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www.routledge.com/politics Selected Contents Routledge Handbook of International Law Edited by David Armstrong, University of Exeter, UK The Routledge Handbook of International Law provides a definitive global survey of the interaction of international politics and international law. Each chapter is written by a leading expert and provides a state of the art overview of the most significant areas within the field. This highly topical collection of specially commissioned papers from both established authorities and rising stars is split into four key sections, comprising a comprehensive survey of the state of the discipline. The Routledge Handbook of International Law is an essential work of reference for scholars and practitioners of international Law. 2008: 246 x 174: 504pp Hb: 978-0-415-41876-8: $199.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88462-1 For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415418768 Routledge Handbook of Transnational Organised Crime Edited by Felia Allum, University of Bath, UK and Stan Gilmore, Thames Valley Police, UK Transnational organized crime (TOC) crosses borders, challenges States, exploits individuals, pursues profit, wrecks economies, destroys civil society, and ultimately weakens global democracy. It is a phenomenon that is all too often misunderstood and misrepresented. This handbook attempts to re-draw the balance, by providing a fresh and interdisciplinary overview of the problems which TOC represents. The innovative aspect of this handbook is not only its interdisciplinary nature but also the dialogue between international academics and practitioners that it presents. The Handbook seeks to provide the definitive overview of transnational organized crime, including contributions from leading international scholars as well as emerging researchers. The work starts by examining the origins, concepts, contagion and evolution of TOC and then moves on to discuss the impact, governance and reactions of governments and their agencies, before looking to the future of TOC, and how the State will seek to respond. Providing a cutting edge survey of the discipline, this work will be essential reading for all those with an interest in this dangerous phenomenon. June 2011: 246 x 174: 368pp Hb: 978-0-415-57979-7: $180.00 Rising to $195.00 three months after publication For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415579797 Introduction F. Allum and S. Gilmour Section 1: Origins and Concepts 1. Is TOC a Myth? P. Van Duyne 2. Understanding Legal Theory and TOC 3. The Political Reality of TOC A. Edwards 4. Local Difficulty: Organized Crime, Transnationality and Policy Transference Dick Hobbs and Sue Hobbs 5. TOC in America M. Woodiwiss 6. TOC in Europe T. Vander Beken 7. African TOC and its impacts S. Ellis 8. TOC in the Indo-Pacific: A View from Australia J. McFarlene, R. Broadhurst and S. Gordon 9. TOC in Russia Serguei Cheloukhine Section 2: Contagion and Evolution 10. The Geography of TOC: Spaces, Networks and Flows T. Hall 11. The Practice of Transnational Organized Crime K. Von Lampe 12. The Drugs Question R. Perl 13. People Trafficking A. Aronowitz 14. TOC and the Market M. Kenny 15. TOC and Money Laundering M. Beare 16. Relationships between the State and TOC T. Ward Section 3: Intensity and Impact 17. TOC and Civil Society Peter Schneider and Jane Schneider 18. Women in TOC F. Allum 19. TOC and the Global Village Kelly Hignett 20. Ethnicity, Mobility and TOC J. Arsoska 21. Imitating Art: TOC’s Infiltration of the Culture Industry J. Pine 22. Explaining the Expansion of the TOC and Terrorism Nexus T. Makarenko 23. Looking Glass Values: The Moral Narratives in Media Representations of Transnational Organized Crime P. Rawinlinson Section 4: Governance 24. Observing T.O. Criminals B. Goold 25. Migration Policy and TOC L. Wyler 26. Governance by Empire M. Bishop and M. Anderson 27. TOC and Surveillance A. Gendron 28. Preserving Human Rights in Transnational Criminal Investigation C. Hartfield Section 5: Reaction 29. UK S. Gilmour 30. The Endangered Empire: American Responses to Transnational Organized Crime R. Kelly 31. The Fight Against Organised Crime: An Asia-Pacific J. McFarlene 32. The Fight against TOC in Russia A. Orlova 33. Countering the Nexus of TOC and Terrorism C. Edwards Section 6: The Future 34. Future TOC Threats – Europe D. Bolt 35. UNODC Pino Arlacchi 36. The Harm from TOC – USA J. Finkenauer 37. TOC and Lessons from Italy A. D’Altiero. Conclusions F. Allum and S. Gilmour Selected Contents Part 1: The Nature of International Law 1. Is International Law Really Law? 2. The Sources of International Law 3. ‘Hard’ and ‘Soft’ Law in International Relations 4. Compliance Issues 5. International Law and International Society 6. Legal and Moral Norms in International Society 7. The Effectiveness of International Law 8. Theories of International Law 9. The Practice of International Law Part 2: The Evolution of International Law 10. The Classical World 11. The Era of Grotius 12. Nineteenth Century Positivism 13. Normative Change in International Society 14. Religion(s) and International Law 15. The ‘Legalization’ and ‘Institutionalisation’ of International Relations 16. Globalisation and Claims that We are Moving Towards a Cosmopolitan Rather than Inter-State Legal Community 17. The Increasing Role of Non-State Actors Part 3: Law and Power in International Society 18. Does Law Reflect or Constrain Power? 19. Law and Force in the Twenty First Century 20. American Hegemony and International Law (i) Pro 21. American Hegemony and International Law (ii) Anti 22. The Iraq War 23. Humanitarian Intervention Part 4: Key Issues in International Law 24. The Environment 25. Terrorism 26. The Laws of War 27. Human Rights 28. Trade 29. Finance 30. Intellectual Property 31. The United Nations 32. The International Court of Justice 33. Law of the Sea 34. Refugees and Migrants ROUTLEDGE INTERNATIONAL HANDBOOKS Politics, International Relations and Area Studies New and Forthcoming

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Selected Contents

Routledge Handbook of International LawEdited by David Armstrong, University of Exeter, UK

The Routledge Handbook of International Law provides a definitive global survey of the interaction of international politics andinternational law. Each chapter is written by a leading expert and provides a state of the art overview of the most significant areaswithin the field.

This highly topical collection of specially commissioned papers from both established authorities and rising stars is split into fourkey sections, comprising a comprehensive survey of the state of the discipline. The Routledge Handbook of International Law is anessential work of reference for scholars and practitioners of international Law.

2008: 246 x 174: 504ppHb: 978-0-415-41876-8: $199.00eBook: 978-0-203-88462-1

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415418768

Routledge Handbook of Transnational Organised CrimeEdited by Felia Allum, University of Bath, UK and Stan Gilmore, Thames Valley Police, UK

Transnational organized crime (TOC) crosses borders, challenges States, exploits individuals, pursues profit, wrecks economies, destroys civil society, andultimately weakens global democracy. It is a phenomenon that is all too often misunderstood and misrepresented. This handbook attempts to re-draw thebalance, by providing a fresh and interdisciplinary overview of the problems which TOC represents. The innovative aspect of this handbook is not only itsinterdisciplinary nature but also the dialogue between international academics and practitioners that it presents.

The Handbook seeks to provide the definitive overview of transnational organized crime, including contributions from leading international scholars as well asemerging researchers. The work starts by examining the origins, concepts, contagion and evolution of TOC and then moves on to discuss the impact,governance and reactions of governments and their agencies, before looking to the future of TOC, and how the State will seek to respond.

Providing a cutting edge survey of the discipline, this work will be essential reading for all those with an interest in this dangerous phenomenon.

June 2011: 246 x 174: 368ppHb: 978-0-415-57979-7: $180.00 Rising to $195.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415579797

Introduction F. Allum and S. Gilmour

Section 1: Origins and Concepts 1. Is TOC a Myth? P. Van Duyne2. Understanding Legal Theory and TOC 3. The Political Reality of TOCA. Edwards 4. Local Difficulty: Organized Crime, Transnationality and PolicyTransference Dick Hobbs and Sue Hobbs 5. TOC in America M. Woodiwiss6. TOC in Europe T. Vander Beken 7. African TOC and its impacts S. Ellis8. TOC in the Indo-Pacific: A View from Australia J. McFarlene, R. Broadhurstand S. Gordon 9. TOC in Russia Serguei Cheloukhine

Section 2: Contagion and Evolution 10. The Geography of TOC: Spaces,Networks and Flows T. Hall 11. The Practice of Transnational Organized CrimeK. Von Lampe 12. The Drugs Question R. Perl 13. People TraffickingA. Aronowitz 14. TOC and the Market M. Kenny 15. TOC and MoneyLaundering M. Beare 16. Relationships between the State and TOC T. Ward

Section 3: Intensity and Impact 17. TOC and Civil Society Peter Schneiderand Jane Schneider 18. Women in TOC F. Allum 19. TOC and the GlobalVillage Kelly Hignett 20. Ethnicity, Mobility and TOC J. Arsoska 21. ImitatingArt: TOC’s Infiltration of the Culture Industry J. Pine

22. Explaining the Expansion of the TOC and Terrorism Nexus T. Makarenko23. Looking Glass Values: The Moral Narratives in Media Representations ofTransnational Organized Crime P. Rawinlinson

Section 4: Governance 24. Observing T.O. Criminals B. Goold 25. MigrationPolicy and TOC L. Wyler 26. Governance by Empire M. Bishop andM. Anderson 27. TOC and Surveillance A. Gendron 28. Preserving HumanRights in Transnational Criminal Investigation C. HartfieldSection 5: Reaction29. UK S. Gilmour 30. The Endangered Empire: American Responses toTransnational Organized Crime R. Kelly 31. The Fight Against OrganisedCrime: An Asia-Pacific J. McFarlene 32. The Fight against TOC in RussiaA. Orlova 33. Countering the Nexus of TOC and Terrorism C. Edwards

Section 6: The Future 34. Future TOC Threats – Europe D. Bolt 35. UNODCPino Arlacchi 36. The Harm from TOC – USA J. Finkenauer 37. TOC andLessons from Italy A. D’Altiero. Conclusions F. Allum and S. Gilmour

Selected Contents

Part 1: The Nature of International Law 1. Is International Law ReallyLaw? 2. The Sources of International Law 3. ‘Hard’ and ‘Soft’ Law inInternational Relations 4. Compliance Issues 5. International Law andInternational Society 6. Legal and Moral Norms in International Society 7. TheEffectiveness of International Law 8. Theories of International Law 9. ThePractice of International Law

Part 2: The Evolution of International Law 10. The Classical World11. The Era of Grotius 12. Nineteenth Century Positivism 13. NormativeChange in International Society 14. Religion(s) and International Law15. The ‘Legalization’ and ‘Institutionalisation’ of International Relations16. Globalisation and Claims that We are Moving Towards a CosmopolitanRather than Inter-State Legal Community 17. The Increasing Role of Non-StateActors

Part 3: Law and Power in International Society 18. Does Law Reflector Constrain Power? 19. Law and Force in the Twenty First Century20. American Hegemony and International Law (i) Pro 21. AmericanHegemony and International Law (ii) Anti 22. The Iraq War23. Humanitarian Intervention

Part 4: Key Issues in International Law 24. The Environment25. Terrorism 26. The Laws of War 27. Human Rights 28. Trade 29. Finance30. Intellectual Property 31. The United Nations 32. The International Courtof Justice 33. Law of the Sea 34. Refugees and Migrants

ROUTLEDGEINTERNATIONALHANDBOOKS

Politics, InternationalRelations and Area Studies

New

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Routledge Handbooks

www.routledge.com/politics

Selected Contents

Selected Contents

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Routledge Handbook of Diplomacy and StatecraftEdited by B.J.C. McKercher, Royal Military College of Canada

The Routledge Handbook of Diplomacy and Statecraft illustrates that the new international order that has evolved – and is still evolving – after the end of the Cold War of the latterhalf of the twentieth century is one dominated by the rivalry of the Great Powers. Looking at the Great, the Middle and the Developing Powers, each chapter in the first threesections will assess the diplomacy and statecraft of these individual Powers to offer insight into how they function, their individual perception of national interests and the roles thatthey play in modern statecraft.

Contemporary diplomacy and statecraft are intimately connected to international organisations and the international economy, and how and why these elements of global politicsdetermine and show their utility is a crucial consideration. Indeed, the next two sections of the book will look at important international organisations and military alliances and theinternational economy. Finally, the last section of the books deals with a series of contemporary problems in conflict and co-operation that are having and will have influence inshaping the evolution of the new international order.

The scholars contributing to this book will collectively show how and why the new international order that has evolved – and is still evolving – since the end of the Cold War throughthe application of diplomacy and statecraft. A comprehensive survey of diplomacy across the world, this work will be essential reading for scholars and professionals alike.

June 2011: 246 x 174: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-78110-7: $180.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415781107

The International Order in the New Century

Section 1: The Context of Diplomacy 1. The History of Diplomacy 2. The Theories ofDiplomacy

Section 2: The Great Powers 3. The United States 4. Great Britain 5. Russia 6. China7. France 8. Germany 9. Japan

Section 3: Middle Powers 10. Brazil 11. India 12. Canada 13. Czechoslovakia14. Turkey

Section 4: Developing Powers 15. Cuba 16. Peru 17. Nigeria 18. Vietnam19. Indonesia

Section 5: International Organisations and Military Alliances 20. The EuropeanUnion. The Political Dimension 21. The United Nations 22. The North Atlantic TreatyOrganisation 23. The Organisation of African Unity 24. The Non-Aligned Movement

Section 6: The International Economy 25. The World Bank and The InternationalMonetary Fund 26. The European Union: The Economic Dimension 27. The Organisationof Petroleum Exporting Countries 28. ALBA – Alternativa Bolivariana para los Pueblos deNuestra América 29. The G-8 and the Move to a Globalised International Economy30. The Opposition to a Globalised International Economy

Section 7: Issues of Conflict and Co-operation 31. International Arms Control32. Civil-Military Relationships and Policy-making 33. The Middle Eastern Balance ofPower 34. The South Asian Balance of Power 35. Rogue States: North Korea 36. FailedStates. Zimbabwe 37. Public versus Private Power: NGOs and International Security38. Environmentalism in an International Context 39. Soft Power and Public Diplomacy

Selected Contents

Routledge Handbook of American Foreign PolicyEdited by Steven W. Hook, Kent State University, USA and Christopher M. Jones, Northern Illinois University, USA

No nation has maintained such an immense stature in world politics as the United States has since the Cold War’s end. In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, prompting the global war onterrorism and the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq, along with American economic and ’soft power’ primacy, there has been increased interest in and scrutiny of Americanforeign policy. The Routledge Handbook of American Foreign Policy brings together leading experts in the field to examine current trends in the way scholars study the history andtheories of American conduct in the world, analysis of state and non-state actors and their tools in conducting policy, and the dynamics of a variety of pressing transnationalchallenges facing the United States.

This volume provides a systematic overview of all aspects of American foreign policy and drives the agenda for further, cutting edge research. Contributors bring analytic depth andbreadth to both the ways in which this subject is approached and the substance of policy formulation and process. The Handbook is an invaluable resource to students, researchers,scholars, and journalists trying to make sense of the broader debates in international relations.

February 2011: 246 x 174: 576ppHb: 978-0-415-80088-4: $150.00eBook: 978-0-203-87863-7

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415800884

Part 1: Research Traditions 1. Foreign Policy Analysis

Part 2: Historical Perspectives 2. Rise of American Power 3. Cold War4. Post-Cold War

Part 3: Theoretical Perspectives 5. Realism 6. Liberalism 7. Critical Theories8. Constructivism 9. Institutional Analysis 10. Individual and Group Decision Making

Part 4: State Actors 11. President 12. National Security Council 13. State Department14. Defense Department 15. Intelligence Community 16. Foreign Economic Bureaucracy17. Congress 18. Courts

Part 5: Transnational Actors 19. Public Opinion 20. News Media 21. Interest Groups22. Intergovernmental Organizations 23. Nongovernmental Organizations

Part 6: Policy Instruments 24. Diplomacy 25. Use of Military Force 26. EconomicSanctions 27. Foreign Aid

Part 7: Transnational Challenges 28. Weapons Proliferation 29. Counter-terrorism30. Global Trade 31. Human Rights and Democracy Promotion 32. Environmental andEnergy Security 33. Immigration 34. Shifts in the Balance of Power

Selected Contents

Routledge Handbooks

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Routledge Handbook of African PoliticsEdited by David Anderson and Nic Cheeseman, both at University of Oxford, UK

Providing a comprehensive and cutting edge examination of this important continent, the Routledge Handbook of African Politics seeks to discuss a wide range of issues including:

• identity and solidarity

•the State

• international relations and the politics of dependency

•conflict

•democracy and electoral politics

•problems and challenges.

This work will feature both established scholars and emerging researchers and will be a vital resource to all students of African Studies, Democratization, Conflict Resolutionand Third World Politics.

June 2011: 246 x 174: 480ppHb: 978-0-415-57378-8: $180.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415573788

Section 1: The Politics of Identity and Solidarity 1. Class Politics 2. Identity andAffiliation 3. Muslim Politics in W Africa 4. Religion and Politics 5. Autochthony6. Affiliations in Nigeria 7. Trade Unions

Section 2: The Politics of the State 8. State & Patronage, Neo-Patrimonialism9. Structure of the State/Legacy of Colonial Rule 10. Military & Politics 11. One PartyState 12. Leadership 13. Colonial Legacies 14. Federalism 15. Constitutions

Section 3: International Relations & the Politics of Dependency 16. Africa Union17. Regional Organizations (COMESA/SADC/EAC) 18. Oil and Politics 19. InternationalAid and Politics 20. Ngos 21. Africa & the International System 22. Economic Issues,Saps to Prsps 23. Migration (Remittances, Brain Drain)

Section 4: Politics and Conflict 24. Warlordism/Collapsed States 25. Guerrillas andPolitics 26. Civil Wars 27. Vigilantes 28. Post-Conflict Reconstruction 29. Trcs/ICC &Legal Issues 30. Peacekeeping, UN

Section 5: Democracy and Electoral Politics 31. Electioneering 32. Political Parties33. Civil Society 34. Electoral Numbers 35. Multi-Party Systems and Electoral-Authoritarianism 36. Parliaments and Executives 37. Public Opinion

Section 6: Problems and Challenges 38. Social Contract OR HIV 39. StateIntegrity/Collapse 40. Democracy Promotion 41. Land & the State 42. Social Policy &Welfare 43. Security, Post 9/11 44. Power-Sharing 45. China in Africa

Selected Contents

Part 1: General Framework 1. Genesis and Evolution of the European Parliament2. The Role of the European Parliament in the European Union 3. European ParliamentElections Theories

Part 2: Case Studies - Euroelections in the EU Member States: The ‘Old’ MemberStates - The Original Six 3. France 4. Germany 5. Italy 6. Belgium 7. TheNetherlands 8. Luxembourg The First and Second Enlargement Countries 9. TheUnited Kingdom

10. Ireland 11. Denmark 12. Greece The Third Enlargement Countries: The IberianRegion 13. Spain 14. Portugal The Fourth Enlargement Countries 15. Austria16. Finland 17. Sweden The ‘New’ Member States - The Fifth Enlargement:Southern Mediterranean Countries 18. Malta 19. Cyprus Central and EasternEuropean Countries 20. Slovenia 21. Estonia 22. Latvia 23. Lithuania 24. CzechRepublic 25. Slovakia 26. Hungary 27. Poland 28. Bulgaria 29. Romania 30. Cross-Country Comparative Analysis of Euroelections Conclusion. Future Agenda of theEuropean Parliament

Routledge Handbook of European ElectionsDonatella M. Viola, Calabria University, Italy

This Handbook is a comprehensive reference guide to the European Parliamentary Elections.

The opening section analyzes the European Parliament’s evolution, profile and political dynamics while the rest of the Handbook focuses on an analysis of Euro-electionsin all EU member states. Each of the country case studies is written to a common template making for an easy comparison of data, methodology and outcomes.

Each of the country case studies includes:

•country profile: area, population size and density, ethnic structure

•overview of the political landscape with a brief account of the political parties and electoral systems in EP elections and general national elections

•public opinion survey on the European Union

•parties’ lists and programmes

•level of party-cohesion over the EU

•media coverage of Euro-elections

•outline of key international, European and domestic issues raised in the campaign

•table of voters’ turnout and election results.

The Handbook is an invaluable resource for all scholars of the European Union, European Parliament, Elections and Parties.

May 2011: 234 x 156: 368ppHb: 978-0-415-59203-1: $195.00

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415592031

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www.routledge.com/politics

Routledge Handbook of Russian Politics & SocietyEdited by Graeme Gill

There are an ever-burgeoning number of books analyzing the Russian experience, or aspects of it. However there is no single volume which gives both a broad survey of the literatureas well as highlighting the cutting edge research work. Through both empirical data and theoretical investigation each chapter in the Routledge Handbook of Russian Politics &Society reviews both the Russian experience and the existing literature, seeking to answer questions about democratic transition, the relationship between the market and democracy,stability and authoritarian politics, the development of civil society, the role of crime and corruption, and the creation of a market economy.

June 2011: 246 x 174: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-57627-7: $180.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415576277

Introduction 1. General Introduction 2. Russia Compares 3. The Yeltsin Era4. The Putin Era

Section 1: Political Institutions 5. Constitution 6. Presidency 7. Legislature8. Bureaucracy 9. Federalism 10. Regional Politics 11. Local Government 12. Military13. Security Services 14. Prime Minister 15. Law & Human Rights 16. Electoral System

Section 2: Political Actors 17. Political Parties 18. Interest Groups 19. Media20. Public Opinion/Voter Behaviour 21. Labour 22. Gender

Section 3: Society 23. Class 24. Business 25. Oligarchs 26. Russian Nationalism27. Communism 28. Civil Society 29. Crime 30. Corruption 31. Informal Relations32. Religion

Section 4: Development 33. Democratisation 34. Economy/Performance35. Economic Reform 36. Natural Resources Sector 37. Health Policy 38. Chechen Wars

Section 5: Russia and the World 39. Foreign Policy 40. The Near Abroad 41. Europe42. USA 43. Asia

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The Routledge International Handbook of Globalization StudiesEdited by Bryan S. Turner, Wellesley College, USA

Series: Routledge International Handbooks

This Handbook offers students clear and informed chapters on the history of globalization and key theories that have considered the causes andconsequences of the globalization process. There are substantive sections looking at demographic, economic, technological, social and cultural changes inglobalization. It examines many negative aspects - new wars, slavery, illegal migration, pollution and inequality - but concludes with an examination ofresponses to these problems through human rights organizations, international labour law and the growth of cosmopolitanism. There is a strong emphasison interdisciplinary approaches with essays covering sociology, demography, economics, politics, anthropology and history.

The Handbook, written in a clear and direct style will appeal to a wide audience. The extensive references and sources will direct students to areas offurther study.

2009: 246 x 174: 728ppHb: 978-0-415-45808-5: $200.00eBook: 978-0-203-87000-6

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415458085

Part 1: Theories and Definitions 1. Theories of Globalization: Issues and Origins2. Limiting Theory: Rethinking Approaches to Cultures of Globalization 3. EconomicTheories of Globalisation 4. Internet and Globalization Lior 5. Anti-globalizationMovements: From Critiques to Alternatives 6. History and Hegemony: The United Statesand Globalization 7. Vulnerability and Globalization: The Social Impact

Part 2: Substantive Issues 8. Transformations of the World’s Population: TheDemographic Revolution 9. All That is Modern Freezes Again:Migration History,Globalization and the Politics of Newness 10. Climate Change, Globalization andCarbonization 11. Infectious Disease and Globalization 12. Globalization, Disasters andDisaster Response 13. The Globalization of Crime 14. Religion out of Place?Globalization of Religious Fundamentalism 15. Globalization and Indigenous Peoples:New Old Patterns 16. Genocide in the Global Age 17. Global Elites 18. Globalization,Ethnic Conflict and Nationalism 19. The Global Drive to Commodify Pensions

Part 3: New Institutions and Cultures 20. Popular Culture, Fans and Globalization21. Film and Globalization: From Hollywood to Bollywood 22. Global Cities 23. CrossingDivides: Consumption and Globalization in History 24. Pluralism, Globalization and theModernization of Gender and Sexual Relations in Asia 25. Globalization and Food: TheDialectics of Globality and Locality 26. Borders, Passports and the Global Mobility27. Globalization of Space: From the Global to the Galactic 28. Globalization andAmericanization

Part 4: Critical Solutions 29. Globalization and Labour: Putting the ILO in its Places30. Globalisation of Human Rights 31. Global Civil Society and the World Social Forum32. Muslim Cosmopolitanism: Contemporary Practice and Social Theory 33. NewCosmopolitanism in the Social Sciences 34. Globalization and its Possible Futures

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Selected Contents

Routledge Handbook of International Political Economy (IPE)IPE as a Global ConversationEdited by Mark Blyth, Johns Hopkins University, USA

The study of the International Political Economy (IPE), like the IPE itself, is plural and unbounded. Despite what partisans sometimes say, rather than therebeing ‘one way’ of studying the IPE that is the ‘right way’, we find across the world great variation in IPE scholarship in terms of focus, questions, andmethods. How then can we make sense of this and understand the field as a whole rather than simply learn one part of it?

This Handbook is designed to address precisely this concern. It maps the shifting boundaries and diverse theoretical commitments of IPE around the world. Itengages the geographical and theoretical diversity of the different versions of IPE found in North America, the UK, in Asia and Australia; and notes theabsences of distinctive versions of IPE in Europe and Latin America. The volume groups together the essential attributes and positions of each school,inviting the reader to engage with and learn about IPE in all of its guises through this evolving ‘global conversation.’ Rather than adjudicate ‘the one trueversion’ of IPE, it argues that the intellectual diversity we see around the world is an essential, and positive, feature of the field.

With over twenty contributors from a wide range of countries Routledge Handbook of International Political Economy is an essential resource for all thosewith an interest in this complex and rapidly evolving field of study.

2009: 246 x 174: 392ppHb: 978-0-415-77126-9: $199.00Pb: 978-0-415-78141-1: $44.95eBook: 978-0-203-88156-9

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415771269

Selected Contents

Introduction: IPE as a Global Conversation Mark Blyth

Section 1: North American IPE 1. The Multiple Traditions of American IPE Benjamin J.Cohen 2. Realist Political Economy: Traditional Themes and Contemporary ChallengesJonathan Kirshner 3. Thinking Rationally about Hierarchy and Global GovernanceAlexander Cooley 4. Constructivism as an Approach to International Political EconomyRawi Abdelal 5. Of Margins, Traditions and Engagements: A Brief Disciplinary History ofIPE in Canada Randall Germain

Section 2: British IPE 6. Lineages of a British International Political Economy BenRosamond and Ben Clift 7. Empiricism and Objectivity: Reflexive Theory Construction in aComplex World Ronen Palan and Angus Cameron 8. Power-Knowledge Estranged: FromSusan Strange to Post-structuralism in British IPE Paul Langley 9. Bridging theTransatlantic Divide? Toward a Structurational Approach to International Political EconomyPhilip G. Cerny

Section 3: IPE in Asia 10. Reading Hobbes in Beijing: Great Power Politics and theChallenge of the Peaceful Ascent Giovanni Arrighi 11. States and Markets, States VersusMarkets: The Developmental State Debate as the Distinctive East Asian Contribution toInternational Political Economy Walden Bello 12. The Rise of East-Asia: An EmergingChallenge to the Study of International Political Economy Henry Yeung 13. Neither Asianor America: IPE in Australia Jason Sharman

Section 4: IPE Elsewhere - Exemptions, Exclusions, and Extensions 14. Why IPE isUnderdeveloped in Europe: A Case Study of France Nicolas Jabko 15. Why Did the LatinAmerican Critical Tradition in the Social Sciences Become Practically Extinct? Gabriel Palma16. What Do Sociologists Bring to International Political Economy? John Campbell17. Economic History and the International Political Economy Michael J. Oliver18. Everyday International Political Economy Leonard Seabrooke and John Hobson

Routledge Handbook of Insurgency and Counter-InsurgencyEdited by Paul B. Rich and Isabelle Duyvesteyn, University of Utrecht, the Netherlands

This new Handbook provides a wide-ranging overview of the current state of academic analysis and debate on insurgency and counter-insurgency, as well as an-up-to date survey ofcontemporary insurgent movements and counter-insurgencies.

This Handbook is a response to the upsurge of scholarly interest in this field, and a continuing burgeoning student interest. This interest is despite the end of many colonialinsurgencies and the end of guerrilla conflicts in Vietnam, Algeria and Southern Africa, and reflects the globalisation of insurgencies, and the interdependency of their strategies andtactics. These trends have seen the study of insurgency and counter-insurgency become a major subfield in International Relations and Security Studies, investigating its evolution intoa variety of newer forms in the post-colonial era. These have been linked to a variety of conflicts centred on trafficking in narcotics, precious stones and metals, hardwoods and childtrafficking. Additionally many modern insurgencies are the product of fragile or weak state structures prone to degenerate into warlord formations centred on regional, ethnic or clannetworks.

This Handbook will be of great interest to all students of insurgency and small wars, terrorism/counter-terrorism, strategic studies, security studies and IR in general, as well asprofessional military colleges and policymakers.

December 2010: 246 x 174: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-56733-6: $180.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415567336

Routledge Handbooks

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Introduction: The Study of Insurgency and Counter-Insurgency Paul Rich andIsabelle Duyvesteyn

Part 1: Theoretical and Analytical Issues 1. The Historiography of Insurgency IanBeckett 2. The Sociological and Psychological Study of Insurgency and Counter-Insurgency Jeffrey Sluka 3. Rethinking the Nature of Insurgency Steven Metz4. Changing Forms of Insurgency: Pirates and Narco-Gangs? Robert Bunker5. Insurgency, Counter-Insurgency and Policing Alice Hills 6. Insurgency andCyber-War David Betz 7. Ethical Dimensions to Insurgency and Counter-InsurgencyChristopher Coker

Part 2: Insurgent Movements 8. Insurgent Movements in Latin America Daniel Castro9. Insurgent Movements in Africa William Reno 10. Insurgent Movements in Iraq AhmedHashim 11. The Insurgency of Hamas and Hizballah 12. Insurgent Movements in SouthEast Asia Larry Cline 13. Insurgent Movements in Pakistan Christine Fair 14. Insurgencyin Afghanistan Antonio Giustozzi 15. Insurgent Movements in India Navnita ChadhaBehera 16. Insurgent Movements in Russia John Russell

Part 3: Counter-Insurgency 17. The Debate on Counter-Insurgency William Rosenau18. The Technology and Logistics of Modern Counter-Insurgency Kevin O’Brien19. Trends in US Counter-Insurgency Tom Mockaitis 20. Counter-Insurgency in Iraq andAfghanistan: A Strategic Watershed? John Nagl 21. On Israeli Counter-InsurgentDoctrines and Practice Sergio Catignani 22. A ’Successful’ Model of Counter-Insurgency?The Sri Lankan Government’s War against the LTTE TBA 23. British Counter-Insurgencysince Ulster Warren Chin 24. Counter-Insurgency in a Non-Democratic State: The RussianExample Yuri Zhukov 25. Counter-Insurgency in South America Mark T. Berger26. Counter-Insurgency in India Sumit Ganguly and David Fidler 27. Counter-Insurgencyin Pakistan Julian Schofield 28. Counter-Insurgency in China Martin I. Wayne29. Counter-Insurgency in South East Asia Tom Marks

Part 4: Insurgency and Counter-Insurgency in a Globalising World30. Contemporary Insurgency and Counter-Insurgency David Kilcullen 31. EmergingTrends in the Twenty-First Century Paul Rich and Isabelle Duyvesteyn

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The Routledge Handbook of Transatlantic SecurityEdited by Jussi Hanhimäki, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Switzerland, Georges-Henri Soutou, Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV) University,France and Basil Germond, University of Central Lancashire, UK

This new Handbook provides readers with the tools to understand the evolution of transatlantic security from the Cold War era to the early twenty-first century.

The contributors address the following key questions arising from the history of transatlantic security relations:

•What lies behind the growing and continuing European dependency on security policy on the United States and what are the political consequences of this?

• Is this dependency likely to continue or will an independent European Common Foreign and Security Policy eventually emerge?

•What has been the impact of ’out-of-area’ issues on transatlantic security cooperation?

The essays in this Handbook cover a broad range of historical and contemporary themes, including the founding of NATO; the impact of the Korean War; the role of nuclear(non-)proliferation; perspectives of individual countries (especially France and Germany); the impact of culture, identity and representation in shaping post-Cold Wartransatlantic relations; institutional issues, particularly EU-NATO relations; the Middle East; and the legacy of the Cold War, notably tensions with Russia.

This Handbook will be of much interest to students of transatlantic security, NATO, Cold War Studies, foreign policy and IR in general.

August 2010: 246 x 174: 336ppHb: 978-0-415-57283-5: $180.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publicationeBook: 978-0-203-84669-8

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415572835

Introduction

Part 1: Transatlantic Security in the Cold War Era 1. Three Ministers and the WorldThey Made: Acheson, Bevin and Schuman, and the Making of the North Atlantic TreatyAnne Deighton 2. The Korean War: Miscalculation and Alliance Transformation SamuelWells 3. The Doctrine of Massive Retaliation and the Impossible Nuclear Defense of theAtlantic Alliance: From MC 48 to MC 70 (1953-1959) François David 4. IVth RepublicFrance and the Atlantic Alliance: Between Faithfulness to the Alliance and NationalInterests Jenny Raflik 5. The Fourth Republic and NATO: Loyalty to the Alliance versusNational Demands George-Henri Soutou 6. NATO Forever? Willy Brandt’s HereticalThoughts on an Alternative Future Benedikt Schoenborn 7. Negotiating with the Enemyand Having Problems with the Allies: The Impact of the Non-Proliferation Treaty onTransatlantic Relations Leopoldo Nuti 8. Power Shifts and New Security Needs: NATO,European Identity, and the Reorganization of the West, 1967–75 Daniel Möckli andAndreas Wenger 9. West Germany and the United States during the Middle East Crisis of1973: ’Nothing but a Semi-Colony’? Bernhard Blumenau 10. The United States and the’Loss’ of Iran: Repercussions on Transatlantic Barbara Zanchetta

Part 2: Transatlantic Security Beyond the Cold War 11. The Warsaw Pact, NATO andthe End of the Cold War Jérôme Elie 12. The Road to Saint Malo: Germany and EU-NATO Relations after the Cold War Wolfgang Krieger 13. EU-NATO Relations after theCold War Hanna Ojanen 14. Security of the EU Boundaries in the Post Cold-War Era AxelMarion 15. Venus Has Learned Geopolitics: The European Union’s Frontier andTransatlantic Relations Basil Germond 16. The Rise and Fall of Criticism Towards theUnited States in Transatlantic Relations: From Anti-Americanism to Obamania TuomasForsberg 17. Strategic Culture and Security: American Antiterrorist Policy and the Use ofSoft Power after 9/11 Jérôme Gygax 18. European Security Identity since the End of theCold War Guillaume de Rougé 19. A Realistic Reset with Russia: Practical Expectations forUS-Russian Relations James Goldgeier 20. The Obama Administration and TransatlanticSecurity: Problems and Prospects Jussi M. Hanhimäki 21. Conclusion: Is the PresentFuture of Transatlantic Security already History? Jean Jacques De Dardel

Routledge Handbook of Ethnic ConflictEdited by Karl Cordell, University of Plymouth, UK and Stefan Wolff, University of Nottingham, UK

A definitive global survey of the interaction of race, ethnicity, nationalism and politics, this Handbook blends theoretically grounded, rigorous analysiswith empirical illustrations, to provide a state-of-the art overview of the contemporary debates on one of the most pervasive international securitychallenges today.

The contributors to this volume offer a 360-degree perspective on ethnic conflict: from the theoretical foundations of nationalism and ethnicity, to the causesand consequences of ethnic conflict, and to the various strategies adopted in response to it. The Routledge Handbook of Ethnic Conflict enables readers togain better insights into such defining moments in post-Cold War international history as the disintegrations of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia and theirrespective consequences and the genocide in Rwanda, as well as the relative success of conflict settlement efforts in Northern Ireland, Macedonia, and Aceh.

By contributing to understanding the varied and multiple causes of ethnic conflicts and to learning from the successes and failures of its prevention andsettlement, the Handbook makes a powerful case that ethnic conflicts are neither unavoidable nor unresolvable, but rather that they require careful analysisand thoughtful and measured responses.

September 2010: 246 x 174: 304ppHb: 978-0-415-47625-6: $180.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415476256

The Study of Ethnic Conflict: An Introduction Karl Cordell and Stefan Wolff

Part 1: Context & Key Concepts 1. The Origin of Nations’: Contested Beginnings,Contested Futures Jennifer Jackson-Preece 2. Ideology and Nationalism Daniele Conversi3. The Nation-State: Civic and Ethnic Dimensions Colin Clark 4. Stateless Nations in aWorld of Nation States Ephraim Nimni 5. Ethnicity and Religion Joe Ruane and JenniferTodd 6. Race and Ethnicity Chris Gilligan

Part 2: Ethnicity and Conflict 7. Ethnicity as a Generator of Conflict Stuart Kaufman8. Democracy and Democratization Jenny Engstrom 9. The Causes and Consequences ofEthnic Cleansing Erin Jenne 10. Genocide Jim Hughes 11. Debating Partition: Evaluatingthe Standard Justifications Brendan O’Leary 12. Irredentas and Secessions: AdjacentPhenomena, Neglected Connections Donald Horowitz 13. Conflict Prevention: A Policy in

Search of a Theory or a Theory in Search of a Policy? David Carment and Martin Fischer14. Managing and Settling Ethnic Conflict Asaf Siniver 15. Multilateral Frameworks forConflict Resolution Eva Sobotka 16. Post-conflict Reconstruction in Ethnically DividedSocieties Monika Heupel

Part 3: Accommodation and Conciliation 17. Deepening Democracy: The Role of CivilSociety Ian O’Flynn and David Russell 18. Human Rights and Ethnopolitics Josef Marko19. Territorial Approaches to Ethnic Conflict Settlement John McGarry and BrendanO’Leary 20. Ethnic Accomodation in Unitary States Frans Schrijver 21. National CulturalAutonomy David Smith 22. Centripetalism Benjamin Reilly 23. Power Sharing StefanWolff and Karl Cordell 24. Playing the Ethnic Card: Liberal Democratic and AuthoritarianPractices Compared Sandra Barkhof

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Introduction: A Secure Europe in a Better World - European Security through the EU

Part 1: The EU as an International Security Actor 1. The Emergence of EuropeanSecurity Institutions (1945-2010) 2. Theoretical Perspective (I): A ’Realist/Traditional’Perspective 3. Theoretical Perspective (2): A ’Constructivist/Critical’ Perspective 4. TheAge of Interpolarity 5. The European Security Strategy 6. European Strategic Culture

Part 2: Institutions, Instruments and Means 7. CFSP and Diplomacy 8. Military ESDP9. Civilian ESDP 10. Industry and Technology 11. Democracy and Human Rights12. Security and Development

Part 3: Policies 13. The Balkans 14. Eastern Neighbourhood and Russia 15. SouthernNeighbourhood incl. the Middle East 16. Iran and the Gulf 17. Sub-Sahara Africa18. Asia including Central Asia 19. New Geopolitical Horizons: Maritime, the Arctic20. Terrorism 21. Non-proliferation, Arms Control and Disarmament 22. Energy

Part 4: Partners 23. NATO and the US 24. The UN 25. The OSCE 26. The AfricanUnion 27. Strategic Partners: The BRICs and Others

Routledge Handbook of Terrorism ResearchResearch, Theories and ConceptsEdited by Alex Schmid, United Nations, Terrorism Prevention Branch, Albert Jongman, Ministry of Defence, the Netherlands and Eric Price,International Atomic Energy Agency, Austria

This book is a monumental collection of definitions, conceptual frameworks, paradigmatic formulations, and bibliographic sources, which has been revisedand updated as a resource for the expanding community of researchers on the subject of terrorism.

The chief instrument for this new research is a questionnaire to be mailed to several hundred leading experts in the field. Their answers will guide andinform the review process of the voluminous literature on terrorism.

Routledge Handbook of Terrorism Research will be essential reading for all students of terrorism, political science and security studies, as well as policymakers and professionals in the security field.

January 2011: 246 x 174: 512ppHb: 978-0-415-41157-8: $199.00

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415411578

Selected Contents

1. Acknowledgments 2. Introduction Alex P. Schmid 3. The Problem of DefiningTerrorism Alex P. Schmid 3.1. Appendix: 250 Definitions of Terrorism Schmid and Easson4. Typologies of Terrorism Sarah Marsden and Alex P. Schmid 5. Theories of TerrorismBradley McAllister and Alex P. Schmid 5.1. Appendix: Hypotheses on Root Causes ofTerrorism A.Schmid 6. Data Bases of Terrorism Neill Bowie and Alex P. Schmid6.1. Appendix: List of Research Centers and Programmes on Terrorism and PoliticalViolence Alex P. Schmid and Gillian Duncan

7. Literature of Terrorism Alex P. Schmid 7.1. Library Resources for Research on TerrorismEric Price 8. Bibliography of Terrorism Gillian Duncan, Albert J. Jongman and Alex P.Schmid 9. List of Extremist and Terrorist Organizations Albert J. Jongman 9.1 Appendix:Chronology of Al Qaeda Attacks Bradley McAllister 9.2 Appendix: Chronology of Al -Qaeda Communiques from Osama Bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri Donald Petersson10. Glossary and Acronyms on Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism Alex P. Schmid 11. Aboutthe Authors

The Routledge Handbook of European SecurityEdited by Sven Biscop and Richard Whitman

This new Handbook brings together key experts on European security from the academic and policy worlds to examine the European Union (EU) as an international security actor.While the focus is on the politico-military dimension, security will be put in the context of the holistic approach advocated by the EU.

Each chapter critically examines EU objectives, instruments and means in order to assess their effectiveness, identify their weaknesses, and offer some recommendations for the EUas a security actor on the international stage.

The volume is organized in five parts:

•Part 1 offers a historical overview of the development of European security institutions and an assessment of today’s multipolar order. It analyzes the holistic ’grand strategy’underlying EU policies and assesses whether a European strategic culture has emerged

•Part 2 looks at the institutions that make and implement policy in the different dimensions covered by the ’grand strategy’, charts the instruments and means at their disposal, andassesses to which extent ’sub-strategies’ in each area are linked up with the overall objectives

•Part 3 examines the effectiveness of the actual policies and actions undertaken, putting the politico-military dimension in the context of the holistic approach

•Part 4 analyzes the role of partnerships with other actors in these policies

•Part 5 offers a theoretical perspective on all of these developments.

June 2011: 246 x 174: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-58828-7: $199.00

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415588287

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www.routledge.com/politics

The Routledge Handbook of Human SecurityEdited by Mary Martin, London School of Economics, UK and Taylor Owen, Oxford University, UK

This Handbook will serve as a standard reference guide to the subject of human security, which has grown greatly in importance over the past 15 years, since the concept was firstpromoted by the UNDP in its 1993 and 1994 Human Development Reports.

September 2010: 246 x 174: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-58128-8: $199.00

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415581288

The Routledge Handbook of War and SocietyIraq and AfghanistanEdited by Steven Carlton-Ford, University of Cincinnatti, USA and Morten G. Ender, United States Military Academy, West Point, USA

This edited volume provides an introduction to current sociological and behavioral research on the effects of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

These wars represent two of the most interesting and potentially troubling events of recent decades. These two wars - so similar in their beginnings - generated different responsesfrom various publics and the mass media; they have had profound effects on the members of the armed services, on their families and relatives, and on the people of Iraq andAfghanistan.

This book will be of interest to students of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, military sociology, war studies, anthropology, US politics and psychology.

August 2010: 246 x 174: 320ppHb: 978-0-415-56732-9: $199.00

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415567329

Foreword Christopher Dandeker. Introduction Steven Carlton-Ford and Morton G. Ender

Part 1: War on the Ground: Combat and its Aftermath 1. Fighting Two ProtractedWars: Recruiting and Retention with an All-Volunteer Force Susan M. Ross 2. Fighting theIrregular War in Afghanistan: Success in Combat - Struggles in Stabilization Brigid MyersPavilonis 3. Learning the Lessons of Counterinsurgency Ian Roxborough 4. Twenty-FirstCentury Narratives from Afghanistan: Storytelling, Morality, and War Ryan D. Pengelly andAnne Irwin 5. Two US Combat Units in Iraq: Psychological Contracts When Expectationsand Realities Diverge Wilbur Scott, David McCone, and George R. Mastroianni6. Capturing Saddam Hussein: Social Network Analysis and Counterinsurgency OperationsBrian J. Reed and David R. Segal 7. Apples, Barrels and Abu Ghraib George R.Mastroianni and George Reed 8. The War on Terror in the Early 21 Century: ApplyingLessons from Sociological Classics and Sites of Abuse Ryan Ashley Caldwell and StjepanG. Mestrovic

Part 2: War on the Ground: Non-Combat Operations, Noncombatants, andOperators 9. Policing Post-War Iraq: Insurgency, Civilian Police, and the Reconstructionof Society Mathieu Deflem and Suzanne Sutphin 10. Policing Afghanistan: Civilian PoliceReform and the Resurgence of the Taliban Mathieu Deflem 11. Managing HumanitarianInformation in Iraq Aldo Benini, Charles Conley, Joseph Donahue, and Shawn Messick12. Role of Contractors and Other Non-Military Personnel in Today’s Wars O. Shawn Cuppand William C. Latham, Jr. 13. Evaluating Psychological Operations in Operation EnduringFreedom James E. Griffith 14. Armed Conflict and Health: Cholera in Iraq Daniel Poole15. Iraqi Adolescents: Self-Regard, Self-Derogation, and Perceived Threat in War SteveCarlton-Ford, Morten G. Ender, and Ahoo Tabatabai

Part 3: The War Back Home: The Social Construction of War, its Heroes, and itsEnemies 16. Globalization and the Invasion of Iraq: State Power and the Enforcement ofNeo-liberalism Daniel Egan 17. The Pakistan and Afghan Crisis Riaz Ahmed Shaikh18. Mass Media as Risk-Management in the ’War on Terror’ Christopher M. Pieper 19.Talking War: How Elite Newspaper Editorials and Opinion Pieces Debated the Attack onIraq Alexander G. Nikolaev and Douglas V. Porpora 20. Debating Antiwar Protests: TheMicrolevel Discourse of Social Movement Framing on a University LISTSERV Mark Hedleyand Sara A. Clark 21. Making Heroes: An Attributional Perspective Gregory C. Gibson,Richard Hogan, John Stahura, and Eugene Jackson 22. Making the Muslim Enemy: TheSocial Construction of the Enemy in the War on Terror Erin Steuter and Deborah Wills

Part 4: The War Back Home: Families and Youth on the Home Front 23. GreedyMedia: Army Families, Embedded Reporting, and War in Iraq Morten G. Ender, KathleenM. Campbell, Toya J. Davis, and Patrick R. Michaelis 24. Military Child Well-being in theFace of Mulitple Deployments Rachel Lipari, Anna Winters, Kenneth Matos, Jason Smith,and Lindsay Rock 25. American Undergraduate Attiutdes Toward the Wars in Iraq andAfghanistan: Trends and Variations Morten G. Ender, David E. Rohall, and Michael D.Matthews

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Introduction

Part 1: Concepts and Contexts 1. Birth of a Discourse 2. Filling the Security Gap - HSvs HR vs Human Development 3. Broad or Narrow – The Definition Debate 4. TheCritical View of Human Security 5. From Competition to Convergence. Human andNational Security

Part 2: Global Policy Challenges 6. Violence and Conflict 7. Development/Poverty8. Disasters 9. Environment 10. Economics and Human Security 11. Health

Part 3: Applications 12. Canada and Human Security 13. Japan 14. European Union15. African Union 16. US - Rethinking Counter Insurgency 17. Asia 18. ChangingViolence in Latin America

Part 4: Methodologies and Tools 19. Indicators - Sally Stares20. Mapping 21. The Use of Force 22. International Law 23. Gendering Human Security24. Psychology

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The Routledge Handbook of Asian Security StudiesEdited by Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University, USA, Andrew Scobell, Texas A&M University, USA and Joseph Liow, Nanyang TechnologicalUniversity, Singapore

The Handbook of Asian Security Studies provides a detailed exploration of security dynamics in the three distinct subregions that comprise Asia, and alsobridges the study of these regions by exploring the geopolitical links between each of them.

2009: 246 x 174: 336ppHb: 978-0-415-77781-0: $199.00eBook: 978-0-203-86510-1

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415777810

Selected Contents

Part 1: Northeast Asia 1. China’s Rise: How Peaceful? 2. Japan’s Security Future 3. TheSecurity of the Korean Peninsula 4. The Taiwan Issue 5. The Tibetan Question 6. TheShanghai Cooperation Organization and Its Implications for Regional Security 7. U.S.-China Relations

Part 2: South Asia 8. Kashmir and the Indo-Pakistani Conflict 9. Nuclear Weapons andCrisis Stability in South Asia 10. The Sino-Indian Rivalry 11. India’s Experiences withInsurgency and Counter-Insurgency 12. The Sri Lankan Civil War 13. Pakistan’s Quest forSecurity 14. Insurgency, Instability, and the Security of Afghanistan

Part 3: Southeast Asia 15. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations 16. BilateralTensions in ASEAN 17. Great Power Politics and Southeast Asian Security 18. MaritimeSecurity in Southeast Asia 19. Internal Conflicts in Southeast Asia 20. Islamic Extremismin Southeast Asia 21. Burma/Myanmar: How Flourishing the ’Disciplined Democracy’?

Part 4: Cross Regional Issues 22. Maritime Rivalry in Asia 23. The ASEAN RegionalForum 24. The New Security Agenda in Asia: Making Spaces for Non-Traditional SecurityFormulations of Emerging Security Challenges

The Routledge Handbook of Security StudiesEdited by Victor Mauer, and Myriam Dunn Cavelty, both at Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zurich, Switzerland

Focusing on contemporary challenges, this major new Handbook offers a wide-ranging collection of cutting-edge essays from leading scholars in the field ofSecurity Studies.

2009: 246 x 174: 504ppHb: 978-0-415-46361-4: $199.00eBook: 978-0-203-86676-4

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415463614

Routledge Handbooks

Part 1: Theoretical Approaches to Security and Different ’Securities’ 1. Realism andSecurity Studies 2. Liberalism 3. The English School and International Security 4. CriticalSecurity Studies 5. Constructivism and Securitization Studies 6. Poststructuralism,Continental Philosophy, and the Remaking of Security Studies 7. Feminist Security Studies8. National Security, Culture, and Identity 9. Societal Security 10. Human Security andDiplomacy

Part 2: Contemporary Security Challenges 11. Terrorism 12. Weapons of MassDestruction 13. Organised Crime, Drug Trafficking, and Trafficking in Women 14. StateFailure and State Building 15. Migration and Security 16. Cyberthreats 17. Old and NewWars 18. The Privatization of International Security 19. Energy Security 20. Resources,the Environment and Conflict 21. Emerging Dangers of Biological Weapons 22. Securityand Health in the 21st Century

Part 3: Regional Security Challenges 23. China’s Rise: Intentions, Power, and Evidence24. The Korean Peninsula: On the Brink? 25. Indian Security Policy 26. Pakistan’s SecurityPredicament: Religion, Economics, or Geopolitics? 27. Afghanistan: A State in Crisis28. The Middle East as a Crisis Region 29. Iran’s Nuclear Challenge 30. Intervention inIraq: Regime Change and the Dialectics of State-Building 31. The Israeli-PalestinianConflict 32. Russia’s Revival 33. The Western Balkans: On the Path to Stability

Part 4: Confronting Security Challenges 34. The European Union: From SecurityCommunity towards Security Actor 35. Alliances 36. Deterrence 37. CoerciveDiplomacy: Scope and Limits, Theory and Policy 38. Peace Operations 39. HumanitarianIntervention 40. Global Governance 41. The Study of Crisis Management

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Routledge Handbook of Energy Security

Edited by Benjamin K. Sovacool, National University of Singapore

This Handbook focuses on energy security world-wide, examining its definition, dimensions, ways to measure and index it, and features essays from thirty contributors from twelve countries.

The volume begins by identifying varying definitions of energy security, including those that prioritize security of supply and affordability alongside those that emphasize availability, energyefficiency, trade, environmental quality, and social and political stewardship. Part two of the book explores the various metrics that can be used to give energy security more coherence, and alsoto enable it to be measured. The third part investigates recent attempts to measure energy security progress at the national level, with a special emphasis placed on countries within theOrganization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), countries within Asia, and industrialized countries worldwide. The final part of the book explicates specific case studies andcomplications relating to the geopolitics of energy in Asia, cooperation in the Mekong Delta, and the conundrum presented by clean coal and fossil fuels.

The main themes and objectives of the volume are to:

• broaden existing discussions of energy security that center on access to fuels, or things like “oil security” or “coal security”• focus not only on the supply side of energy but also the demand side, taking a hard look at energy services and politics along with technologies and infrastructure• investigate energy security issues such as energy poverty, equity and access, and development• analyze ways to index and measure energy security progress at the national and international level.

November 2010: 246x174: 332ppHb: 978-0-415-59117-1 $199.00For more information visit: www.routledge.com/978041591171

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The Routledge Handbook of New Security StudiesEdited by J. Peter Burgess, PRIO, Oslo, Norway

This new Handbook gathers together state-of-the-art theoretical reflection and empirical research by a group of leading international scholars in thesubdiscipline of Critical Security Studies.

In today’s globalised setting, the challenge of maintaining security is no longer limited to the traditional foreign-policy and military tools of the nation-state,and security and insecurity are no longer considered as dependent only upon geopolitics and military strength, but rather are also seen to depend uponsocial, economic, environmental, ethical models of analysis and tools of action. The contributors discuss and evaluate this fundamental shift in four keyareas:

•new security concepts

•new security subjects

•new security objects

•new security practices.

Offering a comprehensive theoretical and empirical overview of this evolving field, this book will be essential reading for all students of critical securitystudies, human security, international/global security, political theory and IR in general.

January 2010: 246 x 174: 328ppHb: 978-0-415-48437-4: $185.00eBook: 978-0-203-85948-3

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415484374

Introduction J. Peter Burgess

Part 1: New Security Concepts 2. Civilizational Security Brett Bowden 3. Risk OliverKessler 4. Small Arms Keith Krause 5. Critical Human Security Taylor Owen 6. CriticalGeopolitics Simon Dalby

Part 2: New Security Subjects 7. Biopolitics Michael Dillon 8. Gendered Security LauraShepherd 9. Identity Security Pinar Bilgin 10. Security as Ethics Anthony Burke11. Financial Security Marieke de Goede 12. International Law and Security Kristin B.Sandvik

Part 3: New Security Objects 13. Environmental Security Jon Barnett 14. Food SecurityRachel Slater and Steve Wiggins 15. Energy Security Roland Dannreuther 16. CyberSecurity Myriam Dunn Cavelty 17. Pandemic Security Stephan Elbe 18. Biosecurity FridaKuhlau and John Hart

Part 4: New Security Practices 19. Surveillance Mark Salter 20. Urban InsecurityDavid Murakami Wood 21. Privatization of Security Anna Leander 22. MigrationWilliam Walters 23. Security Technologies Emmanuel-Pierre Guittet andJulien Jeandesboz 24. Designing Security Cynthia Weber and Mark Lacy 25. NewMobile Crime Monica den Boer

Handbook of Conflict Analysis and ResolutionEdited by Dennis J.D. Sandole and Ingrid Sandole-Staroste, both at George Mason University, Washington DC, USA, and Sean Byrne andJessica Senehi, both at University of Manitoba, Canada

This major Handbook is a collection of work from leading scholars in the Conflict Analysis and Resolution (CAR) field. The central theme is the value ofinterdisciplinary approaches to the analysis and resolution of conflicts.

2008: 246 x 174: 576ppHb: 978-0-415-43395-2: $200.00Pb: 978-0-415-57735-9: $49.95eBook: 978-0-203-89316-6

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415577359

Part 1: Core Concepts and Theories 1. The Role of Identity in Conflict 2. EncounteringNationalism: The Contribution of Peace Studies and Conflict Resolution 3. GenderRelations and Conflict Transformation Among Refugee Women 4. Causation as a CoreConcept in Conflict Analysis 5. The Challenge of Operationalizing Key Concepts inConflict Resolution Theory in International and Subnational Conflicts 6. The Enemy andthe Innocent of Violent Conflicts 7. Identity Conflicts: Models of Dynamics and EarlyWarning 8. Generativity-Based Conflict: Maturing Micro Foundations for Conflict Theory

Part 2: Core Approaches: Conceptual and Methodological 9. Human Agonistes:Interdisciplinary Inquiry into Ontological Agency and Human Conflict 10. TheEthnography of Peace Education: Some Lessons Learned from Palestinian-JewishIntegrated Education in Israel 11. Waging Conflicts Constructively 12. A Social-Psychological Approach to Conflict Analysis and Resolution 13. Building RelationalEmpathy through an Interactive Design Process 14. Building Peace: Storytelling toTransform Conflicts Constructively 15. A Capacity Building Approach to ConflictResolution 16. Gender Mainstreaming: A Valuable Tool in Building Sustainable Peace17. Culture Theory, Culture Clash, and the Practice of Conflict Resolution 18. ConflictResolution: The Missing Link between Liberal IR Theory and Realistic Practice19. Understanding the Development-Conflict Nexus and the Contribution ofDevelopment Cooperation to Peacebuilding 20. Evaluation in Conflict Resolution andPeacebuilding 21. Toward a Conflictology: The Quest for Trans-Disciplinarity

Part 3: Core Practices: Processes 22. Conflict Transformation: Reasons to be Modest23. Mediation Frames/Justice Games 24. Interactive Conflict Resolution: Dialogue,Conflict Analysis and Problem Solving 25. Mediation and International ConflictResolution: Analyzing Structure and Behavior 26. Ethical and Gendered Dilemmas ofMoving from Emergency Response to Development in ’Failed’ States 27. Memory-Retrieval and Truth-Recovery 28. Shifting from Coherent Towards Holistic Peace Processes29. Law and Legal Processes in Resolving International Conflicts

Part 4: Alternative Voices and Complex Intervention Designs 30. RestorativeProcesses of Peace and Healing within the Governing Structures of the Rotinonshonni’Longhouse People’ 31. Critical Systematic Inquiry in Conflict Analysis and Resolution: AnEssential Bridge between Theory and Practice 32. From Diagnosis to Treatment: TowardsNew Shared Principles for Israeli/Palestinian Peacebuilding 33. Strategies for thePrevention, Management and/or Resolution of (Ethnic) Crisis and Conflict: The Case ofthe Balkans 34. The Perception of Economic Assistance in Northern Ireland and Its Role inthe Peace Process 35. Conflict Resolution in An Age of Empire: New Challenges to anEmerging Field

Conclusions Conclusion: Revisiting the CAR Field. Epilogue: Implications for Theory,Research, Practice and Teaching

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New in Paperback

Handbook of Peace and Conflict StudiesEdited by Charles Webel and Johan Galtung

This major Handbook provides a cutting-edge and transdisciplinary overview of the main issues, debates, state-of-the-art methods, and key concepts inpeace and conflict studies today.

2007: 246 x 174: 424ppHb: 978-0-415-39665-3: $210.00Pb: 978-0-415-48319-3: $49.95eBook: 978-0-203-08916-3

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415483193

Selected Contents

Introduction 1. Toward a Philosophy and Metapsychology of Peace 2. Peace byPeaceful Conflict Transformation: The Transcend Approach

Part 1: Understanding and Transforming Conflict 3. Negotiation 4. Mediation5. Former Yugoslavia and Iraq: A Comparative Analysis of International ConflictMismanagement 6. Peace Studies and Peace Politics: Multicultural Common Security inNorth-South Conflict Situations 7. Disarmament 8. Nuclear Disarmament

Part 2: Creating Peace 9. Peace and Conflict Counseling and Training: The TranscendApproach 10. Nonviolence: More Than the Absence of Violence 11. Human Rights /Peace Processes 12. Reconciliation 13. Peace as a Self-Regulating Process

Part 3: Supporting Peace 14. Gender and Peace: Towards a Gender-Inclusive HolisticPerspective 15. Peace Business 16. Peace Journalism 17. Peace Psychology: Theory andPractice 18. Rethinking Peace Education

Part 4: Peace Across the Disciplines 19. Peace Studies as a Transdisciplinary Project20. The Spirit of War and the Spirit of Peace: Understanding the Role of Religion21. International Law: Amid Power, Order and Justice 22. The Language Game of Peace23. Peace and the Arts 24. Peace through Health? Conclusion

New in Paperback

Handbook of Intelligence StudiesEdited by Loch K. Johnson

This topical volume offers a comprehensive review of secret intelligence organizations and activities.

Leading experts in the field approach the three major missions of intelligence: collection-and-analysis; covert action; and counterintelligence. Within each ofthese missions, the dynamically written essays dissect the so-called intelligence cycle to reveal the challenges of gathering and assessing information fromaround the world. Covert action, the most controversial intelligence activity, is explored, with special attention on the issue of military organizations movinginto what was once primarily a civilian responsibility. The authors furthermore examine the problems that are associated with counterintelligence, protectingsecrets from foreign spies and terrorist organizations, as well as the question of intelligence accountability, and how a nation can protect its citizens againstthe possible abuse of power by its own secret agencies.

2006: 246 x 174: 388ppHb: 978-0-415-77050-7: $200.00Pb: 978-0-415-77783-4: $49.95eBook: 978-0-203-08932-3

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Introduction Loch K. Johnson

Part 1: The Study of Intelligence 1. Sources and Methods for the Study of IntelligenceMichael Warner 2. The American Approach to Intelligence Studies James J. Wirtz 3. TheHistoriography of the FBI Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones 4. Intelligence Ethics: Laying a Foundationfor the Second Oldest Profession Michael Andregg

Part 2: The Evolution of Modern Intelligence 5. The Accountability of Security andIntelligence Agencies Ian Leigh 6. ’Knowing the Self, Knowing the Other’: TheComparative Analysis of Security Intelligence Peter Gill 7. U.S. Patronage of GermanPostwar Intelligence Wolfgang Krieger

Part 3: The Intelligence Cycle Collection and Processing 8. The Technical Collectionof Intelligence Jeffrey Richelson 9. Human Source Intelligence Frederick P. Hitz 10. OpenSource Intelligence Robert David Steele 11. Adapting Intelligence to Changing Issues PaulR. Pillar 12. The Challenges of Economic Intelligence Minh A. Luong

Part 4: The Intelligence Cycle and the Crafting of Intelligence Reports: Analysisand Dissemination 13. Strategic Warning: Intelligence Support in a World ofUncertainty and Surprise Jack Davis 14. Achieving All-Source Fusion in the IntelligenceCommunity Richard L. Russell 15. Adding Value to the Intelligence Product Steven Marrin16. Analysis for Strategic Intelligence John Hollister Hedley

Part 5: Counterintelligence and Covert Action 17. Cold War Intelligence DefectorsNigel West 18. Counterintelligence Failures in the United States Stan A. Taylor19. Émigré Intelligence Reporting: Sifting Fact from Fiction Mark Stout 20. Linus Pauling:A Case Study in Counterintelligence Run Amok Kathryn S. Olmsted 21. The Role ofCovert Action William J. Daugherty 22. The Future of Covert Action John Prados

Part 6: Intelligence Accountability 23. Intelligence Oversight in the UK: The Case ofIraq Mark Phythian 24. Intelligence Accountability: Challenges for Parliaments andIntelligence Services Hans Born and Thorsten Wetzling 25. Intelligence and the Rise ofJudicial Intervention Fred F. Manget 26. A Shock Theory of Congressional Accountabilityfor Intelligence Loch K. Johnson. Appendixes A. The US Intelligence Community, 2006B. Leadership of the US Intelligence Community, 2006 C. The Intelligence Cycle

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Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian PoliticsEdited by Richard Robison, Murdoch University, Australia

The Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Politics provides a comprehensive analysis of the major themes, conflicts and ideas that have defined and shaped the politics ofSoutheast Asia in the modern period.

The Handbook is organised into six thematic parts :

•Part 1 provides an analysis of how the dominant powerful political and social coalitions of the region and the blueprints for authoritarian rule were forged in the Cold War era

•Part 2 assesses the complex processes of transition towards various forms of democratic politics and the way populism and money politics vie with more secular ideas of technocraticrule to shape emerging regimes and systems of governance

•Part 3 deals with the politics of markets and how institutions and systems of governance are being forged in an increasingly global environment

•Part 4 addresses whether civil society in Southeast Asia has really evolved as an independent sphere of social and political activity and power outside the control of powerful states

•Part 5 considers the challenges to the authority of national and secular forms of state authority posed by ongoing violence and conflict and by various ethnic and regional forces

•Part 6 examines how national governments are dealing with matters such as labour, human rights, the environment and security across the region spill beyond national boundariesand within a new global framework.

This authoritative Handbook in both scope and quality engages the Southeast Asian experience firmly with larger debates about how modern political systems and modern states areformed and how countries and regions are drawn into the global system.

June 2011: 246 x 174: 356ppHb: 978-0-415-49427-4: $175.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

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Selected Contents

Part 1: The Cold War Genesis of Politics in Southeast Asia 2. Comparisons ofDifferent Post-colonial/Cold War Regimes 3. The Defeat of the Left and Liberal Politics

Part 2: Political Regimes in the Post-Cold War period 4. Democracy, Decentralisationand Money Politics (Indonesia, Malaysia) 5. The Rise/Consolidation of PopulistDemocracies in Southeast Asia (Thaksin in Thailand) 6. One Party Democracies or the Riseof New Forms and Ideologies of Authoritarianism (Malaysia, Singapore) 7. Vietnam: TheReform of Politics and State as the Incubator of New Political Forces

Part 3: The Politics of Markets and the Rise of Governance 8. Building theRegulatory State and the Politics of Governance 9. The Politics of Corruption 10. ThePolitics of Rule of Law 11. The Privatisation of Governance

Part 4: Civil Society and Politics 12. Organized Labour, the Non-existence of LabourParties and the Politics of the New Urban Poor 13. Social Movements and NGOs in thePolitics of the Region 14. Human Rights Issues and Women’s Organisation 15. ThePolitics of Public Goods 16. Land as a New Big Political Issue in the Coming Decades andthe Collision of State Officials, Private Capital and the Peasantry 17. Urbanization and theRole of Citizens and the Middle Classes in Influencing State Policy Authority

Part 5: National States and Secular Authority under threat 18. The Role of Islam inPolitics, Islamic Political Movements and Radical and Violent Islamic Movements 19. TheWar on Terror 20. Ethnic Armies, the Politics of Narcotics and Fractured States: The Caseof Burma 21. Demands for Autonomy and Secession; Indonesia (Timor, Aceh, Papua) andIslamic Secession Movements (Thailand and the Philippines) 22. Resolving the Legacies ofViolence and Conflict: The Case of Cambodia

Part 6: Forging a Regional and Global Compact 23. Problems Across the Region: ThePolitics of Labour Migration and Cross-Border Flows 24. The Politics of Trade 25. ThePolitics of Security and the Accommodation to Shifting Global Geo-Politics 26. A Minnowin Two Spheres of Influence – Caught Between US and China. Bibliography

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Routledge Handbook of Asian RegionalismEdited by Mark Beeson, University of Western Australia and Richard Stubbs, McMaster University, Canada

The Routledge Handbook of Asian Regionalism is a definitive introduction to, and analysis of, the development of regionalism in Asia, including coverage of East Asia, Southeast Asiaand South Asia. The result will be a comprehensive exploration of what is arguably the most dynamic and important region in the world. Significantly, this volume addresses themultiple manifestations of regionalism in Asia and is consequently organised thematically under the headings of:

•Conceptualising the Asian Region

•Economic Issues

•Political Issues

•Strategic Issues

•Regional Organizations.

The Routledge Handbook of Asian Regionalism will be an indispenable resource for students and scholars of Asia politics, international relations and regionalism.

June 2011: 246 x 174: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-58054-0: $180.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415580540

Introduction

Part 1: Conceptualizing the Asian region 1. Theories of Regionalism 2. CompetingRegions: East Asia vs the Asia-Pacific 3. The Importance of Memory 4. History of Asia5. Maritime Connections

Part 2: Economic Issues 6. Asian Models of Capitalism 7. The Overseas Chinese 8. TheDevelopmental State 9. The Role of MNCs 10. Trade Integration 11. FinancialCooperation 12. China-ASEAN Free Trade Agreement

Part 3: Political Issues 13. Asian Values and Ways 14. Globalisation and Asia15. Sovereignty 16. Bottom up Regionalism/ASEAN People’s Forum 17. Corruption18. Human Rights 19. Asian Legal Systems 20. Democracy and Authoritarianism

Part 4: Strategic Issues 21. Geopolitical History and the Rise of China 22. RegionalLeadership Competition 23. Theoretical Approaches to Asian Security 24. ComprehensiveSecurity 25. Environmental Security 26. Non-Traditional Security 27. Energy Security

Part 5: Organizations 28. ASEAN 29. Asean Regional Forum 30. APEC 31. ASEAN+332. EAS 33. SCO 34. ASEM 35. SAARC

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Routledge Handbook of Indian PoliticsEdited by Atul Kohli, Princeton University, USA and Prerna Singh, Harvard University, USA

The Routledge Handbook of Indian Politics fulfils the current need for a concise yet comprehensive volume on the central themes of Indian Politics, fuelled by the growing economicand socio-political importance of this country and the need of scholars, analysts and students in understanding the ways in which the world’s largest democracy functions.

This Handbook comprises three sections:

•Section 1 ’The State’ examines a spectrum of India’s leaders; institutions such as political parties and federalism; economic growth and social development; and politics in different states

•Section 2 ’Society’ analyzes identity politics; the relationship between religion and society; and various aspects of civil society

•Section 3 ’International Perspectives’ discusses India’s foreign relations as well as a selection of national security issues.

Chapters are structured along the themes of state, society, and the politics that link the two in the context of post-Independence India. Written by experts in their respective field, thishandbook offers an invigorating initiation into the seemingly daunting and complex terrain of Indian politics.

February 2011: 246 x 174: 480ppHb: 978-0-415-77685-1: $175.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415776851

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Routledge Handbook of Central Asian PoliticsEdited by Reuel R. Hanks, Oklahoma State University, USA

Written by experts on the region’s complex politics, this Handbook provides an in depth understanding of political issues in the five states of Central Asia. It is structured along thethemes of security and stability, development of political institutions and national integration, issues in political economy and international relations.

January 2011: 246 x 174: 368ppHb: 978-0-415-77676-9: $175.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415776769

Introduction

Part 1: Security and Stability 1. The Politicization of Islam 2. The Status of MinorityPopulations and Interethnic Conflict 3. Border Issues Between Central Asian States4. Water Resources and Stability e.g. Military Power and Capacity

Part 2: Development of Political Institutions and National Integration5. Development of Institutions/Civil Society 6. Democratization of Political System7. Construction of National Identity 8. Corruption, Patronage and Clan Politics 9. Roleand Development of Media 10. Educational Reform

Part 3: Issues in Political Economy 11. Economic Development and Political Issues12. The Drug Trade 13. Human Trafficking and the Status of Women 14. Internal andExternal Migration 15. Environmental Degradation 16. Infrastructure andCommunications

Part 4: International Relations 17. Geopolitics and International Organizations18. Relations with Russia 19. Relations with U.S. 20. Relations with South Asia(Afghanistan, Pakistan, India) 21. Relations with China 22. Relations with the EU23. Geopolitics of Oil and Energy

Selected Contents

Selected Contents

Introduction Atul Kohli and Prerna Singh(1) State 1.1. Historical Legacy 1.1.1 The Colonial Inheritance

1.2 Leaders 1.2.1 Gandhi 1.2.2 The Nehruvian Legacy 1.2.3 The Iron Man: Patel andthe Integration of India 1.2.3 Indira’s India 1.2.4 India’s Minority Leaders 1.2.5 The PoetPrime Minister

1.3 Political Institutions Political Parties 1.3.1 The Congress System and its Decline1.3.2 The Rise of the BJP 1.3.3 The Emerging Influence of Regional and Caste-basedParties/ Emergence of Coalition Politics 1.3.4 Elections and Electoral Behavior1.3.5 Judiciary 1.3.6 The Bureaucracy 1.3.7 Panchayati Raj Institutions Federalism1.3.8 Nature and Construction of India’s Federal Structure 1.3.9 Centre-State Relations(including challenges to the centre - Kashmir, Punjab, North East)

1.4 Economic and Social Development 1.4.1 India’ Economic Development1.4.2 Business and Politics 1.4.3 The Politics of Redistribution 1.4.4 Corruption1.4.5 The Politics of Public Goods Provision 1.4.6 Unemployment, Labour Regulationsand Trade Unions 1.4.7 Outsourcing

1.5 A View from the States 1.5.1 Uttar Pradesh 1.5.2 Kerala 1.5.3 Tamil Nadu1.5.4 West Bengal 1.5.5 Bihar

(2) Society 2.1 Identity Politics 2.1.1 Language Politics 2.1.2 Caste Politics 2.1.3Class Politics 2.1.4 Reservations 2.1.5 Hindu-Muslim Conflict and Civic Life 2.1.6 Hindu-Muslim Conflict and Party Competition

2.2. Religion and Society 2.2.1 Religion and Politics 2.2.2 Muslims in Indian Politics

2.3. Civil Society Social Movements and Agrarian Struggles 2.3.1 Dalit Movements inIndia 2.3.2 Agrarian Struggles Gender Politics 2.3.2 Women’s MovementsEnvironmental Movements 2.3.3 The Chipko Movement 2.3.4 The Narmada BachaoAndolan Other Aspects 2.3.5 Human Rights Issues 2.3.6 Role of NGOs in Politics2.3.7 Migration and the Indian Diaspora (including India’s politics towards the diasporaand the role of the diaspora)

(3) International Perspective 3.1 India and the World 3.2 India in Asia 3.3 Indo-USRelations 3.4 India-European Relations 3.5 India-Russia Relations National Security Issues3.6) India’s Relations with Pakistan 3.7 India and the Bomb 3.8 Security and Terrorism

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Routledge Handbook of South Asian PoliticsIndia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and NepalEdited by Paul R. Brass, University of Washington, USA

The Routledge Handbook of South Asian Politics examines key issues in politics of the five independent states of the South Asian region: India, Pakistan,Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Nepal. Written by experts in their respective areas, this Handbook introduces the reader to the politics of South Asia bypresenting the prevailing agreements and disagreements in the literature.

The Handbook comprises seven sections providing comprehensive coverage, including:

•an overview of the independence movements in the former colonial states

•the political changes that have occurred in the postcolonial states since independence

•the structure and functioning of the main governmental and non-governmental institutions

•the structure of the state (unitary or federal)

•political parties, the judiciary, and the military

•political processes and political and economic change, including issues of pluralism & national integration and political economy

•radical and violent political movements

•the international politics of the region.

This unique reference work provides a comprehensive and up-to-date survey of the state of the field and is an invaluable resource for students andacademics interested in South Asian Studies, South Asian Politics, Comparative Politics and International Relations.

April 2010: 246 x 174: 480ppHb: 978-0-415-43429-4: $175.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publicationeBook: 978-0-203-87818-7

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415434294

1.Introduction Paul R. Brass

Part 1: Colonialism, Nationalism, and Independence in South Asia: India, Pakistan,and Sri Lanka 1. India and Pakistan Ian Talbot 2. Sri Lanka’s Independence: ShadowsOver a Colonial Graft Nira Wickramasinghe

Part 2: Political Change, Political Parties, and the Issue of Unitary vs. FederalForms of Government 3. Political Change, Political Structure and the Indian State SinceIndependence John Harriss 4. Parties and Politics in India Virginia Van Dyke 5. Pakistan’sPolitics and Its Economy Shahid Javed Burki 6. Party Overinstitutionalization, Contestationand Democratic Degradation in Bangladesh Harry Blair 7. Politics and Governance inPost-Independence Sri Lanka Neil DeVotta 8. Trajectories of Democracy and Restructuringof the State in Nepal Krishna Hachhethu and David N. Gellner Federalism and Centre-State Relations 9. The Old and the New Federalism in Independent India Lloyd I.Rudolph and Susanne Hoeber Rudolph

Part 3: The Judiciary 10. India’s Judiciary: Imperium in Imperio? Shylashri Shankar11. Balancing Act: Prudence, Impunity and Pakistan’s Jurisprudence Paula R. Newberg12. Confronting Constitutional Curtailments: Attempts to Rebuild Independence of theJudiciary in Bangladesh Sara Hossein and Tanjib-ul Alam 13. Executive Sovereignty: TheJudiciary in Sri Lanka Shylashri Shankar

Part 4: Pluralism and National Integration: Language Issues 14. Politics of Languagein India E. Annamalai 15. Language Problems and Politics in Pakistan Tariq Rahman

Part 5: Crises of National Unity 16. Crises of National Unity in India: Punjab, Kashmirand the Northeast Gurharpal Singh 17. Communal and Caste Politics and Conflicts inIndia Steven I. Wilkinson 18. Ethnic and Islamic Militancy in Pakistan MohammadWaseem 19. Ethnic Conflict and the Civil War in Sri Lanka Jayadeva Uyangoda

Part 6: Political Economy India 20. The Political Economy of Development in IndiaSince Independence Stuart Corbridge 21. The Political Economy of Agrarian Change inIndia Jan Breman Sri Lanka 22. Economic Development and Socio-Political Change in SriLanka since Independence W. D. Lakshman

Part 7: Comparative Chapters 23. The Militaries of South Asia Stephen P. Cohen24. Corruption and the Criminalization of Politics in South Asia Stanley A. Kochanek25. Radical and Violent Political Movements Sumanta Banerjee 26. The InternationalPolitics of South Asia Vernon Hewitt. Bibliography

Selected Contents

Handbook of Human RightsEdited by Thomas Cushman

The Handbook maps out the field of human rights for the humanities and social sciences. It provides a solid foundation for the reader who wants to learn the basic parameters of thefield, but also to promote new thinking and frameworks for the future study of human rights in the twenty-first century.

December 2010: 246 x 174: 584ppHb: 978-0-415-48023-9: $180.00 Rising to $195.00 three months after publicationeBook: 978-0-203-88703-5

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415480239

Part 1: Historical Perspectives and Basic Concepts 1. Rights in Historical Perspective2. Major Philosophers of Rights 3. Universal and Particular Rights Revisited 4. Types ofRights 5. Critiques of Rights

Part 2: Cultural Dimensions of Human Rights 6. Existential Bases of Human Rights7. Human Rights as Cultural Practices and Orientations 8. Human Rights, the Sacred, andInstutionalized Religions 9. The Past in the Present of Human Rights

Part 3: The Disciplines and Human Rights 10. Human Rights and Non-State Actors11. Legal and Political Processes and Human Rights 12. Human Rights Practice andMobilization 13. Human Rights, Violence, and the Use of Force

Part 4: Representations of Human Rights 14. Human Rights of Vulnerable Groups 5.Biological Characteristics and Vulnerability 16. The Rights of Subordinate Classes andMarginal Peoples 17. Human Rights and Vulnerable Bodies 18. Globalization Processesand Human Rights

Part 5: The Geography of Human Rights 19. North America 20. Europe 21. LatinAmerica 22. Africa 23. The Middle East 24. Human Rights in Asia and South Asia

Part 6: The Future of Human Rights: Perspectives From Leading Scholars andHuman Rights Practitioners

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Routledge Handbook of Japanese PoliticsEdited by Alisa Gaunder, Southwestern University, USA

The Routledge Handbook of Japanese Politics is an advanced level reference guide which surveys the current state of Japanese Politics, featuring both traditional topics and cuttingedge research.

The volume is divided into five sections covering domestic politics, civil society, social policy, political economy and international relations/security. The first four sections begin with anoverview chapter that provides historical background information on the section’s overarching topic. The chapters that follow explore more specific topics in the sub-area. In the finalsection, historical background information is contained in the individual chapters which cover the diverse areas of international political economy, security and foreign policy.

Offering a complete overview of the full spectrum of Japanese politics, the Handbook is an invaluable resource for academics, researchers, policy analysts, graduate andundergraduate students studying this ever-evolving field.

December 2010: 246 x 174: 400ppHb: 978-0-415-55137-3: $180.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publication

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415551373

Selected Contents

Part 1: Domestic Politics 1. The ’1955 System’, Reform in the 1990s and the CurrentInstitutional Landscape of National Politics 2. The Liberal Democratic Party: AnExplanation of its Continued Dominance 3. The Democratic Party of Japan: PartyLeadership, Organization and Ideology 4. The Dynamics of Coalition Government inJapan 5. Prime Ministerial Leadership: Did Koizumi Institutionalize a Strong PrimeMinistership and Cabinet or Does Strong Prime Ministerial Leadership RemainIdiosyncratic? 6. The Effects of the Lower House Electoral System (post-1994) on PoliticalParty Organization, Voting and Electioneering 7. Electioneering in Japan: The Role ofPersonal Support Organizations and Local Branch Offices and/or the Strategies ofIndividual Politicians 8. Money and Politics: The Effects of the New Political FundingRegulations Over the Last 15 years 9. Law and Politics: The Role of Courts in PolicyMaking 10. Local Politics

Part 2: Civil Society 11. An Overview of the Landscape of Civil Society in Japan12. NPOs and Judicial Reform 13. Civil Society and the Internet 14. The LaborMovement 15. The Rightist Movement 16. The Women’s Movement

Part 3: Social Policy 17. Overview of the Japanese Welfare State 18. Policies for anAging Society (Pension and Healthcare) 19. Policies Addressing the Emerging Income Gap20. Gender Related Policies 21. Immigration Policy 22. Environmental Policy

Part 4: Political Economy 23. Institutional Changes in the Japanese Model ofCapitalism 24. The Dynamics of the Post-Bubble Economy 25. The Debate OverEconomic Reform 26. The Politics and Implications of Postal System Reform

Part 5: International Relations and Security 27. Japan and East Asian EconomicRegionalism 28. Japan’s Security Policy in East Asia 29. The Politics of ConstitutionalRevision 30. Japan-U.S. Relations 31. Japan-China Relations 32. Japan-EU Relations 33.Japan as a ’Soft Power’ Superpower and/or Japan’s Response to International Norms

Routledge Handbook of Regionalism & FederalismEdited by John Loughlin, Cardiff University, UK

Federalism is a system of government in which central and regional authorities are linked in an interdependent political relationship in which powers and functions are distributed withthe aim of maintaining a substantial degree of autonomy and integrity in the regional units. Federalism is a key organising principle in many countries including the United States,Canada, Brazil, Australia, India, Russia, Germany, Switzerland, Austria and Belgium as well as the European Union.

Regionalism is closely linked to federalism and refers both to the advocacy and institutional representation of the interests of a particular sub-national region and, in transnationalterms, to the creation and implementation of institutions which express a common sense of identity and purpose within a geographical region. Examples of the former would includedevolution in the UK, and autonomous regions within Spain, Italy, Poland and Romania while examples of transnational regionalism include the European Union, NAFTA, Mercosur,ASEAN and the African Union.

Traditional political science classified states as either federal or unitary with a clear distinction between each category. Over the past thirty years or so, however, this basic distinctionhas become increasingly inadequate to capture the complexity of evolving state forms. This complexity is largely a product of wider processes of change taking place in the economic,social, political and cultural spheres such as globalization, new forms of economic production and exchange and developments within administrative reform such as New PublicManagement and deregulation. In Europe, the accelerating processes of European integration and the partial strengthening of the federal aspects of the EU since the 1980s have alsocreated a new situation of complexity for the EU’s member states.

Research by scholars in the field of federalism and regionalism have shown the many different forms of federalism and regionalism. The complexity of these forms means that it hasbeen necessary to develop new typologies which also demonstrate that there is now a considerable overlap between both federal and unitary states.

This Handbook draws together the main theoretical themes of this current research and provides a comprehensive overview of regionalism and federalism in contemporary globalpolitics. It covers evolving forms of federalism and regionalism in all parts of the world and features a comprehensive range of case studies by leading international scholars.

June 2011: 246 x 174: 368ppHb: 978-0-415-56621-6: $180.00 Rising to $199.00 three months after publicationFor more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415566216

1. Introduction John Loughlin

Part 1: Theorizing Federalism 2. Typologies of Federalism Ron Watts 3. TheorizingFederalism Dan Kelemen 4. Federalism and Federation Michael Burgess 5. MultinationalFederalism Alain-G Gagnon 6. Pluralist Federalism Ferran Requejo

Part 2: Case Studies of Federalism 7. The United States John Kincaid 8. CanadaRon Watts 9. Russia 10. Germany Arthur Benz 11. Belgium Kris Deschouwer12. Switzerland 13. Australia Cheryl Saunders 14. Brazil 15. Nigeria Rotimi Suberu16. South Africa 17. India 18. Malaysia 19. Failed Federations: Yugoslavia andCzechoslovakia

Part 3: Theorizing Regions, Regionalism and Regionalization 20. The NewRegionalism Michael Keating 21. Multilevel Governance in the EU Gary Marks andLiesbet Hooghe 22. Regionalism and Small Nation Nationalism John Loughlin23. Economic Regionalism John Agnew 24. Regionalism and Globalization WilfriedSchwenden

Part 4: Case Studies of Regionalism and Regionalization 25. Decentralization andRegionalization in France Alistair Cole 26. The Spanish Autonomic State Francesc Morata27. The Italian ‘Federal’ State Francesco Merloni 28. Devolution in the UK Charlie Jeffery29. Poland 30. Romania Ana Maria Dobre

Part 5: Transnationalism Regionalism 31. European Union 32. NAFTA 33. AfricanUnion 34. Mercosur 35. Asean 36. Conclusions: Comparing Trends in Federalism andRegionalism J. Loughlin

Selected Contents

15

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Routledge Handbook of Public DiplomacyEdited by Nancy Snow, Syracuse University, New York, USA and Philip M. Taylor, University of Leeds, UK

This Handbook provides a comprehensive overview of public diplomacy and national image and perception management, from the efforts to fosterpro-West sentiment during the Cold War to the post-9/11 campaign to ’win the hearts and minds’ of the Muslim world.

2008: 246 x 174: 408ppHb: 978-0-415-95301-6: $199.00Pb: 978-0-415-95302-3: $55.95eBook: 978-0-203-89152-0

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415953023

Introduction 1. Rethinking Public Diplomacy Nancy Snow 2. Public Diplomacy andStrategic Communication Philip M. Taylor

Part 1: The Context of Public Diplomacy 3. Public Diplomacy: The Evolution of aPhrase Nick Cull 4. Public Diplomacy as Loss of World Authority Michael Vlahos5. Public Opinion and Power Ali Wyne 6. Exchange Programs and Public Diplomacy GilesScott-Smith 7. Arts Diplomacy: The Neglected Aspect of Cultural Diplomacy John Brown

Part 2: Public Diplomacy Applications 8. Operationalizing Public Diplomacy MattArmstrong 9. Between ‘Take-offs’ and ‘Crash Landings’: Situational Aspects of PublicDiplomacy John Robert Kelley 10. Mapping Out a Spectrum of Public DiplomacyInitiatives: Informational and Relational Frameworks R.S. Zaharna 11. The Nexus of U.S.Public Diplomacy and Citizen Diplomacy Sherry Mueller

Part 3: Public Diplomacy Management: Image, Influence and Persuasion 12. PublicDiplomacy in International Conflicts: A Social Influence Analysis Anthony Pratkanis13. Credibility and Public Diplomacy Robert Gass and John Seiter 14. The CultureVariable in the Influence Equation Kelton Rhoads 15. Military Psychological Operations asPublic Diplomacy Mark Kilbane

Part 4: State and Non-State Actors in Public Diplomacy 16. American Business andIts Role in Public Diplomacy Keith Reinhard 17. The Public Diplomat: A First PersonAccount Peter Kovach 18. The Case for Localized Public Diplomacy William P. Kiehl19. The Distinction Between Public Affairs and Public Diplomacy Ken S. Heller and Liza M.Persson 20. Valuing Exchange of Persons in Public Diplomacy Nancy Snow

Part 5: Global Approaches to Public Diplomacy 21. Four Seasons in One Day: TheCrowded House of Public Diplomacy in the UK Ali Fisher 22. German Public Diplomacy:The Dialogue of Cultures Oliver Zoellner 23. Origin and Development of Japan’s PublicDiplomacy Tadashi Ogawa 24. China Talks Back: Public Diplomacy and Soft Power for theChinese Century Gary Rawnsley 25. Central and Eastern European Public Diplomacy: ATransitional Perspective on National Reputation Management Gyorgy Szondi26. Australian Public Diplomacy Naren Chitty

Part 6: Advancing Public Diplomacy Studies 27. How Globalization Became U.S.Public Diplomacy at the End of the Cold War Joseph Duffey 28. Ethics and Social Issuesin Public Diplomacy Richard Nelson and Foad Izadi 29. Noopolitik: A New Paradigm forPublic Diplomacy David Ronfeldt and John Arquilla

Selected Contents

Routledge Handbook of Political ManagementDennis W. Johnson, George Washington University, USA

A comprehensive overview of the field of applied politics, encompassing political consulting, campaigns and elections, lobbying and advocacy, grass rootspolitics, fundraising, media and political communications, the role of the parties, political leadership, and the ethical dimensions of public life.

2008: 246 x 174: 656ppHb: 978-0-415-96225-4: $199.00eBook: 978-0-203-89213-8

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415962254

Part 1: The Field of Political Management 1. Political Consulting: From its Inceptionto Today 2. Modern Political Campaigns in the United States 3. Political ConsultingWorldwide 4. Political Management and Political Science 5. Political Management andPolitical Communications 6. Political Management and Marketing

Part 2: American Campaigns and Elections 7. The Permanent Campaign 8. PoliticalManagement and the Technological Revolution 9. Message Testing in the Twenty-firstCentury 10. The New Media in Political Campaigns: What the Future Holds 11. The Riseand Influence of ’Monster’ PACs 12. The Promise and Futility of American CampaignFinancing 13. Campaigning Online 14. Selling the Presidency 2004: A MarketingPerspective 15. What Drives the Cost of Political Advertising? 16. Running for Office:The Candidate’s Job Gets Tougher, More Complex 17. The War of Ideas, Wedge Isues,Youth Recruitment, and Money 18. The Religious Right in American Politics

Part 3: Campaigns Worldwide 19. Television Campaigning Worldwide 20. MobileTechnology and Political Participation: What the Rest of the World Can Teach America21. The Modern British Campaign 22. German Elections and Modern CampaignTechniques 23. Falafel and Apple Pie: American Consultants, Modernization and

Americanization of Electoral Campaigns in Israel 24. Russia: Electoral Campaigning in a’Managed Democracy’ 25. Australia and the Modern Election Campaign 26. ElectionCampaigns in the Philippines 27. Evolution and Limitations of Modern Campaigning inEast Asia: A Case Study of Taiwan 28. Mexican 2000 Presidential Election: LongTransition or a Sudden Political Marketing Triumph?

Part 4: Lobbying and Advocacy 29. Creation of the U.S. Lobbying Industry 30. BestPractices in Online Advocacy for Associations, Nonprofits, and Corporations 31. BuildingConstituencies for Advocacy for Associations, Nonprofits, and Corporations 32. PoliticalConsultants, Interest Groups, and Issue Advocacy 33. Military and Defense Lobbying: ACase Study 34. Discoverying Our (Corporate) Grassroots: European Advocacy 2.0

Part 5: Political Parties, Political Management, and Democracy 35. CampaignConsultants and Political Parties Today 36. Network Marketing and American PoliticalParties 37. Managing a Market-Orientation in Opposition and Government: Cases in theU.K. and New Zealand 38. Machiavellian Marketing: Justifying the Ends and Means inModern Politics 39. The Ethics of Campaigns and Public Affairs 40. Winning Over aCynical Public: Debate over Stem Cell and Other Biotechnologies

Selected Contents

16

New in Paperback

Routledge Handbook of Internet PoliticsEdited by Andrew Chadwick, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK and Philip N. Howard, University of Washington, USA

A comprehensive set of resources, this Handbook provides linkages to established theories of media and politics, political communication, governance,deliberative democracy and social movements, all within an interdisciplinary context. Containing the latest survey data, the contributors form a stronginternational cast of established and junior scholars.

2008: 246 x 174: 528ppHb: 978-0-415-42914-6: $200.00Pb: 978-0-415-78058-2: $44.95eBook: 978-0-203-96254-1

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415780582

Selected Contents

1. Introduction

Part 1: Institutions 2. The Internet in US Election Campaigns 3. European PoliticalOrganizations and the Internet: Mobilization, Participation and Change 4. Electoral WebProduction Practices in Cross-National Perspective: The Relative Influence of NationalDevelopment, Political Culture, and Web Genre 5. Parties, Election Campaigning and theInternet: Toward a Comparative Institutional Approach 6. Technological Change and theShifting Nature of Political Organization 7. Making Parliamentary Democracy Visible:Speaking to, With and For the Public in the Age of Interactive Technology 8. BureaucraticReform and E-Government in the United States: An Institutional Perspective 9. PublicManagement Change and E-Government: The Emergence of Digital Era Governance

Part 2: Behavior 10. Wired to Fact: The Role of the Internet in Identifying DeceptionDuring the 2004 US Presidential Campaign 11. Political Engagement Online: Do theInformation Rich Get Richer and the Like-Minded More Similar? 12. Information, theInternet and Direct Democracy 13. Toward Digital Citizenship: Addressing Inequality inthe Information Age 14. Online News Creation and Consumption: Implications forModern Democracies 15. Web 2.0 and the Transformation of News and Journalism

Part 3: Identities 16. The Internet and the Changing Global Media Environment17. The Virtual Sphere 2.0: The Internet, the Public Sphere and Beyond 18. Identity,Technology and Narratives: Transnational Activism and Social Networks 19. TheorizingGender and the Internet: Past, Present, and Future 20. New Immigrants, the Internet,and Civic Society 21. One Europe, Digitally Divided 22. Working Around the State:Internet Use and Political Identity in the Arab World

Part 4: Law and Policy 23. The Geopolitics of Internet Control: Censorship, Sovereigntyand Cyberspace 24. Locational Surveillance: Embracing the Patterns of Our Lives25. Metaphoric Reinforcement of the Virtual Fence: Factors Shaping the Political Economyof Property in Cyberspace 26. Globalizing the Logic of Openness: Open Source Softwareand the Global Governance of Intellectual Property 27. Exclusionary Rules? The Politics ofProtocols 28. The New Politics of the Internet: Multistakeholder Policy Making and theInternet Technocracy 29. Enabling Effective Multistakeholder Participation in GlobalInternet Governance Through Accessible Cyberinfrastructure 30. Internet Diffusion andthe Digital Divide: The Role of Policymaking and Political Institutions 31. Conclusion

Routledge Handbook of Religion and PoliticsEdited by Jeff Haynes, London Metropolitan University, UK

From the United States to the Middle East, Asia and Africa, religion has become an increasingly important factor in political activity and organisation. ThisHandbook provides a definitive global survey of the interaction of religion and politics.

Featuring contributions from an international team of experts, it examines the political aspects of all the world’s major religions, including such crucialcontemporary issues as religious fundamentalism, terrorism, the war on terror, the ’clash of civilizations’ and science and religion.

Four main themes addressed include:

•the World religions and politics

•religion and governance

•religion and international relations

•religion, security and development.

References at the end of each chapter guide the reader towards the most up-to-date information on various topics. In addition, large amounts ofinformation make this book an indispensable source of information for students, academics and the wider public interested in the dynamic relationshipbetween politics and religion.

2008: 246 x 174: 448ppHb: 978-0-415-41455-5: $155.00Pb: 978-0-415-60029-3: $44.95eBook: 978-0-203-89054-7

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415414555

1. Introduction

Part 1: The World Religions and Politics 2. Buddhism and Politics 3. Christianity:Protestantism 4. The Catholic Church and Catholicism in Global Politics 5. Confucianism,from Above and Below 6. Hinduism 7. Sunni Islam and Politics 8. Shiism and Politics9. Judaism and the State

Part 2: Religion and Governance 10. Secularisation and Politics 11. ReligiousFundamentalisms 12. Religion and the State 13. Does God Matter, and If So whoseGod? Religion and Democratization 14. Religion and Political Parties 15. Religion andCivil Society 16. Religious Commitment and Socio-Political Orientations: DifferentPatterns of Compartmentalisation among Muslims and Christians?

Part 3: Religion and International Relations 17. Integrating Religion into InternationalRelations Theory 18. Religion and Foreign Policy 19. Transnational Religious Actors andInternational Relations 20. Religion and Globalisation

Part 4: Religion, Security and Development 21. On the Nature of Religious Terrorism22. Conflict Prevention and Peacebuilding 23. Religion and Women: Canadian Women’sReligious Volunteering: Compassion, Connections, and Comparisons 24. Faith-basedDevelopment Aid 25. Religion, Climate Change and Human Suffering

Selected Contents

17

Routledge Handbooks

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Routledge Handbooks

www.routledge.com/politics

Routledge Handbook of Political IslamEdited by Shahram Akbarzadeh, University of Melbourne, Australia

This Handbook provides a multidisciplinary overview of one of the key political movements of our time. Drawing on the expertise from some of the top scholars in the world it examinestheoretical and historical backgrounds, terrorism, strategy, case studies of Islamist movements in the developing world and the West, and the relationship with democracy and gender issues.

January 2011: 234 x 156: 424ppHb: 978-0-415-48473-2: $199.00

For more information, visit: www.routledge.com/9780415484732

1. Introduction 2. Political Thoughts of Seyyed Qutb 3. The Emerging Political Philosophyof Contemporary Islamism 4. Muslim Brotherhood 5. Hamas between Pragmatism andRadicalism 6. Velayat-e Faqih 7. Hizbullah in Lebanon 8. Hizb ut-Tahrir 9. Emergence ofPolitical Islam in Central Asia 10. Preserving Muslim Identity under Secular Rule in Turkey11. Merging Islam and Democracy in Iran? 12. Rise of Islamism in Pakistan 13. Limits ofIslamic Legitimacy in Saudi Arabia 14. Islamic Radicalism in Indonesia

15. The Significance of the Arab Israeli Conflict 16. Islamism and Political Violence – AlQaeda 17. The Challenge of Muslim Integration in the West 18. Radicalism in the UnitedKingdom 19. Islamic Education as Incubator of Radicalism? 20. Attitude Towards Women21. Islamism and the US Policy 22. The Clash of Civilizations 23. Islam and Modern

Selected Contents

Part 1: Introduction: Scott Byrd, Ellen Reese, Jackie Smith and Elizabeth Smythe

Part 2: The World Social Forum: Towards Global Democracy?

1. Social Fora as Public Stage and Infrastructure of Global Justice Movements Dieter Rucht2. The Political and its Absence in the WSF: Implications for Democracy Teivo Teivanen3. Horizontalist Youth Camps and the Bolivarian Revolution: A Story of Blocked DiffusionLeslie Wood 4. Deliberative Discussion, Language, and Efficiency in the World SocialForum Process Nicole Doerr 5. Freeing Software and Opening Space: Social Forums andthe Cultural Politics of Technology Jeffrey S. Juris, Giuseppe Caruso, and Lorenzo Mosca

Part 3: Regional and Local Participation: Movements, Space, and Place 6. (In)FertileGround? Social Forum Activism in its Regional and Local Dimension Peter Smith andElizabeth Smythe 7. African Voices and Activists at the WSF in Nairobi: The UncertainWays of Transnational African Activism Marie-Emmanuelle Pommerolle and JohannaSiméant 8. Global Movements in Local Struggles: Findings on the Social Forum Process inItaly Donatella della Porta and Lorenzo Mosca 9. Emerging Visions of Another World?Contestation and collaboration at the Quebec Social Forum Pascale Dufour and JanetConway 10. Spaces of Intentionality: Race, Class and Horizontality at the United StatesSocial Forum Jeffrey Juris

Part 4: Social Movements and the Social Forum Process 11. We are the Ones WeHave Been Waiting For: The U.S. Social Forum in Context Jackie Smith, Jeffrey Juris, andthe USSF Research Collective 12. More than a Shadow of a Difference? FeministParticipation in the World Social Forum Lyndi Hewitt and Marina Karides 13. BuildingNational Labor Solidarity: Unions and Labor Activists at the 2007 U.S. Social Forum EllenReese, Kadambari Anantram, Linda J. Kim, Roy Kwon, and Preeta Saxena 14. The DalitMovement Meets the Social Forum: A Global Struggle for Social Justice and HumanRights Jay Smith 15. Indigenous Peoples and Social Forums Marc Becker and Ashley N.Koda

Part 5: Bridging Movements: Networks and Campaigns 16. The World SocialForums as a Bounded Open Space: Maintain It, Fix It, or Nix It? Evidence from Post-9/11Global Antiwar Activism Ruth Reitan 17. From Porto Alegre to Live 8 to Davos:Mainstreaming the Global Call to Action Against Poverty Ana Velitchkova 18. Our Worldis Not for Sale! The WSF Process and Transnational Resistance to International TradeAgreements Elizabeth Smythe 19. Global Environmentalists and Their Movements at theWorld Social Forums Matheu Kaneshiro, Kirk S. Lawrence, and Christopher Chase-Dunn

Part 6: Conclusion Thomas Ponniah and Scott Byrd

Selected Contents

18

The Routledge Handbook of the World Social ForumEdited by Scott Byrd, University of California, Irvine, USA, Ellen Reese, University of California, Riverside, USA, Jackie Smith, University of Notre Dame, USA, andElizabeth Smythe, Concordia University College of Alberta, Canada

Series: Rethinking Globalizations

This Handbook is a comprehensive reference guide to the World Social Forum (WSF), and an invaluable resource for scholars of Globalization, International Organizations andInternational Relations.

The book brings together the work of social historians and scientists from a range of disciplines and countries to document and analyze the Social Forum process. It examines thetheoretical and political implications of the WSF at the local and global levels. Overall, the volume furthers the understanding of the dynamics of democratization and coalition buildingwithin an era of globalization and transnational activism.

March 2011: 246x174: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-59771-5 $199.00

For more information visit: www.routledge.com/9780415597715

Introduction - Israel and the Palestinians: One Land Two Peoples

Part 1: Origins and Background 1. Palestinian Nationalism 2. Zionism

Part 2: History of Conflict 3. 1948 War: Origins and Consequences 4. 1967 War:Origins and Consequences 5. Israel and the Occupied Territories 1967-936. The Palestinian Intifadah

Part 3: Seeking Peace 7. International Efforts: 1967-1993 8. The Oslo Accords 9. TheOslo Process 10. The Camp David Summit 11. Track II Diplomacy 12. InternationalEfforts: 2001-2008: From the Road Map to Annapolis

Part 4: Domestic Politics and Actors 13. Israeli 14. The Israeli Settler Movement15. Palestinian Citizens of Israel 16. Palestinian Politics 17. The PLO 18. Hamas

Part 5: Critical Issues 19. Refugees 20. Jerusalem 21. Borders and Territory 22. Water23. Settlements 24. Disengagement, Separation and Israeli Security Barrier 25. Terrorism

Part 6: International and Regional Involvement 26. United States 27. Europe28. The Arab World 29. International Donor Assistance 30. International Invention andPeacekeeping. Conclusion: Prospects for Peace and the Two State Solution

Selected Contents

Routledge Handbook of the Israeli-Palestinian ConflictEdited by David Newman, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel and Joel Peters, Virginia Tech University, USA

This Handbook provides an overview of the most contentious and protracted political issue in the Middle East. The editors have gathered together a range of the top experts onthe Palestinian-Israeli conflict. They tackle a range of topics from historical background, through to peace efforts, domestic politics, critical issues such as refugees and settlermovements, and the role of outside players such as the Arab states, US and EU.

November 2010: 246x174: 384ppHb: 978-0-415-77862-6 $199.00

For more information visit: www.routledge.com/9780415778626

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