachman, 1-

“Assessing Russia’s Role in Cross-Taiwan Strait Relations,” by Shaohua HU, 39-

“The Limits of Twenty-First Century Chinese Soft-Power Statecraft in Southeast Asia:The Case of the Philippines,” by Renato Cruz De Castro, 77-

“The Regional Variations of Farmland Property Rights Transformation in China: AnInstitutional Comparison between Suzhou and Dongguan,” by Daniel You-ren YANG andHung-kai Wang, 117-

“Environmental NGOs and the Anti-Dam Movements in China: A Social Movement withChinese Characteristics,” by Teh-chang Lin, 149-

“State Secrets Privilege: Origins, Parameters, and Application,” by Chao-yung Hsueh,185-

“ Taiwan and South Korea: Comparing East Asia’s Two “Third-Wave” Democracies,” byJ. Bruce Jacobs, 227-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

16 | P a g e

Journal of African History, Vol. 49, No. 1 (April 2008)http://www.journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=AFH&volumeId=49&issueId=01

“Untangling The Many Roots Of West African Mangrove Rice Farming: Rice TechnologyIn The Rio Nunez Region, Earliest Times To C. 1800,” by Edda L. Fields-Black, 1-21

“Constructing Avatime: Questions Of History And Identity In A West African Polity, C.1690s To The Twentieth Century,” by Lynne Brydon, 23-42

“The Constant Demand Of The French: The Mascarene Slave Trade And The Worlds OfThe Indian Ocean And Atlantic During The Eighteenth And Nineteenth Centuries,” byRichard B. Allen, 43-72

“The Intellectual Lives Of Mau Mau Detainees,” by Derek R. Peterson, 73-91

“The State Of The Subject: A Guinean Educator's Odyssey In The Postcolonial Forest,1960–2001,” by Jay Straker, 93-109

“Oil, British Interests And The Nigerian Civil War,” by Chibuike Uche, 111-135

Journal of American History, Volume 94, No. 3 (December 2007)http://www.indiana.edu/~jah/issues/943.shtml

Special Issue: Through the Eye of Katrina: The Past as Prologue?

“An Introduction,” by Clarence L. Mohr and Lawrence N. Powell (pp. 693–94

“Boundary Issues: Clarifying New Orleans’s Murky Edges,” by Ari Kelman (pp. 695–703)

“An Ethnic Geography of New Orleans,” by Richard Campanella (pp. 704–715)

“New Orleans Architecture: Building Renewal,” by Karen Kingsley (pp. 716–25)

“The Atlantic World and the Road to Plessy v. Ferguson, ”by Rebecca J. Scott (pp. 726–33)

“The Political Construction of a Natural Disaster: The Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1853,”by Henry M. McKiven Jr. (pp. 734–42)

“The Politics of Poverty and History: Racial Inequality and the Long Prelude to Katrina,”by Kent B. Germany (pp. 743–51)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

17 | P a g e

“Fade to Black: Hurricane Katrina and the Disappearance of Creole New Orleans,” byArnold R. Hirsch (pp. 752–61)

“Water in Sacred Places: Rebuilding New Orleans Black Churches as Sites of CommunityEmpowerment,” by Donald E. DeVore (pp. 762–69)

“Resilient History and the Rebuilding of a Community: The Vietnamese AmericanCommunity in New Orleans East,” by Karen J. Leong, Christopher A. Airriess, Wei Li,Angela Chia-Chen Chen, and Verna M. Keith (pp. 770–79)

“The Post-Katrina, Semiseparate World of Gender Politics,” by Pamela Tyler (pp. 780–88)

“Carnival and Katrina,” by Reid Mitchell (pp. 789–94)

“Poverty Is the New Prostitution: Race, Poverty, and Public Housing in Post-KatrinaNew Orleans,” by Alecia P. Long (pp. 795–803)

“The Disneyfication of New Orleans: The French Quarter as Facade in a Divided City,” byJ. Mark Souther (pp. 804–811)

“‘They’re Tryin’ to Wash Us Away’: New Orleans Musicians Surviving Katrina,” by BruceBoyd Raeburn (pp. 812–19)

“Reflections of an Authentic Jazz Life in Pre-Katrina New Orleans,” by Michael G. White(pp. 820–27)

“The Mourning After: Languages of Loss and Grief in Post-Katrina New Orleans,” byMarline Otte (pp. 828–36)

“‘The Forgotten People of New Orleans’: Community, Vulnerability, and the Lower NinthWard,” by Juliette Landphair (pp. 704–15)

“Constructing New Orleans, Constructing Race: A Population History of New Orleans,”by Elizabeth Fussell (pp. 846–55)

“After the Storms: Tradition and Change in Bayou La Batre,” by Frye Gaillard (pp. 856–62)

“What Does American History Tell Us about Katrina and Vice Versa?” by Lawrence N.Powell (pp. 863–76)

Exhibition Reviews

“Tribal Paths: Colorado American Indians, 1500 to the Present,” by Cindy Ott (pp. 877)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

18 | P a g e

“Ford Orientation Center and Donald W. Reynolds Museum and Education Center,” bySteve Frank (pp. 881)

“Inhuman Traffic: The Business of the Slave Trade”; “Portraits, People, and Abolition”;and “Uncomfortable Truths: The Shadow of Slave Trading on Contemporary Art andDesign”; and “Traces of the Trade: Discovery Trails Exploring the Links between Art,Design, and the Transatlantic Slave Trade,” by Lynn M. Hudson (pp. 886–91)

“Recovering Their Story: African Americans on the Davis Plantation, 1850–1925,” byHeather Bailey (pp. 891–4)

“In the Cause of Liberty,” by Andrew J. Torget (pp. 894–96)

“The National World War I Museum at Liberty Memorial,” by Elizabeth Cafer du Plessis(pp. 896–901)

“History Is All Around Us,” by Douglas E. Evelyn (pp. 901–904)

“Open House: If These Walls Could Talk,” by Kristin Hass (pp. 904–907)

Journal of American History, Volume 94, No. 4 (March 2008 – Upcoming)http://www.indiana.edu/~jah/issues/944.shtml

“Presidential Address -- A Commemoration and a Historical Mediation,” by RichardWhite, (pp. 1073–81)

“The Labors of Liberality: Christian Benevolence and National Prejudice in theAmerican Founding,” by J. M. Opal, . (pp. 1082–1107)

“ ‘The Slightest Semblance of Unruliness’: Steamboat Excursions, Pleasure Resorts, andthe Emergence of Segregation Culture on the Potomac River,” by Andrew W. Kahrl, . (pp.1108–36)

“ ‘Not Marriage at All, but Simple Harlotry’: The Companionate Marriage Controversy,”by Rebecca L. Davis, (pp. 1137–63)

“Americans, Germans, and War Crimes: Converging Narratives from ‘the Good War’,” byJames J. Weingartner, (pp. 1164–83)

Textbooks & Teaching

“Starting Places: Studying How Students Understand History,” by Scott E. Casper (pp.1184–85)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

19 | P a g e

“‘Famous Americans’: The Changing Pantheon of American Heroes,” by Sam Wineburgand Chauncey Monte-Sano (pp. 1186–1202)

“A Place for Regions in the Modern U.S. Survey?” David M. Wrobel (pp. 1203–10)

“The History Learning Project: A Department ‘Decodes’ Its Students,” by Arlene Díaz,Joan Middendorf, David Pace, and Leah Shopkow (pp. 1211–24)

Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 66, No. 4 (October 2007)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=JAS&volumeId=66&issueId=04

“Bandits and Kings: Moral Authority and Resistance in Early Colonial India,” by AnandA. Yang, 881-

“History in Poetry: Nabinchandra Sen's Palashir Yuddha and the Question of Truth,” byRosinka Chaudhuri, 897

“Tracking the Goddess: Religion, Community, and Identity in the Durga Puja Ceremoniesof Nineteenth-Century Calcutta,” by Tithi Bhattacharya, 919-

“Out of Tradition: Master Artisans and Economic Change in Colonial India,” byTirthankar Roy, 963-

“Taxes, the Local Elite, and the Rural Populace in the Chinju Uprising of 1862,” by SunJoo Kim, 993-

“Masculinizing the Nation: Gender Ideologies in Traditional Korea and in the 1890s-1900s Korean Enlightenment Discourse,” by Vladimir Tikhonov, 1029-

“Law and Custom under the Chosǒn Dynasty and Colonial Korea: A ComparativePerspective,” by Marie Seong-Hak Kim, 1067-

Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 10, No. 1: 1-2 (Winter 2008)http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/abs/10.1162/jcws.2008.10.1.1

“The 1963 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty: A Missed Opportunity for Detente?” by VojtechMastny, 3-25.

“The Vietnam War and China's Third-Line Defense Planning before the CulturalRevolution, 1964-1966,” by Lorenz Luthi, 26-51.

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

20 | P a g e

“Playing the China Card? Revisiting France's Recognition of Communist China, 1963-1964,” by Garret Martin, 52-80.

“The Study of Cold War International History in China: A Review of the Last TwentyYears,” by Yafeng Xia, 81-115.

Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 10, No. 1: 1-2 (Spring 2008 – Forthcoming)http://www.mitpressjournals.org/page/journal/forthcoming.jsp?journalCode=jcws

“Britain, the Transatlantic Alliance, and the Arab-Israeli War of 1973,” by GeraintHughes, 3-40

“Harold Wilson, the British Labour Party, and the War in Vietnam,” by RhiannonVickers, 41-70

“ ‘In a Class by Itself’: Cold War Politics and Finland's Position vis-a-vis the UnitedNations, 1945-1956,” by Norbert Gotz, 71-96

“Mao and the Cultural Revolution in China: Perspectives on Mao's Last Revolution,” byLynn White, Steven I. Levine, Yafeng Xia, Joseph W. Esherick, David E.Apter, Roderick MacFarquhar, and Michael Schoenhals, 97-130

“Perspectives on The Cold War after Stalin's Death: A Missed Opportunity for Peace?”by Robert L. Jervis, Thomas Maddux, and Bernd Greiner, 131-138

Journal of Conflict Resolution, Vol. 52, No. 1 (February 2008)http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/vol52/issue1/?etoc

“Warlike Democracies,” by John Ferejohn and Frances McCall Rosenbluth, 3-38

“To Kill or to Protect: Security Forces, Domestic Institutions, and Genocide,” by MichaelColaresi and Sabine C. Carey, 39-67

“A Tournament of Party Decision Rules,” by James H. Fowler and Michael Laver, 68-92

“Threat, Dehumanization, and Support for Retaliatory Aggressive Policies inAsymmetric Conflict,” by Ifat Maoz and Clark McCauley, 93-116

“Bones of Contention: Comparing Territorial, Maritime, and River Issues,” by Paul R.Hensel, Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, Thomas E. Sowers, II, and Clayton L. Thyne, 117-143

“Personal Functioning Under Stress: Accountability and Social Support of IsraeliLeaders in the Yom Kippur War,” by Uri Bar-Joseph and Rose McDermott, 144-170

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

21 | P a g e

Journal of Conflict Resolution, Vol. 52, No. 2 (April 2008)http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/vol52/issue1/?etoc

“International Organizations Count,” by Emilie M. Hafner-Burton, Jana von Stein, andErik Gartzke, 175-188

“Intergovernmental Organizations and the Kantian Peace: A Network Perspective,” byHan Dorussen and Hugh Ward, 189-212

“Power or Plenty: How Do International Trade Institutions Affect Economic Sanctions?”by Emilie M. Hafner-Burton and Alexander H. Montgomery, 213-242

“The International Law and Politics of Climate Change: Ratification of the UnitedNations Framework Convention and the Kyoto Protocol,” by Jana von Stein, 243-268

“Democratization and the Varieties of International Organizations,” by Edward D.Mansfield and Jon C. Pevehouse, 269-294

“IO Mediation of Interstate Conflicts: Moving Beyond the Global versus RegionalDichotomy,” by Holley E. Hansen, Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, and Stephen C. Nemeth,295-325

“Commentary on the Special Issue,” by Duncan Snidal, 326-333

“Commentary on the Special Issue,” by Helen V. Milner, 334-337

Journal of Contemporary African Studies, Vol. 26, No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=02589001&volume=26&issue=1

“The continuing salience of race: Discrimination and diversity in South Africa,” byJeremy Seekings, 1-

“Weak links in the BEE chain? Procurement, skills and employment equity in the metalsand engineering industries,” by Grace Mohamed and Simon Roberts, 27-

“Privatisation and labour militancy: The case of Cameroon's tea estates,” by PietKonings, 51-

“Poets, culture and orature: A reappraisal of the Malawi political public sphere, 1953-2006,” by John Lwanda, 71

Journal of Contemporary Asia, Volume 38 Issue 2 (May 2008)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

22 | P a g e

http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=00472336&volume=38&issue=2

“Doi Moi in review: The challenges of building market socialism in Vietnam,” by MelanieBeresford, 221-

“Law and civil society in Cambodia and Vietnam: A gramscian perspective,” by IngridLandau, 244-

“Rich doctors and poor patients: Market failure and health care systems in developingcountries,” by B. N. Ghosh, 259

“Taking the bait: Maoists and the democratic lure in Nepal,” by Saroj Giri, 277

“Haven under erasure?: Hong Kong, global Asia and human rights,” by Ming-Yan Lai,300

“Global ruling class: Billionaires and how they ‘make it’,” by James Petras, 319-

Journal of Contemporary China, Vol. 17, No. 55 (May 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=10670564&volume=17&issue

=55

“China's Global Search for Energy Security: cooperation and competition in Asia–Pacific,” by Suisheng Zhao, 207-

“Energy Insecurity with Chinese and American Characteristics: implications for Sino–American relations,” by Jonathan D. Pollack, 229-

“Energy Production and Social Marginalisation in China,” by Philip Andrews-Speed andXin Ma, 247-

“A Crisis is Looming: China's energy challenge in the eyes of university students,” byDavid Zweig; Shulan Ye, 273-

“A Chinese View of China's Energy Security,” by Joseph Y. S. Cheng, 297-

“Perceptions of Injustice in the Chinese Countryside,” by M. Kent Jennings and Kuang-Hui Chen, 319-

“Domestic Openness in post-WTO China: central and local perspectives,” by Yingjie Guo,339-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

23 | P a g e

“Economic Growth and Income Inequality: the modern Taiwan experience,” by Yu-FengL. Lee, 361-

“Searching for Common Interests between China and Japan: a Chinese view,” by FanYongming, 375-

“Liberalism in Contemporary China: ten years after its ‘resurface’,” by Yinghong Cheng,383-

Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Vol. 15, No. (December 2007)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g788417113~db=all

Special Issue: Youth Culture in Europe

“Editorial,” by Jeremy Leaman and Martha Wörsching, 283 – 286

“Changes in the Political Culture of Young East and West Germans Between 1992 and2003. Results of the DJI Youth Survey,” by Wolfgang Gaiser, Martina Gille, Johann DeRijke, and Sabine Sardei-Biermann, 287 – 302

“Youth Culture and Citizenship in Multicultural Britain,” by Alan France, Jo Meredith,and Adriana Sandu, 303 – 316

“'Getting On With It': Life Narratives of Disadvantaged Young Adults in a Medium-SizedUK Town,” by Christina Kokoroskou, 317 – 326

“Speaking Their Language: Uses (and Potential Misuses) of Celebrity Linguists in thePromotion of Post-14 Foreign Language Learning in the UK,” by Nicky Bray, 327 – 343

“Why There Was No 'Marshall Plan' for Eastern Europe and Why This Still Matters,” byMaria Ivanova, 345 – 376

"The Hoax of War: The Foreign Policy Discourses of Poland and Bulgaria on Iraq, 2003-2005,” by Emilian Kavalski and Magdalena Zolkos, 377 – 393

Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 43, No. 1 (January 2008)http://jch.sagepub.com/content/vol43/issue1/?etoc

“Echoes of the Spanish Civil War in Palestine: Zionists, Communists and theContemporary Press,” by Raanan Rein, 9-23

“`Corrupting and Uncontrollable Activities': Moral Panic about Youth in Post-Civil-WarGreece,” by Efi Avdela, 25-44

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

24 | P a g e

“Smuts, the United Nations and the Rhetoric of Race and Rights,” by Saul Dubow, 45-74

“The Freedom that Never Was: Israel's Freedom of Overflight Over the Straits of TiranPrior to the Six Day War,” by Eitan Barak, 75-91

“Revisiting the Meeting of the Staatssekretäre on 2 May 1941: A Response to KlausJochen Arnold and Gert C. Lübbers,” by Alex J. Kay, 93-104

“The War Game Controversy — Again,” by James Chapman, 105-112

“Review Article: `The Moloch of Details'? Cycles of Criticism and the Meaning of HistoryNow,” by Donald M. MacRaild, 113-125

“Review Article: Twentieth-Century Masculinities,” by Matt Cook, 127-135

“Review Article: The German Nature Conservation Movement in the TwentiethCentury,” by David Motadel, 137-153

“Review Article: The `Problem of China' and Chinese Exceptionalism,” by LouiseEdwards, 155-164

Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 43, No. 2 (April 2008)http://jch.sagepub.com/content/vol43/issue2/?etoc

“The Uses and Abuses of Nietzsche in the Third Reich: Alfred Baeumler's 'HeroicRealism',” by Max Whyte, 171-194

“Undermine, or Bring Them Over: SOE and OSS Plans for Hungary in 1943,” by TamásMeszerics, 195-216

“'Good Morning, Pupil!' American Representations of Italianness and the Occupation ofItaly, 1943-1945,” by Andrew Buchanan, 217-240

“Israel's 1948 War of Independence as a Total War,” by Moshe Naor, 241-257

“Suez 1956: A European Intervention?” by Ralph Dietl, 259-278

“The Cult of the Red Martyr: Politics of Commemoration in China,” by Chang-tai Hung,279-304

“Political Purges and State Crisis in Portugal's Transition to Democracy, 1975-76,” byAntónio Costa Pinto, 305-332

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

25 | P a g e

Journal of Genocide Research, Vol., No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=14623528&volume=10&issue

=1

“From the Editors: academia and genocide—degrees of culpability,” by Henry R.Huttenbach, 1-

“Late Ottoman genocides: the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire and Young Turkishpopulation and extermination policies—introduction,” by Dominik J. Schaller andJürgen Zimmerer, 7-

“Seeing like a nation-state: Young Turk social engineering in Eastern Turkey, 1913–50,”by Ugur ümit üngör, 15-

“The 1914 cleansing of Aegean Greeks as a case of violent Turkification,” by MatthiasBjørnlund, 41-

“Perception of the other's fate: what Greek Orthodox refugees from the Ottoman Empirereported about the destruction of Ottoman Armenians,” by Hervé Georgelin, 59-

“A prelude to genocide: CUP population policies and provincial insecurity, 1908–14,” byDikran M. Kaligian, 77-

“Dissolve or punish? The international debate amongst jurists and publicists on theconsequences of the Armenian genocide for the Ottoman Empire, 1915–23,” by DanielMarc Segesser, 95-

“Three Responses to ‘Can There Be Genocide Without the Intent to Commit Genocide?’,”by various, 111-

Journal Of The Gilded Age And Progressive Era, Vol. 7, No. 1 (January 2008)

“2007 SHGAPE Distinguished Historian Address: Workers' Movements in the UnitedStates Confront Imperialism: The Progressive Era Experience,” by David Montgomery

“A Narrowing of Vision: Hardy L. Brian and the Fate of Louisiana Populism,” by JoelSipress

“John Sloan's Veiled Politics and Art,” by Gail Gelburd

“Hoodwinked: The Anti-Saloon League and the Ku Klux Klan in 1920s ProhibitionEnforcement,” by Thomas R. Pegram

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

26 | P a g e

Journal of Global History, Vol. 2, No. 3 (November 2007)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=JGH&volumeId=2&issueId=03

“The birth-pangs of Portuguese Asia: revisiting the fateful ‘long decade’ 1498–1509,” bySanjay Subrahmanyam, 261-280

“The varieties of Sioux Christianity, 1860–1980, in international perspective,” by DavidLindenfeld, 281-302

“Buddhism in the re-ordering of an early modern world: Chinese missions toCochinchina in the seventeenth century,” by Charles Wheeler, 303-324

“Indian Nationalism and the ‘world forces’: transnational and diasporic dimensions ofthe Indian freedom movement on the eve of the First World War,” by Harald Fischer-Tiné, 325-344

“The dematerialization of telecommunication: communication centres and peripheriesin Europe and the world, 1850–1920,” by Roland Wenzlhuemer, 345-372

“The two prime movers of globalization: history and impact of diesel engines and gasturbines,” by Vaclav Smil, 373-394

“Comparing British and American empires,” by A. G. Hopkins, 395-404

Journal of the Historical Society, Vol. 8, No. 1 (March 2008)

Original Articles

“Framing Southeast Asia's Economic History: Cycles of Globalization over la LongueDurée,” by Peter A. Coclanis, pages 1–27

“The Political Education of John Jones: Black Politics in a Northern City, 1845 1879,” byMargaret Garb, pages 29–60

“Vengeance and Civility: A New Look at Early American Statecraft,” by J.M. Opal, pages61–83

“Editorial Note: The Burnham Electoral Archive, Part II,” by Thomas Ferguson, pages85–86

Table 3: Summary: Elections to U.S. House of Representatives, 1788 2006, pages 87–157

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

27 | P a g e

Table 4: Summary:Massachusetts Voting Data, 1780 2006, pages 159–171

Table 5: Summary:New York Voting Data, 1828 2004, pages 173–183

Table 6: Summary: Selected Congressional and Gubernatorial Data, pages 185–199

Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Volume 36 Issue 1 (January 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=03086534&volume=36&issue=1

“Christian-Muslim Marriage and Cohabitation: An Aspect of Identity and FamilyFormation in Nineteenth-Century Cape Town,” by Vertrees Malherbe, 5-

“Repression and Rebellion: Britain's Response to the Arab Revolt in Palestine of 1936–39,” by Jacob Norris, 25-

“Innocent Abroad? Decolonisation and US Engagement with French West Africa, 1945–56,” by Martin C. Thomas, 47-

“Britain, the Old Commonwealth and the Problem of Rhodesian Independence, 1964–65,” by Carl Watts, 75-

“Further Thoughts on Imperial Absent-Mindedness,” by Bernard Porter, 101-

“Expulsion from Chagos: Regaining Paradise,” by David Snoxell, 119-

Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 38, No. 4 (Spring 2008)http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jinh/current

“Political Change and Political Discourse in the Early Modern Mediterranean World,” byLinda T. Darling, 505-531.

“Fractional Identities: The Political Arithmetic of Aboriginal Victorians,” by Len Smith,Janet McCalman, Ian Anderson, Sandra Smith, Joanne Evans, Gavan McCarthy, and JaneBeer, 533-551.

“How New Is the "New" Social Study of Childhood? The Myth of a Paradigm Shift,” byPatrick J. Ryan, 553-576.

Journal of Israeli History: Politics, Society, Culture, Vol. 27, No. 1 (March 2008)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

28 | P a g e

http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=13531042&volume=27&issue=1

“The mass immigrations to Israel: A comparison of the failure of the Mizrahi immigrantsof the 1950s with the success of the Russian immigrants of the 1990s,” by SammySmooha, 1-

“Being an Israeli: Immigrants from the Former Soviet Union in Israel, fifteen yearslater,” by Elazar Leshem, p. 29

“The new Mizrahi middle class: Ethnic mobility and class integration in Israel,” by UriCohen and Nissim Leon, 51-

“How Trans-Jordan was severed from the territory of the Jewish National Home,” byIsaiah Friedman, 65-

“The city that is not white: The celestial Tel Aviv and the earthly Tel Aviv,” by MichaelFeige, 87-

Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 40, No. 1 (February 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=LAS&volumeId=40&issueId=01

“Pension Reform in Latin America: Distributional Principles, Inequalities andAlternative Policy Options,” by CAMILA ARZA, 1-28

“The President's ‘New’ Constituency: Lula and the Pragmatic Vote in Brazil's 2006Presidential Elections,” by CESAR ZUCCO, 29-49

“Accountability in Hostile Times: the Case of the Peruvian Human Rights Ombudsman1996-2001,” by THOMAS PEGRAM, 51-82

“Shaping Taxation: Economic Elites and Fiscal Decision-Making in Argentina, 1920–1945,” by JOSÉ ANTONIO SÁNCHEZ ROMÁN, 83-108

“The Resistance of the Marginalised: Catholics in Eastern Michoacán and the MexicanState, 1920–40,” by ENRIQUE GUERRA MANZO, 109-133

Journal of Military History, Vol. 72, No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.smh-hq.org/jmh/volumes/jmh721/toc721.html

Peter H. Wilson, "Defining Military Culture," 11-41.

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

29 | P a g e

Ronald F. Kingsley and Harvey J. Alexander, "The Failure of Abercromby's Attack onFort Carillon, July 1758, and the Scapegoating of Matthew Clerk," 43-70.

Mark van de Logt, "'The Powers of the Heavens Shall Eat of My Smoke:' The Significanceof Scalping in Pawnee Warfare," 71-104.

Xu Guoqi, "The Great War and China's Military Expedition Plan," 105-140.

Mary Glantz, "An Officer and a Diplomat? The Ambiguous Position of Philip R.Faymonville and United States-Soviet Relations, 1941-1943," 141-177.

Bradley Lynn Coleman, "Recovering the Korean War Dead, 1950-1958: GravesRegistration, Forensic Anthropology, and Wartime Memorialization,” 179-222.

Journal of Military History, Vol. 72, No. 2 (April 2008)http://www.smh-hq.org/jmh/volumes/jmh722/toc722.html

Robert H. Larson, "Max Jähns and the Writing of Military History in Imperial Germany,"345-370.

Lisa M. Budreau, "The Politics of Remembrance: The Gold Star Mothers' Pilgrimage andAmerica's Fading Memory of the Great War," 371-411.

Tami Davis Biddle, "Dresden 1945: Reality, History, and Memory," 413-449.

Kenneth P. Werrell, "Across the Yalu: Rules of Engagement and the Communist AirSanctuary during the Korea War," 451-475.

Ingo Wolfgang Trauschweizer, "Learning with an Ally: The U.S. Army and theBundeswehr in the Cold War," 477-508.

Uri Bar Joseph, "Strategic Surprise or Fundamental Flaws? The Source of Israel'sMilitary Defeat at the Beginning of the 1973 War," 509-530.

George D. Salaita, "Embellishing Omaha Beach," 531-534.

Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 46, No. 1 (March 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org//action/displayIssue?jid=MOA&volumeId=46&issueId=01#toccontent

“Striving for growth, bypassing the poor? A critical review of Rwanda's rural sectorpolicies,” by An Ansoms, 1-32

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

30 | P a g e

“ ‘Getting in, getting out’: militia membership and prospects for re-integration in post-war Liberia,” by Morten Bøås and Anne Hatløy, 33-55

“Making sense of violence: voices of soldiers in the Congo (DRC),” by Maria ErikssonBaaz and Maria Stern, 57-86

“The domestication of the mobile phone: oral society and new ICT in Burkina Faso,” byHans Peter Hahn and Ludovic Kibora, 87-109

“Bare life and the developmental state: implications of the militarisation of highereducation in Eritrea,” by Tanja R. Müller, 111-131

“Pipes and politics: a century of change and continuity in Kenyan urban water supply,”by David Nilsson and Ezekiel Nyangeri Nyanchaga, 133-158

Journal of Modern Chinese History, Vol. 1, No. 2 (December 2007)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=17535654&volume=1&issue=2

“Modern China's cultural transformation – problems and prospects,” by Yunzhi Geng,137-

“A research report on Japanese use of chemical weapons during the Second WorldWar,” by Ping Bu, 155-

“Soviet–Japanese relations and the strategic interests of the Guomindang and the CCP –Chiang Kai-shek's planning of sanctions against the CCP in 1943,” by Ye Deng, 175-

“The Sino-Soviet Conference, 1924–1927,” by Qihua Tang, 195-

“Nationalism and the May Thirtieth Movement: an analysis of the northernintelligentsia,” by Guangxu Ao, 219-

“Writing about a different kind of medical history: a critical review of Zaizao bingren byYang Nianqun,” by Xinzhong Yu, 239-

“The past 20 years of modern Chinese social history,” by Long Xing and Yingze Hu, 249-

Journal of Modern History, Vol. 79, No. 4 (December 2007)http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/jmh/2007/79/4#

“Patronage, Profits, and Public Theaters: Rethinking Cultural Unification in AncienRégime France,” by Lauren Clay, 729-771

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

31 | P a g e

“ ‘Falling into Feathers’: Jews and the Trans-Atlantic Ostrich Feather Trade,” by SarahAbrevaya Stein, 772-812

“Catholic Racism and Its Opponents,” by John Connelly, 813-847

“The Legend of Compulsory Unification: The Catholic Clergy and the Revival of TradeUnionism in West Germany after the Second World War,” by William Patch, 848-880

Journal of Modern History, Vol. 80, No. 1 (March 2008)http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/jmh/2008/80/1#

“Before Democracy: The Production and Uses of Common Sense,” by Sophia Rosenfeld,1-54

“Transnational Culture War: Christianity, Nation, and the Judeo-Bolshevik Myth inHungary, 1890–1920,” by Paul Hanebrink, 55-80

“The Fate of the Nineteenth Century in German Historiography,” by H. Glenn Penny, 81-108

Journal of Modern Italian Studies, Vol. 13, No. 1 (March 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1354571X&volume=13&issue=1&uno_jumptype=alert&uno_alerttype=new_issue_alert,email

“Beyond the three circles: Italy and the rest of the world,” by Maurizio Carbone, 1-

“Italy's foreign policy toward China: missed opportunities and new chances,” by ValterCoralluzzo, 6-

“A bridge in times of confrontation: Italy and Russia in the context of EU and NATOenlargements,” by Cristian Collina, 25-

“Italy and Africa: how to forget colonialism,” by Giampaolo Calchi Novati, 41-

“Italy and the south of the world: still a laggard in international development?” byMaurizio Carbone, 58-

“A wolf in sheep's clothing? Italy's policies toward international organizations,” byGiovanna Antonia Fois and Fabrizio Pagani, 75-

“Man of faith and political commitment: Alcide De Gasperi in the history of Europe,” byGiulio Venneri, 89-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

32 | P a g e

“Mysteries about mysteries,” by David Ward, 93-

Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 42, No. 3 (December 2007)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g788594304~db=all~tab=toc~order=page

“Narrating Colonial Encounters,” by Miriam Kahn and Sabine Wilke, 293 – 297

“Oceanic Carvings and Germanic Cravings,” by Rainer F. Buschmann, 299 – 315

“Hambruch's Colonial Narrative,” by Glenn Petersen, 317 – 330

“New Compatriots,” by Christopher Balme, 331 – 344

“Multiple Voices, Multiple Truths,” by Richard Scaglion, 345 – 360

“History and its Others,” by Jonathan Lamb, 361 – 368

Journal of Political Science Education, Vol. 4, No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=15512169&volume=4&issue=1

“Cultivating Civic Competence: Simulations and Skill-Building in an IntroductoryGovernment Class, by Jeffrey L. Bernstein, 1-

“Using the Classroom to Cultivate Student Support for Participation in Campus Life: TheCall for Civic Education Interventions,” by J. Cherie Strachan, 21-

“Developing Civic Engagement in General Education Political Science,” by Juan CarlosHuerta and Joseph Jozwiak, 42-

“Student Learning Identities: Developing a Learning Taxonomy for the Political ScienceClassroom,” by Darrell Driver, Kyle Jette, and Leonard Lira, 61-

“ ‘City Council Meetings Are Cool’: Increasing Student Civic Engagement ThroughService Learning,” by Laura van Assendelft, 86-

“Some Things Y'all Need to Know: Teaching Southern Politics at Home and Abroad,” byL. Marvin Overby, 98-

“Factors in Information Literacy Education,” by Michelle Hale Williams and JocelynJones Evans, 116-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

33 | P a g e

“A Crisis of Legitimacy: Shakespeare's Richard II and the Problems of Modern ExecutiveLeadership,” by Andrea Ciliotta-Rubery, 131-

Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 39, No. 2 (June 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=SEA&volumeId=39&issueId=02

“Introduction: Communities of interpretation and the construction of modernMyanmar,” by Maitrii Aung-Thwin, 187-192

“Mranma Pran: When context encounters notion,” by Michael Aung-Thwin, 193-217

“Finding the political in Myanmar, a.k.a. Burma,” by Robert H. Taylor, 219-237

“Anthropological communities of interpretation for Burma: An overview,” by U ChitHlaing, 239-254

“Communities of interpretation in the study of religion in Burma,” by Juliane Schober,255-267

“Communities of the past: A new view of the old walls and hydraulic system atSriksetra, Myanmar (Burma),” by Bob Hudson and Terry Lustig, 269-296

“Structuring revolt: Communities of interpretation in the historiography of the Saya Sanrebellion,” by Maitrii Aung-Thwin, 297-317

Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 31, No. 1 (February 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=01402390&volume=31&issue

=1

“The Israel defense forces in the Second Lebanon War: Why the poor performance?” byAvi Kober, 3-

“Strategic deficiencies in national liberation struggles: The case of fatah in the al-AqsaIntifada,” by Gil Friedman, 41-

“Becoming the enemy: Convergence in the American and Al Qaeda ways of warfare,” byAnthony Vinci, 69-

“Intelligence within BAOR and NATO's Northern Army Group,” by Richard J. Aldrich, 89-

“Peacemaking through bribes or cultural empathy? The political officer and Britain'sstrategy towards the North-West Frontier, 1901–1945,” by Christian Tripodi, 123-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

34 | P a g e

Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 31, No. 2 (April 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=01402390&volume=31&issue

=2

“Understanding Proto-Insurgencies,” by Daniel Byman, 165-

“Pakistan's Relations with Central Asia: Is Past Prologue?” by C. Christine Fair, 201-

“The Iraq Survey Group: From Weapons of Mass Destruction to Counterinsurgency,” byRichard J. Shuster, 229-

“Through the Looking Glass: The Soviet Military-Technical Revolution and the AmericanRevolution in Military Affairs,” by Dima P. Adamsky, 257-

“ ‘Pounding Their Feet’: Israeli Military Culture as Reflected in Early IDF CombatHistory,” by Gil-li Vardi, 295-

Journal of Vietnamese Studies, Vol. 3, No. 1 (Winter 2008)http://caliber.ucpress.net/toc/vs/3/1

“History Interrupted: Life after Material Death in South Vietnamese and DiasporicWorks of Fiction,” by Nguyen-Vo Thu-Hu'o'ng, 1-35

“Exhibiting War, Reconciling Pasts: Photographic Representation and TransnationalCommemoration in Contemporary Vietnam,” by Christina Schwenkel, 36-77.

“Protest and Political Incorporation: Vietnamese American Protests in Orange County,California, 1975-2001,” by Nhu'-Ngoc T. Ong and David S. Meyer, 78-107.

“Quantifying Poverty in Viet Nam: Who Counts?” by Jonathan Pincus and John Sender,108-150.

“Catholicism vs. Communism, Continued: The Catholic Church in Vietnam,” by Lan T.Chu, 151-192.

“Translators' Note to Nguyen Ngoc's ‘An Exciting Period for VietnameseProse’,” by Cao Thi Nhu' Quynh and John C. Schafer, 193-196.

“An Exciting Period for Vietnamese Prose,” by Nguyen Ngoc, 197-219

Lusotopie, Vol. 14, No. 2 (December 2007)http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/brill/luso/2007/00000014/00000002

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

35 | P a g e

“The Worlds which the Portuguese, the Russians, and the Turks Created: Empires onEurope's Periphery,” by Georgi M. Derlugian, 3-10

“When adaptation eludes transformation: The Losing Game of Portuguese Territorieswithin the Context of Europe,” by Daniel Francisco, 11-31

“Introduction,” by Brigitte Lachartre and Pierre Salama, 35-41

“The Lula government and the political ascension of the domestic Brazilianbourgeoisie,” by Armando Boito, 43-60

“Debates about agriculture and rural development policies in the Brazil of Lula,” by ÉricSabourin, 61-85

“Between Multilateralism and Regional Integration. The Trade Policy of the LulaGovernment (2003-2006),” by Joaquim Ramos, 87-108

“Globalisation in Brazil, culprit or scapegoat?” by Paulo Kliass and Pierre Salama, 109-132

“Targeted social policy and tax compromises. The two faces of the Lula government,” byGraça Druck and Luiz Filgueiras, 133-146

“Metamorphosis of poverty in Brazil,” by Marcio Pochmann, 147-156

“The start of Lula's second term of office and the Plan for the Acceleration of Growth,”by Paulo Kliass, 157-168

“Le Brésil de Luandino Vieira: Entretiens,” by Juliana Marçano Santil, 171-183

“Faits, Fictions, Fumées,” by René Pélissier, 185-191

“Writing Women's History in Southern Europe 19th-20th Centuries,” Cristina Água-Mel, 193-195

“Essays on the Literature of São Tomé e Príncipe,” by Gerhard Seibert, 195-200

“Exclusion et politique à São Paulo. Les outsiders de la démocratie au Brésil,” byMarcelo de Almeida Medeiros, 200-203

“Raça como Retórica, a construção da diferença,” by Patricia Birman, 203-206

“Língua Portuguesa e Cooperação para o Desenvolvimento,” by Jean-Pierre Chavagne,206-208

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

36 | P a g e

“A Europa do Sul e a Construção da União Europeia 1945-2000: Espanha e a IntegraçãoEuropeia : Um Balanço,” by Michel Cahen, 208-218

“Blackness without ethnicity : Constructing race in Brazil: Negritude sem etnicidade : olocal e o global nas relações raciais e na produção cultural negra do Brasil,” by PatriciaBirman, 218-220

“Notes de lecture,” by Jean-Pierre Chavagne, Michel Cahen, and David Birmingham,221-228

Manière de voir, No. 97 (February-March 2008)http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/97/

La bataille des langues

I. Une vision du monde

“Cette arme de domination...” by Bernard Cassen

“Adorno et l’allemand,” by Jacques Derrida

“Parler arabe, mais en Rolls ou en Wolkswagen?” by Edward W. Said

“Résistance du catalan,” by Víctor Gómez Pin

“A Malte, l’expression est histoire,” by Martine Vanhove

“Culture wallonne ou culture francophone?” by Serge Govaert

“Une expression de la lutte des classes au Québec,” by Jacques Cellard

II. Le dépassement d’un « moi divisé »

“ ‘Cicatriser mes blessures mémorielles... ‘,” by Assia Djebar

“Divergences coloniales sur l’enseignement du vernaculaire,” by Robert Cornevin

“Ni ‘petit-nègre’ ni ‘petit-français’,” by Mwatha Musanyi Ngalasso

“La patrie littéraire du colonisé,” by Albert Memmi

“La dignité retrouvée du guarani au Paraguay,” by Ruben Bareiro-Saguier

“Des ‘métèques” dans le jardin français,” by Tahar Ben Jelloun

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

37 | P a g e

III. Réponses de la francophonie

“Solidarité et multipolarité planétaires,” by Ignacio Ramonet

“L’épreuve de la liberté,” by Philippe de Saint Robert

“Le plus court chemin vers l’universel,” B. C.

“Entre le ‘tout Coca-Cola’ et le ‘tout ayatollah’,” by Stélio Farandjis

“Une jambe qui manqué,” by Michel Guillou

“Au service du pluralisme culturel,” by Abdou Diouf

IV. La chape de l’anglais

“La langue-dollar,” by B. C.

“L’utile avant le beau, un choix de civilization,” by Philippe Lalanne-Berdouticq

“Un abus de position dominante,” by Pierre Lelong

“La hantise des laboratoires : « to be » ou ne pas être?” by Philippe Lazar

“Sarcasmes médiatiques contre la loi Toubon,” by B. C.

“La science comme elle se parle...,” by Jean-Marc Lévy-Leblond

“Anglicisation forcenée dans les enterprises,” by B. C.

V. Des stratégies de résistance

“Une idée en marche, la latinité,” by Philippe Rossillon

“Entre locuteurs de langues romanes, on peut toujours se comprendre,” by B. C.

“Esprit de famille,” by Françoise Ploquin

“Un multilinguisme émancipateur,” by José Vidal-Beneyto

“Bruxelles devrait être une vitrine,” by B. C.

“Cartographie: Les langues officielles, La francophonie, Les pays Anglophones,” byCécile Marin

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

38 | P a g e

Manière de voir, No. 98 (April-May 2008)http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/98

Histoires d’Israël, 1948-2008

“Politique de la force, force de la politique,” by Dominique Vidal

I. Aux origines de l’Etat

“De Theodor Herzl à la naissance d’Israël,” by Henry Laurens

“L’expulsion des Palestiniens revisitée,” by D. V.

“Le judaïsme de mon enfance,” by Avraham Burg

“Au nom de la Shoah,” by Idith Zertal

“En 1961, le tournant du procès Eichmann,” by Tom Segev

“Réponse aux intellectuels arabes fascinés par Roger Garaudy,” by Edward W. Said

II. Soixante ans de conflits

“Opération Mousquetaire,” by Eric Rouleau

“Le problème des réfugiés de Palestine,” by Micheline Paunet

“Le désastre des colonies israéliennes dans les territoires occupies,” by AmnonKapeliouk

“Vœux pieux, froide réalité,” by Claude Julien

“Convergences libanaises,” by Samir Kassir

“La dérive israélienne,” by A. K.

“Ecrire l’histoire à l’encre verte,” by Shimon Pérès

“Paix durable ou paix piégée?” by Alain Gresh

“ ‘Politicide’,” by Baruch Kimmerling

III. Une société bousculée

“Kaléidoscope pacifiste,” by Jean Lacouture

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

39 | P a g e

“Sionisme et judaïsme inconciliables?” by Boas Evron

“Une nation d’immigrations,” by A. K.

“Révolution laïque pour le sionisme,” by Zeev Sternhell

“L’enjeu séfarade,” by Marius Schattner

“Regain d’idéal au kibboutz Gan Shmuel,” by D. V.

“Rêves de ‘transfert’,” by Amira Hass

“Le traumatisme persistant des Arabes israéliens,” by Joseph Algazy

“Un nouveau ‘Far East’, la Cisjordanie,” by Gadi Algazi

“Le high-tech change la donne,” by D. V.

Cartographie:

“Des frontières changeantes,” by Philippe Rekacewicz

Biographies, by Dominique Vidal:

“David Ben Gourion. Le père fondateur”

“Golda Meïr. La première « dame de fer »”

“Menahem Begin. D’un naufrage à l’autre”

“Itzhak Rabin. « Faucon », puis « colombe »”

“Shimon Pérès. Une si longue attente...”

“Ariel Sharon. A tout prix”

“Benyamin Netanyahou. Made in USA”

Middle East Journal, Vol. 61 No. 4 (Autumn 2007)http://www.mideasti.org/middle-east-journal/issue/61/4

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

40 | P a g e

“Israeli Policy towards the Occupied Palestinian Territories: The Economic Dimension,1967-2007,” by Arie Arnon

“Lions Tamed? An Inquiry into the Causes of De-Radicalization of Armed IslamistMovements: The Case of the Egyptian Islamic Group,” by Omar Ashour

“Conflict and Cooperation in the Persian Gulf: The Interregional Order and US Policy,”by Henner Fürtig

“Attitudes towards Violence against Women in Kuwait,” by by Fatima Nazar and KamiarKouzekanani

“Between Reality and Secrecy: Israel's Freedom of Navigation through the Straits ofTiran, 1956-1967,” by Eitan Barak

Middle East Journal, Vol. 62 No. 1 (Winter 2008)http://www.mideasti.org/middle-east-journal/issue/62/1

“Iran's New Iraq,” by Ray Takeyh

“A Stable Structure on Shifting Sands: Assessing the Hizbullah-Iran-Syria Relationship,”by Abbas William Samii

“Libya's Nuclear Turnaround: Perspectives from Tripoli,” by Målfrid Braut-Hegghammer

“The Changing Libyan Economy: Causes and Consequences,” by Ronald Bruce St John

“From the Myth of European Union Accession to Disillusion: Implications for Religiousand Ethnic Polarization in Turkey,” by Deniz Gökalp and Seda Ünsar

Middle East Journal, Vol. 62 No. 2 (Spring 2008)http://www.mideasti.org/middle-east-journal/issue/62/2

“Russian-Iranian Relations in the Ahmadinejad Era,” by Mark Katz

“The Unraveling of Iraq: Ethnosectarian Preferences and State Performance inHistorical Perspective,” by Adeed Dawisha

“Occultation in Perpetuum: Shi‘ite Messianism and the Policies of the Islamic Republic,”by Ze’ev Maghen

“How Favoritism Affects the Business Climate: Empirical Evidence from Jordan,” byMarkus Loewe, Jonas Blume, and Johanna Speer

“Militarizing Welfare: Neo-liberalism and Jordanian Policy,” by Anne Marie Baylouny

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

41 | P a g e

Middle East Policy, Vol. 15, No. 1 (Spring 2008)http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/toc/mepo/15/1

Iran “Iran's Strategic Concerns and U.S. Interests,” by Gary Sick, Trita Parsi, Ray Takeyh,

Barbara Slavin, 1–18

“Iran and the United States: The Nuclear Issue,” by Anthony H. Cordesman, 19–29

“Diplomacy and Hypocrisy: The Case of Iran,” by Anthony Newkirk, 30–45

“Iran's Reformists and Activists: Internet Exploiters,” by Babak Rahimi and ElhamGheytanchi, 46–59

Economic Issues

“Arab Economies at a Tipping Point,” by Marcus Noland and Howard Pack, 60–69

“Gulf Cooperation Council Stock Markets Since September 11,” by Sam R. Hakim, 70–81

“Thinking Strategically about Iraq: Report from a Symposium,” by Colin H. Kahl, BrianKatulis, Marc Lynch, 82–110

“Pakistan: Terror War Bolsters Islamism, Nationhood,” by Mustafa Malik, 111–124

“Wars and Rumors of War: The Levantine Tinderbox,” by Antony T. Sullivan, 125–132

“Libya and the United States: A Faustian Pact?” by Ronald Bruce St John, 133–148

“The Attack on Middle East Studies: A Historical Perspective,” by Lawrence Davidson,149–160

Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 12, No. 1 (March 2008)http://meria.idc.ac.il/journal/2008/issue1/jvol12no1in.asp

"Lebanon 2006: Unfinished War," by Jonathan Spyer

"Ignorance Cannot Be Realistic: A Critique of the Mearsheimer-Walt Thesis," OfiraSeliktar

"Impediments to Stability in Iraq: The Elusive Economic Dimension," by Robert Looney

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

42 | P a g e

"Harsh Readjustment: The Sunnis and the Political Process in Contemporary Iraq," byRonen Zeidel

"Shaykh Yusuf al-Qaradawi: Portrait of a Leading Islamist Thinker," by Ana Soage

"The Relationship Between Traditional and Contemporary Islamist Political Thought,"by Sherko Kirmanj

"Pakistan on The Tightrope," by Isaac Kfir

Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 44, No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=00263206&volume=44&issue

=1

“Revisionist Zionism: Image, Reality and the Quest for Historical Narrative,” by JanZouplna, 3-

“Defining ‘America’ from a Distance: Local Strategies of the Global in the Middle East,”by Özlem Altan-Olcay, 29-

“Foreign Direct Investment in Turkey: Historical Constraints and the AKP SuccessStory,” by Ioannis N. Grigoriadis; Antonis Kamaras, 53-

“Modernization, Science and Engineering in the Early Nineteenth Century OttomanEmpire,” byBerrak Burçak, 69-

“Said Halim Pasha – Philosopher Prince,” by Syed Tanvir Wasti, 85-

“Countering US Hegemony: The Discourse of Salim al-Hoss and other ArabIntellectuals,” by Sami E. Baroudi, 105-

“Upsurge of the Extreme Right in Turkey: The Intra-Right Struggle to Redefine ‘TrueNationalism and Islam’,” by Yüksel Taskin, 131-

“China and Iran. Ancient Partners in a Post-imperial World,” by Fred Halliday, 151-

“Tribal Politics in Iran: Rural Conflict and the New State, 1921–1941,” by MasoudKazemzadeh, 153-

“Russia in the Middle East: Friend or Foe?” by Rami Ginat, 157

“General Maps of Persia: 1477–1925,” by Stephanie Cronin, 163-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

43 | P a g e

“Economic Co-operation in the Gulf: Issues in the Economies of the Arab Gulf Co-operation Council States,” by Randa Alami, 166-

Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 44, No. 2 (March 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=00263206&volume=44&issue

=2

“The Ibadhi Imamate of Muhammad bin ‘Abdallah al-Khalili (1920–54): The LastChapter of a Lost and Forgotten Legacy,” by Uzi Rabi, 169-

“Intra-Elite Factionalism and the 2004 Majles Elections in Iran,” by MasoudKazemzadeh, 189-

“Man on the Spot: Captain George Gracey and British Policy towards the Assyrians,1917–45,” by John Fisher, 215-

“The Demise of the Kurdish Emirates: The Impact of Ottoman Reforms andInternational Relations on Kurdistan during the First Half of the Nineteenth Century,”by Michael Eppel, 237-

“The Ottoman Approach to the Western Europeans in the Levant during the EarlyModern Period,” by Mehmet Bulut, 259-

“Seyyid Bey and the Abolition of the Caliphate,” by Michelangelo Guida, 275-

“Property and Human Rights in Cyprus: The European Court of Human Rights as aPlatform of Political Struggle,” by Kudret Özersay; Ayla Gürel, 291-

“Economic Cooperation between India and Saudi Arabia: Performance and Prospects,”by Muhammad Azhar, 323-

Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 42, No. 1 (January 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=ASS&volumeId=42&issueId=01

“The Labour Process in the Bombay Handloom Industry, 1880–1940,” by Douglas E.Haynes, 1-45

“The Paradox of Peasant Worker: Re-conceptualizing workers’ politics in Bengal 1890–1939,” by Subho Basu, 47-74

“Gender and Class: Women in Indian Industry, 1890–1990,” by Samita Sen, 75-116

“The Decline and Fall of the Jobber System in the Bombay Cotton Textile Industry,1870–1955,” by Rajnarayan Chandavarkar, 117-210

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

44 | P a g e

“ ‘We are all sondukarar (relatives)!’: kinship and its morality in an urban industry ofTamilnadu, South India,” by Geert De Neve, 211-246

“Introduction: Islamic reformism in South Asia,” by Filippo Osella and Caroline Osella,247-257

“Islamic Reform and Modernities in South Asia,” by Francis Robinson, 259-281

“Breathing in India, c. 1890,” by Nile Green, 283-315

“Islamism and Social Reform in Kerala, South India,” by Filippo Osella and CarolineOsella, 317-346

“Piety as Politics amongst Muslim Women in Contemporary Sri Lanka,” by FarzanaHaniffa, 347-375

“The Changing Perspectives of Three Muslim Men on the Question of Saint Worshipover a 10-Year Period in Gujarat, Western India,” by Edward Simpson, 377-403

“Women, Politics and Islamism in Northern Pakistan,” by Magnus Marsden, 405-429

“Violence, Reconstruction and Islamic Reform—Stories from the Muslim ‘Ghetto’,” byRubina Jasani, 431-456

“Reading the Qur'an in Bangladesh: The Politics of ‘Belief’ Among Islamist Women,” byMaimuna Huq, 457-488

“Islamic Feminism in India: Indian Muslim Women Activists and the Reform of MuslimPersonal Law,” by Sylvia Vatuk, 489-518

“Disputing Contraception: Muslim Reform, Secular Change and Fertility,” by PatriciaJeffery and Roger Jeffery and Craig Jeffrey, 519-548

“Cracks in the ‘Mightiest Fortress’: Jamaat-e-Islami's Changing Discourse on Women,”by Irfan Ahmad, 549-575

“Jamaat-i-Islami in Bangladesh: Women, Democracy and the Transformation of IslamistPolitics,” by Elora Shehabuddin, 577-603

“The Enemy Within: Madrasa and Muslim Identity in North India,” by Arshad Alam,605-627

Modern Chinese History, Vol. 1, No. 2 (December 2007)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

45 | P a g e

http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g790011912~db=all~tab=toc~order=page

Geng, Yunzhi, “Modern China's cultural transformation – problems and prospects,”137-153

Bu, Ping, “A research report on Japanese use of chemical weapons during the SecondWorld War,” 155-172

Deng, Ye, “Soviet–Japanese relations and the strategic interests of the Guomindang andthe CCP – Chiang Kai-shek's planning of sanctions against the CCP in 1943,” 175-194

Tang, Qihua, “The Sino-Soviet Conference, 1924–1927,” 195-218

Ao, Guangxu, “Nationalism and the May Thirtieth Movement: an analysis of thenorthern intelligentsia,” 219-237

Yu, Xinzhong, “Writing about a different kind of medical history: a critical review ofZaizao bingren by Yang Nianqun,” 239-248

Xing, Long and Yingze Hu, “The past 20 years of modern Chinese social history,” 249-260.

Modern Italy, Vol. 13, No. 1 (February 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g789968423~db=all~tab=toc~orde

r=page

Baldoli, Claudia. “The ‘Northern Dominator’ and the Mare Nostrum: Fascist Italy's‘Cultural War’ in Malta,” 5-20

Pollard, John. “Christopher Seton-Watson,” 3-4

Chiarini, Roberto. “Anti-Zionism and the Italian Extreme Right,” 21-35

Davidson, Jason W. “In and out of Iraq: A vote-seeking explanation of Berlusconi's Iraqpolicy.” 37-50

Stewart, Fiona M. “The interaction of methodology with an impegno del dopo in NutoRevelli's collections of oral testimonies.” 51-68

Adamson, Walter L. “Contexts and Debates Fascinating futurism: The historiographicalpolitics of an historical avant-garde.” 69-85

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

46 | P a g e

Modern Italy, Vol. 13, No. 2 (May 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g792760552~db=all~tab=toc~order=page

Italian Foreign Policy and the Mediterranean

Carbone, Maurizio. “Introduction: Italy's foreign policy and the Mediterranean.” 111-113

Coralluzzo, Valter. “Italy and the Mediterranean: Relations with the Maghreb countries.Modern Italy.” 115-133

Sarto, Raffaella A. Del and Nathalie Tocci. “Italy's politics without policy: BalancingAtlanticism and Europeanism in the Middle East.” 135-153

Carbone, Maurizio. “Between ambition and ambivalence: Italy and the EuropeanUnion's Mediterranean policy.” 155-168

Belloni, Roberto and Roberto Morozzo della Rocca. “Italy and the Balkans: The rise of areluctant middle power.” 169-185

Fossati, Fabio. “Italy and European Union enlargement: A comparative analysis of leftand right governments.” 187-198

Le Monde Diplomatique, January 2008http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/01/

Sécurité

“Alarmante banalisation des vigiles,” by Martin Mongin

“A l’université aussi," by Martin Mongin

“Suspicion généralisée,” by Martin Mongin

“Législation”

Pouvoir d’achat

“Partage des richesses, la question taboue,” by François Ruffin.

En débat

“Vivre en troupeau en se pensant libres,” by Dany-Robert Dufour

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

47 | P a g e

“La télévision, ce « troisième parent » des foyers modernes, forge-t-elle des individus oudes moutons?”

Droit d’auteur

“Des maisons de disques bousculées par la rue,” by Thomas Blondeau.

Société

“ ‘Votre capital santé m’intéresse...’,” François Cusset.

Exposition

“A Paris, malgré la censure russe,” by Jacques Denis.

Europe

“Tourisme politique en Irlande du Nord,” by Benoît Lety

“La boîte de Pandore des frontières balkaniques,” by Jean-Arnault Dérens and PhilippeRekacewicz

“Simple corridor ou carrefour d’échanges?”

“Incertaines délimitations de l’Albanie,”

États-Unis

“Quand le Congrès arrêtera-t-il la guerre d’Irak?” by Ryan C. Hendrickson.

“ ‘Democracy now’ donne sa voix à la gauche américaine,” by Danielle Follett andThomas Boothe

“Auditeurs solidaires”

“Jusqu’en Europe”

Amérique Latine

“Coup de semonce au Venezuela,” by Gregory Wilpert

Turquie

“La société entre l’armée et les islamistes,” by Niels Kadritzke

“Comment Ankara étouffe l’opposition kurde,” by Olivier Piot

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

48 | P a g e

Pakistan

“Mainmise des militaires sur les richesses du pays,” by

“Nouveaux féodaux,” by Ayesha Siddiqa

Afrique

“Le lobby évangélique à l’assaut de l’Ouganda,” by Anouk Batard

“Pasteur superstar”

Le Monde Diplomatique, February 2008http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/02/

France

“Le sarkozysme est-il un bonapartisme?” by Alain Garrigou

“Traitement de choc pour tuer l’hôpital public,” by André Grimaldi, Thomas Papo andJean-Paul Vernant

“Quand l’Angleterre veut imiter la France,” by Catherine Smadja and Philippe Froguel

“Quelques propositions”

“Gagner de l’argent avec le chômage,” by Marion Lhour

“La télévision publique libérée de ses chaînes?” by Marie Bénilde

Femmes

“Menaces sur le droit à l’avortement,” by Anne Daguerre

“Un enjeu dans la course à la Maison Blanche”

“Ravages de la clandestinité”

“ ‘Une midinette aux ongles laqués’,” by Sylvie Tissot

En débat

“Universels, les droits de l’homme?” by François Jullien

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

49 | P a g e

Etats-Unis

“En croisière sur le « Titanic » de la droite américaine,” by Johann Hari

Afrique

“Affrontements très politiques au Kenya,” by Jean-Christophe Servant

“En Centrafrique, stratégie française et enjeux régionaux,” by Vincent Munié

“L’Union européenne s’engage à reculons,” by Léon Koungou

Royaume-Uni

“Ces Gurkhas oubliés de la Couronne britannique,” by Cédric Bosquet

Environnement

“La montagne victime des sports d’hiver,” by Philippe Descamps

“Les neiges ne sont plus éternelles,” by Philippe Descamps

“Boom de la randonnée,” by Philippe Descamps

“Les rurbains contre la nature,” by Augustin Berque

“Aux origines d’un idéal,” by Augustin Berque

Proche-Orient

“Enquête sur l’implantation d’Al-Qaida au Liban,” by Fidaa Itani

“Un système confessionnel instable,” by Alain Gresh

“Qu’est-ce que le salafisme?” by Wendy Kristianasen

Amérique Latine

“ ‘Révolution hors la révolution’ en Bolivie,” by Franck Poupeau and Hervé Do Alto

“Quand le Québec s’interroge”

“Un projet toujours vivant : la souveraineté,” by Louise Beaudoin

“L’interaméricanité jetée aux oubliettes?” by Dorval Brunelle

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

50 | P a g e

“Autochtones canadiens, caméra au poing,” by Dominique Godrèche

Le Monde Diplomatique, March 2008http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/03/

Économie

“Crises financières, n’en tirer aucune leçon...” by Frédéric Lordon

“Des mots sur les maux”

“Paroles d’experts,”

“Et la droite française devint libérale,” by François Denord

Migrations

“Réfugiés au Sud, barrières au Nord”

“Une enquête de Philippe Rekacewicz”

“Citoyens de nulle part,” by Ph. R.

“Réfugiés de la faim (article inédit),” by Jean Ziegler

Nucléaire

“Les dossiers enterrés de Tchernobyl,” by Alison Katz

Internet

“Mouvements tectoniques sur la Toile,” by Hervé Le Crosnier

“Des marchés âprement disputés”

Communication

“Opus Dei, de la légende noire à la normalisation médiatique,” by Jérôme Anciberro.

“Pudeur linguistique”

Irak

“Les Etats-Unis vont-ils gagner la guerre ? (aperçu sur le blog Nouvelles d’Orient),” byAlain Gresh

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

51 | P a g e

“L’anthropologie, arme des militaries,” by William O. Beeman

“Au service du colonisateur,” by Alain Ruscio

Afrique

“Comment le conflit au Darfour déstabilise le Tchad,” by Gérard Prunier

“De N’djamena à Kaboul, opérations françaises secretes,” by Philippe Leymarie

Amérique Latine

“Le jour où le Mexique fut privé de tortillas,” by Anne Vigna

“Sus aux populisms,” by Renaud Lambert

Europe

“La Pologne sur un volcan salarial,” by Dariusz Zalega

France

“Des « classes dangereuses » à discipliner,” by Laurent Bonelli

“Tornade patronale sur le code du travail,” by Gérard Filoche

“Plus haute sera la prochaine tour,” by Thierry Paquot

Le Monde Diplomatique, April 2008http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/04/

France

“L’art de faire rêver les pauvres,” by Mona Chollet

“L’Université féodale de demain”(aperçu), by Pierre Jourde

“La figure imposée du dernier poilu,” by Nicolas Offenstadt

“Qui évaluera Jacques Attali?” by Louis Pinto

Afrique

“Quand les Sud-Africains réclament un toit,” by Philippe Rivière

“Bidonvilles et immeubles chics” (Ph. R.)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

52 | P a g e

“L’apartheid au musée" (Ph. R.)

“Le retour de la tuberculose” (Ph. R.)

Arménie

“Dangereuse instabilité,” by Jean Gueyras

Italie

“Rude épreuve électorale pour la Gauche arc-en-ciel,” by Rudi Ghedini

États-Unis

“L’audacieux pari de Barack Obama (aperçu),” by John Gerring and Joshua Yesnowitz

“Contre l’invasion de l’Irak”(inédit)

“Miami se lasse de l’extrême droite cubaine,” by Maurice Lemoine

“Posada Carriles (Luis)” (M. L.)

“ ‘Les Cinq’ “ (M. L.)

Monde Arabe

“Les régimes arabes modernisent… l’autoritarisme,” by Hicham Ben Abdallah El Alaoui

Dossier « alliance atlantique »

“Les Etats-Unis sont-ils une menace pour l’Europe ?”(aperçu) by Pierre Conesa

“Subtile partie d’échecs entre Moscou et Washington,” by Olivier Zajec

“Ce que voulait de Gaulle en 1966,” by Dominique Vidal

Amérique Latine

“Carlos Slim, tout l’or du Mexique,” by Renaud Lambert

Tibet

“Bourgeonnement précoce du printemps de Lhassa,” by Mathieu Vernerey

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

53 | P a g e

Inédit

“Mai 68, la mémoire et l’oubli,” by Kristin Ross

Le Monde Diplomatique, May 2008http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/05/

Fonds Souverains

“Prédateurs, sauveurs ou dupes ?”(aperçu) by Ibrahim Warde

“Primes et châtiments des ‘traders,” by Ibrahim Warde

Crise Alimentaire

“Comment le marché mondial des céréales s’est emballé,” by Dominique Baillard

“L’éthanol, nouvel euphorisant des responsables américains” (D. B.)

“ « Rares sont les agriculteurs qui cultivent le blé » “ (A.-C. R.)

“L’Egypte des ventres vides,” by Joel Beinin

Médias

“Du pain, des jeux et des milliardaires,” by Mathias Roux

“La bonne fortune des mots” (M. R.)

Commémoration

“Le retournement de Mai 68,” by Bernard Lacroix

France

“Que s’est-il donc passé le 6 mai 2007?” by Anne-Cécile Robert

Allemagne

“Ce nouveau parti qui bouscule le paysage politique,” by Peter Linden

“Les étudiants se sentent pousser des ailes” (P. L.)

Construction Européenne

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

54 | P a g e

“Le meilleur de l’Europe pour les femmes,” by Violaine Lucas and Barbara Vilain

“Ce qu’elles veulent”

“Une révolution à Bruxelles?” by Jean-Luc Sauron

Quarante-Cinq Ans Après

“Sans valise ni cercueil, les pieds-noirs restés en Algérie,” by Pierre Daum et Aurel

Népal

“De la guérilla à la démocratie,” by Marie Lecomte-Tilouine

Un nouvel « Empire du mal »

“Le spectre du califat hante les Etats-Unis”(aperçu), by Jean-Pierre Filiu

Angola

“Après-guerre et or noir,” by Augusta Conchiglia

Amérique Latine

“Une petite feuille verte nommée coca,” by Johanna Levy.

Jeux Olympiques

“Le Tibet pris dans le rêve de l’autre,” by Slavoj Žižek

Nonproliferation Review, Vol. 15, No. 1 (March 2008)http://cns.miis.edu/pubs/npr/vol15/151toc.htm

“Paranoid, Potbellied Stalinist Gets Nuclear Weapons: How The U.S. Print Media CoverNorth Korea,” by Hugh Gusterson

“Identity Politics and Nuclear Disarmament: The Case of Ukraine,” by ChristopherStevens

“Wake Up, Stop Dreaming: Reassessing Japan's Processing Program,” by MasafumiTakubo

“Surmounting the Obstacles to Implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1540,” byMonika Heupel

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

55 | P a g e

ORBIS: A Journal of World Affairs, Vol. 52, No. 1 (Winter 2008)http://www.fpri.org/orbis/5201/

Assessing Democratic Transitions Today

“Introduction,” by Adrian A. Basora

“Must Democracy Continue to Retreat in Postcommunist Europe and Eurasia?” byAdrian A. Basora

“The Tasks of Democratic Transition and Transferability,” by Valerie Bunce

“Ukraine: Lessons Learned from Other Post-Communist Transitions,” by MykolaRiabchuk

“Central Asia: U.S. Bases and Democratization,” by Alexander Cooley

“East and South East Asia: Lessons from Democratic Transitions,” by Tom Ginsburg

“Can Outsiders Bring Democracy to Post-Conflict States?” by John R. Schmidt

“China’s Energy-Driven ‘Soft Power’,” by Toshi Yoshihara and James R. Holmes

“China’s New Multi-Faceted Maritime Strategy,” by David Lei

Review Essays

“The ‘Israel Lobby’: A Realistic Assessment,” by Ben Fishman

“Protestant Peculiarities in Contemporary America and Germany,” by Paul Gottfried

Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 77, No. 1 (February 2008)http://caliber.ucpress.net/toc/phr/77/1

“Images of Women and Power,” by Linda B. Hall, 1-18

“Empires, Frontiers, Filibusters, and Pioneers: The Transnational World of John Sutter,”by Albert L. Hurtado, 19-47

“Chukchi Gold: American Enterprise and Russian Xenophobia in the NortheasternSiberia Company,” by Thomas C. Owen, 49-85

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

56 | P a g e

“Population Concentration in Los Angeles, 1940-2000,” by Roger W. Lotchin, 87-101

“Legitimate Collaboration: The Administration of Santo Tomas Internment Camp and ItsHistories, 1942-2003,” by James Mace Ward, 159-201

“The Battle for Fort Lawton: Competing Environmental Claims in Postwar Seattle,” byJeffrey C. Sanders, 203-235.

“Making Wilderness Work: Frank Church and the American Wilderness Movement,” bySara Dant, 237-272.

“Pixel Cowboys and Silicon Gold Mines: Videogames of the American West,” by JohnWills, 273-303.

Politique étrangère, 2008-1 (Spring 2008)http://www.cairn.be/revue-politique-etrangere-2008-1.htm

L'OTAN avant Bucarest

“Israël frappe la Syrie: un raid mystérieux,” by Pierre Razoux, 9-22

“Le voisinage de l'Union européenne : sphère de sécurité, réseau de connections oumariage de convenance ?” by Esther Brimmer, 25-37

“La Politique européenne de voisinage: Perspectives internes et externs,” by BarbaraLippert, 39-50

“L'Union pour la Méditerranée : un défi européen,” by Denis Bauchard, 51-64

La Turquie et l'Union pour la Méditerranée : un partenariat calculé,” Dorothée Schmid,65-76

Globaliser l'Alliance?” by Simon Serfaty, 79-90

Les soixante ans de l'OTAN : un point de vue européen,” by Benoît d’Aboville, 91-104

OTAN : vers un nouveau concept stratégique?” by Stephanie C. Hofmann, 105-118

“L'OTAN et le monde arabe : peur, dialogue et partenariat,” Kassim Bouhou, 119-130

“Essai de modélisation « tectonique » du droit international public,” by Julien Aubertand Yannick Prost, 133-146

Législatives en Pologne: quel changement?” by Kerry Longhurst, 147-158

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

57 | P a g e

“L'avenir du nucléaire civil,” Jean Syrota, 161-171

“La question iranienne: après le National Intelligence Estimate,” by Bruno Tertrais, 173-184

Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice, Vol. 12, No. 1 (March 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=13642529&volume=12&issue=1

“A conversation with Hayden White,” by Ewa Domanska, 3-

“History in the world: Hayden White and the consumer of history,” p. Kalle Pihlainen,23-

“Exploding history: Hayden White on disciplinization,” by Oliver Daddow, 41-

“ ‘Nobody does it better’: radical history and Hayden White,” by Keith Jenkins, 59-

“A Weberian medievalist: Hayden White in the 1950s,” by Herman Paul, 75-

“Hayden White, international history and questions too seldom posed,” by PatrickFinney, 103-

“The product called ‘India’: codes, processes, labels,” by Ranjan Ghosh, 125-

Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice, Vol. 12, No. 2 (June 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=13642529&volume=12&issue=2

“As though they meant her no harm, María Enríquez remade the friends whoabandoned her – their intentions, their possibilities, their worlds – inviting them(perhaps, it is true) to dance,” by Marjorie Becker, 153-

“In- Between the Flags : reflections on a narrative of Surf Life Saving Australia,” by p.165Authors: Douglas Booth, 165-

“History and peace education in Israel/Palestine: a critical discussion of the use ofhistory in peace education,” Jakob Feldt, 189-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

58 | P a g e

“A standoff with history: at the site of the ‘Bad River Gathering’,” by Alexander Kozinand Katharina Draheim, 209-

“Actualizing the past: political devolution and the symbols of the European regions. Thecase of Belgian federalization (1970–1998),” by Javier Gimeno Martínez, 229-

“Medicinal histories: the future of the past,” by Elizabeth Garcia, 253-

“ ‘My racket is History’: Wyndham Lewis and historical theory,” by Beverley Southgate,263-

“Invitation to historians,” by C. Behan McCullagh, 273-

“Recapitulating the historiographical contributions of Matthew Frye Jacobson'sWhiteness of a Different Color and Gail Bederman's Manliness and Civilization,” byTanfer Emin Tunc, 281-

Review of International Studies, Vol. 34, No. S1 (Supplement 1, 2008)http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=RIS&volumeId=34&issueId=S1

Supplement S1 – Cultures and Politics of Global Communication

“International Relations and the challenges of global communication,” by costas m.Constantinou and oliver p. Richmond and Alison M. S. Watson, 5-19

“Communications/excommunications: an interview with Armand Mattelart,” by CostasM. Constantinou, 21-42

“On order and conflict: International Relations and the ‘communicative turn’,” byMathias Albert and Oliver Kessler and Stephan Stetter, 43-67

“Opening other windows: a political economy of ‘openness’ in a global informationsociety,” by Christopher May, 69-92

“Global communication and political culture in the semi-periphery: the rise of the Globocorporation,” by Peter Wilkin, 93-113

“Fear no more: emotions and world politics,” by Roland Bleiker and Emma Hutchison,115-135

“Popular visual language as global communication: the remediation of United AirlinesFlight 93,” by Cynthia Weber, 137-153

“Humanitarian travels: ethical communication in Lonely Planet guidebooks,” by DebbieLisle, 155-172

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

59 | P a g e

“Transversal communication, diaspora, and the Euro-Kurds,” by Nevzat Soguk, 173-192

“Never mind the bollocks: the punk rock politics of global communication,” by Kevin C.Dunn, 193-210

“Biopolitics, communication and global governance,” by Jenny Edkins, 211-232

“Anti-cosmopolitanism, pluralism and the cosmopolitan harm principle,” by RichardShapcott, 185-205

“A matter of drawing boundaries: global democracy and international exclusion,” byRaffaele Marchetti, 207-224

“David Hume and international political theory: a reappraisal,” by Edwin Van De Haar,225-242

“Minority as inferiority: minority rights in historical perspective,” by Andre Liebich,243-263

“Biopolitics of security in the 21st century: an introduction,” by Michael Dillon and LuisLobo-Guerrero, 265-292

“‘To save succeeding generations from the scourge of war’: the US, UN and the violenceof security,” by Laura J. Shepherd, 293-311

“The utopia and reality of sovereignty: social reality, normative IR and ‘OrganizedHypocrisy’,” by David Jason Karp, 313-335

“Why do states bother to deceive? Managing trust at home and abroad,” by John KurtJacobsen, 337-361

“ ‘Real’? As if! Critical reflections on state personhood,” by Jacob Schiff, 363-377

Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine, Vol. 55, No. 1 (2008-1)http://www.cairn.be/revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2008-1.htm

“Images, masques et visages: Production et consommation des cosmétiques à Paris sousl'Ancien Régime,” by Catherine Lanoë, 7-27

“De l'Eau Impériale aux Violettes du Czar: Le jeu social des élégances olfactives dans leParis du XIXe siècle,” by Eugénie Briot, 28-49

“Les deux morts de Louis XIII,” by Cédric Coraillon, 50-73

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

60 | P a g e

“Entre fête civique et reconstruction identitaire en Hollande : Enkhuizen en 1772,” byThierry Allain, 74-97

“La réception du XXe Congrès du PCUS dans la région de Gorki,” Jean-Paul Depretto, 98-124

“Une relecture du « dossier secret » : homosexualité et antisémitisme dans l'AffaireDreyfus,” by Pierre Gervais, et al., 125-160

Revue internationale et stratégique, No. 69 (Spring 2008)http://www.iris-france.org/Archives/revue/numero_69_en.php3 (English versionavailable)

Les défis de la présidence française de l'UE

Entretien – “Mes engagements,” by Lilian Thuram, 9-16

“Les routes maritimes: nouvel enjeu des relations internationales?” by AntoineFrémont, 17-30

“Le paradoxe diplomatique du Qatar comme moyen d'accès à la consecration,” byBarah Mikaïl, 31-42

“Les adaptations des équilibres stratégiques en Europe septentrionale,” by MatthieuChillaud, 43-54

“La stratégie politique iranienne: idéologie ou pragmatisme?” by Julien Saada, 55-68

Dossier – “Les défis de la présidence française de l'UE – EDITORIAL”

“Qu'attendent les Européens de la présidence française de l'UE?” by Fabio Liberti,69-72

Entretien – “La présidence française du Conseil de l'Union européenne : pour quoifaire?” by Jean-Pierre Jouyet, 73-80

Dossier – “Les défis de la présidence française de l'UE - LES ATTENTESEUROPÉENNES”

Entretien – “Les attentes britanniques de la présidence française de l'UE,” by CharlesGrant, 81-88

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

61 | P a g e

“Enfin un rendez-vous européen convaincant, s'il vous plaît!” by Ronja Kempin andDaniela Schwarzer, 89-98

“Les attentes italiennes vis-à-vis de la nouvelle politique européenne de la France,”by Ettore Greco, 99-106

“La France vue d'Espagne avant la présidence de l'Union européenne Paradoxes etlimites d'une entente « plus cordiale que jamais »,” by Hubert Peres, 107-116

Dossier – “Les défis de la présidence française de l'UE - LES DOSSIERS CLÉS DE LAPRÉSIDENCE”

Entretien – “Comment faire cohabiter la défense européenne et l'OTAN?” by LeoMichel, 117-126

“2008 : une année vitale pour la défense de l'UE,” by Daniel Keohane, 127-136

“L'énergie, enjeu clé pour la présidence française de l'Union,” by Laure Delcour, 137-144

Dossier – “Les défis de la présidence française de l'UE - LA PRÉPARATION FRANÇAISE DELA PRÉSIDENCE EUROPÉENNE”

Entretien – “Le grand retour de la France en Europe,” by Alain Lamassoure, 145-152

Entretien – “La défense européenne comme priorité de la présidence française,” byNicole Gnesotto, 153- 160

“Les enjeux de la présidence française de l'Union européenne : opportunités etlimites,” by Frédéric Charillon, 161-168

Royal United Services Institute Journal, Issue: Apr 2008, Vol. 153, No. 2 (April 2008)http://www.rusi.org/publication/journal/

“Engaging Muslim communities in counter-terrorism strategies,” by H A Hellyer

“Multiculturalism after 7/7: A Scapegoat or a Hope for the Future,” by Tariq Madood

“Iraq and its Borders: the Role of Barriers in Counter-Insurgency,” by AlexanderAlderson

“The US 'Surge' as a Collaborative Corrective for Iraq,” by Matthew B Arnold

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

62 | P a g e

“Iraq 2007 - Moving Beyond Counter-Insurgency Doctrine: A First Hand Perspective,”by Emma Sky

“Peace Operations and Exit,” by Dominik Zaum

“Pakistan's Waziristan Problem,” by Shaukat Qadir

“UK Effects-Based Planning and Centre of Gravity Analysis: An IncreasinglyDysfunctional Relationship?” by Tim Bird

“New Containment Policy: A Grand Strategy for the Twenty-first Century?” by AndreasHerberg-Rothe

“War and Transformation,” by General Jean-Louis Georgelin

“Maximising the Potential of UK Maritime Forces in Peace Time: 'A Force for Good',” byJeremy Blackham and Gerry Paulus

“Nuclear History Note: US Atomic Demolition Munitions (1954-1989),” by Matthew DBird

“British Private Armies in the Middle East: The Arab Legion and the Trans-JordanFrontier Force, 1920-1956,” by Matthew Hughes

“A Good War: Wartime Officers Who Rose to Command Level in the 1914-1918 War,” byA D Harvey

Security Studies, Vol. 17, No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=09636412&volume=17&issue=1

“Wedge Strategy, Balancing, and the Deviant Case of Spain, 1940–41,” by Timothy W.Crawford, 1-

“National Unification and Mistrust: Bargaining Power and the Prospects for aPRC/Taiwan Agreement,” by Scott L. Kastner; Chad Rector, 39-

“Surprise Attacks—Are They Inevitable? Moving Beyond the Orthodox–RevisionistDichotomy,” by Or Honig, 72-

“The Geography of Insurgent Organization and its Consequences for Civil Wars:Evidence from Liberia and Sierra Leone,” by Patrick Johnston, 107-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

63 | P a g e

“Balancing and the Bible: A Pre-Thucydidean View of Threat,” by Ariel Ilan Roth, 138-

“War, Nuclear Weapons, and Crisis Stability in South Asia,” by Sumit Ganguly, 164-

Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 31, No. 1 (January 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1057-610X&volume=31&issue=1

“Connecting Terrorist Networks,” by Justin Magouirk, Scott Atran, and Marc Sageman,1-

“Strengths and Weaknesses of Grassroot Jihadist Networks: The Madrid Bombings,” byJavier Jordan, Fernando M. Mañas, and Nicola Horsburgh, 17-

“Democracy, Al Qaeda, and the Causes of Terrorism: A Strategic Analysis of U.S. Policy,”by Michael Freeman, 40-

“The Logic of Terrorist Target Choice: An Examination of Chechen Rebel Bombings from1997–2003,” by Lisa M. Mccartan, Andrea Masselli, Michael Rey, and Danielle Rusnak,60-

“Terrorists, Insurgents, and Criminals—Growing Nexus?” Chester G. Oehme III, 80-

Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 31, No. 2 (February 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1057610X&volume=31&issue

=2

“Misuse of Passports: Identity Fraud, the Propensity to Travel, and InternationalTerrorism,” by Martin Rudner, 95-

“Creating the Ideology of Al Qaeda: From Hypocrites to Salafi-Jihadists,” by ChristinaHellmich, 111-

“The Alliance System of the Abu Sayyaf, 1993–2000,” by Eduardo F. Ugarte, 125-

“An Appraisal of the Radical Animal Liberation Movement in Switzerland: 2003 toMarch 2007,” by Jean-Marc Flükiger, 145-

“Modeling Hostage-Taking: On Reputation and Strategic Rationality of Terrorists,” byHeinrich Harald Nax, 158-

Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 31, No. 3 (March 2008)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

64 | P a g e

http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1057610X&volume=31&issue=3

“Iran, Terrorism, and Weapons of Mass Destruction,” by Daniel Byman, 169

“Global Jihadist Recidivism: A Red Flag,” by Dennis A. Pluchinsky, 182

“Jihadist Strategic Debates before 9/11,” by Steven Brooke, 201

“Terrorism and Terrorist Leaders: Insights from Developmental and EcologicalPsychology,” by Alice Locicero and Samuel J. Sinclair, 227-

“Deconstructing Political Orthodoxies on Insurgent and Terrorist Sanctuaries,” byMichael A. Innes, 251-

Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 31, No. 4 (April 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1057610X&volume=31&issue

=4

“Terrorist Organization Typologies and the Probability of a Boomerang Effect,” by BoazGanor, 269-

“Harsh State Repression as a Cause of Suicide Bombing: The Case of the Palestinian–Israeli Conflict,” by Bader Araj, 284

“Male and Female Suicide Bombers: Different Sexes, Different Reasons?” by KarenJacques and Paul J. Taylor, 304-

“Connecting a Thousand Points of Hatred,” by Justin Magouirk, 327

“Welfare as Warfare: How Violent Non-State Groups Use Social Services to Attack theState,” by Alexus G. Grynkewich, 350-

“Notable Literature on Germany's Red Army Faction within the Context of Die RAF undder linke Terrorismus,” by Martin Gutmann, 371

Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 31, No. 5 (May 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=1057610X&volume=31&issue

=5

“War in the Gray: Exploring the Concept of Dirty War,” by M. L. R. Smith and SophieRoberts, 377

“Circles Drawing Toward High Risk Activism: The Use of Usroh and Halaqa in IslamistRadical Movements,” by Frank Hairgrove and Douglas M. Mcleod, 399

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

65 | P a g e

“Foreign Fighters and the Case of Chechnya: A Critical Assessment,” by Cerwyn Mooreand Paul Tumelty, 412-

“Terrorists and Laser Weapons Use: An Emergent Threat,” by Robert J. Bunker, 434-

“The Grey Threat: Presence of Jihadist Terrorism and Failings in the PortugueseNational Security System,” by José Vegar, 456-

Third World Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 2 (March 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=01436597&volume=29&issue=2

“Global Governance and the Democratic Deficit: stifling the voice of the South,” JohnGlenn, 217-

“Foreign Direct Investment in Developing Countries: have we reached a policy ‘tippingpoint’?” by Andrew Sumner, 239-

“Examining the State: a Foucauldian perspective on international ‘governanceindicators’,” by Oded Löwenheim, 255-

“Transitional Justice as Global Project: critical reflections,” by Rosemary Nagy, 275

“China's Environmental Governance: the domestic – international nexus,” by GeraldChan, Pak K. Lee, Lai-Ha Chan, 291-

“Transformation and Decay: the de-institutionalisation of party systems in SouthAmerica,” by Omar Sanchez, 315-

“Africa's Futures: from North – South to East – South?” by William G. Martin, 339-

“From Guerrillas to Government: post-conflict stability in Liberia, Uganda and Rwanda,”by p. David S. McDonough, 257-

“The Integration of Western Modernism in Postcolonial Arabic Literature: a study ofAbdul-Wahhab Al-Bayati's Third World poetics,” by Saddik M. Gohar, 375

Third World Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 3 (April 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=01436597&volume=29&issue

=3

Special Issue: Developmental and Cultural Nationalisms

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

66 | P a g e

“Introduction: nationalisms and their understandings in historical perspective,” byRadhika Desai, 397-

“Nationalism and poverty: discourses of development and culture in 20th centuryIndia,” by Sumit Sarkar, 429-

“The Cultural Career of the Japanese Economy: developmental and culturalnationalisms in historical perspective,” by Laura Hein, 447-

“From Post-imperial to Late Communist Nationalism: historical change in Chinesenationalism from May Fourth to the 1990s,” by Guoguang Wu, 467-

“Radical Islamism and Failed Developmentalism,” by Saeed Rahnema, 483-

“From ‘Class’ to ‘Social Strata': grasping the social totality in reform-era China,” by AnnAnagnost, 497-

“Beyond Bandung: developmental nationalism and (multi)cultural nationalism inIndonesia,” by Joshua Barker, 521-

“Islamic Cultural Nationalism and Gender Politics in Iran,” by Haideh Moghissi, 541-

“Hermeneutics against Instrumental Reason: national and post-national Islam in the20th century,” by Mohammed Bamyeh, 555-

“Nationalism and the Radical Intelligentsia in Thailand,” by Thongchai Winichakul, 575-

“From Islamisation to Shariatisation: cultural transnationalism in Pakistan,” by FarzanaShaikh, 593-

“A Nationalism without Politics? The illiberal consequences of liberal institutions in SriLanka,” by Jonathan Spencer, 611

“From Developmental Nationalism to the End of Nation-state in Iraq?” by MartinBunton, 631-

“Conclusion: from developmental to cultural nationalisms,” by Radhika Desai, 647-

Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 18, No. 4 (2007)http://tcbh.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol18/issue4/

“A Disputed Identity: Women Conscientious Objectors in Second World War Britain,” byHazel Nicholson, 409

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

67 | P a g e

“ ‘Mrs Fairly is a Dirty, Lazy Type’: Unsatisfactory Householdsand the Problem ofProblem Families in Norwich 1942–1963,” by Becky Taylor, 429

“A Technocratic Imperial State? The Colonial Office and Scientific Research, 1940–1960,” by Sabine Clarke, 453

“ ‘Disturbing the Complacency of Religion’? The Evangelical Crusades of Dr Billy Grahamand Father Patrick Peyton in Britain, 1951–54,” Alana Harris and Martin Spence, 481

“The London Broadcasting Company (LBC) and Independent Radio News (IRN)Archive,” by Hugh Chignell, 514

Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 19, No. 4 (2007)http://tcbh.oxfordjournals.org/current.dtl

“The National Insurance Acts 1911–1947, the Approved Societies and the PrudentialAssurance Company,” by Michael Heller, 1-28

“Black Sailors on Red Clydeside: Rioting, Reactionary Trade Unionism and ConflictingNotions of ‘Britishness’ Following the First World War,” by Jacqueline Jenkinson, 29-60

“Women and Work after the Second World War: A Case Study of the Jute Industry, Circa1945–1954,” by Carlo Morelli and Jim Tomlinson, 61-82

“Myxomatosis in 1950s Britain,” by P.W.J. Bartrip, 83-105

Vingtième Siècle, No. 98 (April-June 2008)http://www.pressesdesciencespo.fr/livre/?GCOI=27246100368670&fa=sommaire

Dossier : L'ombre portée de Mai 68

“L’événement en surplomb,” by Jean-Pierre Rioux

“Que jeunesse se passe ? Discours publics et expertises sur les jeunes après Mai 68,” byLudivine Bantigny

“L’ombre portée de mai 1968 en politique : démocratie et participation,” by ÉvelyneCohen

“Jeux d’ombres : Mai, le mouvement social et l’autogestion (1968-2007),” by FranckGeorgi

“L’entrée en derision,” by Bertrand Lemonnier

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

68 | P a g e

“La « nouvelle presse » en France dans les années 1970 ou la réussite par l’échec,” byLaurent Martin

“Des bancs de l’école au courrier du cœur : une histoire du corps ragaillardie,” by AndréRauch

“Intellectuels : les ombres changeantes de Mai 68,” by Bernard Brillant

“1968, l’an I du tout culturel?” by Emmanuelle Loyer

“Génération, générations,” by Jean-François Sirinelli

“Maintenir l’ordre : le MBF et la sécurité locale en France occupée,” by Gaël Eismann

“Le premier mai à Berlin-Est dans les années 1950,” by Jérôme Bazin

“1956, un court dégel littéraire en URSS : les « audaces » de Novy Mir et deLitératournaïa Moskva,” by Cécile Vaissié

“Staline et les écrivains soviétiques : la fabrication et la disgrâce d’AlexandreAvdeenko,” by Michel Niqueux

“Entre démobilisation et surmobilisation : l’impossible repos du soldat rouge en URSS(1921-1929),” by Alexandre Sumpf

“Veuves et veuvages de la premier guerre mondiale : Lyon (1914-1924),” by PeggyBette

“Une décennie de désindustrialisation (1974-1984),” by Ludovic Laloux

“Les territoires du rugby : une histoire mondiale,” by Antoine Mourat

“L’Europe s’expose,” by Nicolas Beaupré, Dorota Dakowska et Benoît Majerus

“Guerre et poste,” by Philippe Artières

“Du praxinoscope au cellulo : retour sur la richesse du cinéma d’animation français,” byDimitri Vezyroglou

“Histoire de la police parisienne,” by Arnaud-Dominique Houte

“Dans les fermes de notre enfance,” by Martine Cocaud

William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 65, No. 2 (April 2008)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

69 | P a g e

http://oieahc.wm.edu/wmq/index.htm

“The Other Side of Revolution: Loyalitst in the British Empire,” by Maya Jasanoff, 205-

“ ‘A very convenient instrument’: The Manhattan Company, Aaron Burr, and theElection of 1800,” by Brian Phillips Murphy, 233-

“Indian Intermarriage and Métissage in Colonial Louisiana,” by Kathleen Duval, 267-

“Robert Dinwiddie’s Reports on the British American Colonies,” by Kenneth Morgan,305-

Women's History Review, Vol. 17, No. 2 (April 2008)http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=issue&issn=09612025&volume=17&issue=2

Special Issue: Gender, Religion and Politics: Josephine Butler's Campaigns in InternationalPerspective (1875–1959)

“Introduction: the International Abolitionist Federation,” by Anne Summers, 149

“Josephine Butler and Regulated Prostitution in Italy,” by Bruno P. F. Wanrooij, 153

“Comment: Amazons in Italy; Josephine Butler and the transformation of Italian femalemilitancy,” by Marjan Schwegman, 173-

“The Abolitionist Struggle of Pastor Tommy Fallot: between social Christianity,feminism and secularism (1882–1893),” by Florence Rochefort, 179-

“Dealing with the Issue of Prostitution; Mobilizing Feminisms in France, Switzerlandand Belgium (1875–1920),” (work in progress) by Christine Machiels, 195-

“The Association for Moral and Social Hygiene: abolitionism and prostitution law inBritain (1915–1959),” by Julia Ann Laite, 207

“Herrenmoral : Anna Pappritz and abolitionism in Germany,” by Kerstin Wolff, 225-

“Madame Ghénia Avril de Sainte-Croix, the Josephine Butler of France,” by Karen Offen,239-

“Josephine Butler and the Making of Feminism: international abolitionism in theNetherlands (1870–1914),” by Petra De Vries, 257-

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

70 | P a g e

“In the Absence of Empire: feminism, abolitionism and social work in Hamburg ( c.1900–1933),” by Victoria Harris, 279

World Policy Journal, Vol. 24, No. 3 (Fall 2007)http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/wopj/24/3

“Reinventing Ourselves,” The Editors, ii-iii

“A War Without End,” by Leon V. Sigal, 1-7

“Why Are We in Iraq?: A Realpolitik Perspective,” by Barry Gewen, 8-22

“The Iraqi Refugee Disaster,” by Ben Sanders and Merrill Smith, 23-28

“How to Close Guantanamo,” by Jennifer Daskal, 29-37

“Who Lost Iraq and Why It Matters: The Case for Offshore Balancing,” by ChristopherLayne, 38-52.

“America's Oil Market Power: The Unused Weapon Against Iran,” by Steve A. Yetiv andLowell Feld, 53-62

“Deciphering Turkey's Elections: The Making of a Revolution,” by Henri J. Barkey andYasemin Congar, 63-73.

“War, Peace, and American Politics: Talking with Zbigniew Brzezinski,” by JonathanPower, 75-82

“From Stalin to Putin, An Insider's View: Talking with Georgi Arbatov,” by JonathanPower, 83-88.

“ ‘The Graham Greene Argument’: A Vietnam Parallel that Escaped George W. Bush,” byKevin Buckley, 89-98

“JFK and Oswald: The Inconvenient Truth,” by Priscilla J. McMillan, 99-102

“Perry and Pearl: The Unintended Consequence,” by George Feifer, 103-110

“More on Defining Terror,” by Roberto Toscano, 111-112

“Ghosts Along the Bosphorus,” by Karl E. Meyer, 113-118

World Policy Journal, Vol. 24, No. 4 (Winter 2007/8)

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

71 | P a g e

http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/wopj/current

“The End of Liberal Globalization,” by Michael F. Oppenheimer, 1-9

“Violence and Elections: Will Kenya Collapse?” by Jacqueline Klopp and Prisca Kamungi,11-18.

“On Righting Trade: Human Rights, Trade, and the 2008 Elections,” by Susan ArielAaronson, 19-28

“Making Monetary Mischief: Using Currency as a Weapon,” by Jodi Liss, 29-38

“Pinochet's Revenge: Spain Revisits its Civil War,” by Omar G. Encarnacion, 39-50

“The Not-So-Black Art of Public Diplomacy,” by Humphrey Taylor, 51-59

“Zion and the Arabs: Jaffa as a Metaphor,” by Adam LeBor, 61-75

“The Beauty of Compromise: Finding the Middle in South Asia,” by Ramachandra Guha,77-89

“The Global War on Terror, Sliced Four Ways,” by Charles B. Strozier, 90-98

“ ‘Democratic Torture’: Has Mill's Safeguard Weakened?” by Aziz Z. Huq, 99-107

“Riding the Cairo Carousel,” by Karl E. Meyer, 108-112

World Politics, Vol. 60, No. 2 (January 2008 – Forthcoming)http://www.princeton.edu/~piirs/publications/world_politics.html#forthcoming

“Bilateral Trade Treaties and the Most-Favored-Nation Clause: Evidence from the Mid-Nineteenth Century,” by Olivier Accominotti and Marc Flandreau

“University Challenges: Explaining Institutional Change in Higher Education,” by Ben W.Ansell

“Embedding Neoliberal Reform in Latin America,” by Marcus J. Kurtz and Sarah M.Brooks

“Toward a New Theory of Institutional Change,” by Kurt Weyland

“Faith in Politics: New Trends in the Study of Religion and Politics,” by Eva Bellin

H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], I-Z, Second Quarter 2008

72 | P a g e

Copyright © 2008 H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online

H-Net permits the redistribution and reprinting of this work for non-profit, educationalpurposes, with full and accurate attribution to the author(s), web location, date ofpublication, H-Diplo, and H-Net: Humanities & Social Sciences Online. For other uses,contact the H-Diplo editorial staff at [email protected].