H-Diplo - H-Net

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H-Diplo - H-Net
[jw]
H-Diplo
JOURNAL WATCH, J to Z
H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review
Second Quarter 2016
17 April 2016
Compiled by Lubna Qureshi, Stockholm University
Journal of African Studies, Vol. 57, Issue 1 (2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AFH&volumeId=57&issueId=01&
iid=10189140
Global Currency Trade and Economic Transformation in Western Africa
• Toby Green, “Africa and the Price Revolution: Currency Imports and Socioeconomic Change in
West and West-Central Africa During the Seventeenth Century,” 1.
Marriage and the Roots of Political Power in Islamic West Africa
• Jan Jensen, “When Marrying a Muslim: The Social Code of Political Elites in the Western
Sudan, c. 1600-c. 1850,” 25.
The Politics of Kingship in Central Africa’s Historiography
• David M. Gordon, “(Dis)embodying Sovereignty: Divine Kingship in Central African
Historiography,” 47 .
Healing and Literacy in Ghana
• Abena Dove Osseo-Asare, “Writing Medical Authority: The Rise of Literate Healers in Ghana,
1930-70,” 69.
Challenges to Nation Building in Ethiopia and Chad
• Luca Puddu, “State Building, Rural Development, and the Making of a Frontier Regime in
Northeastern Ethiopia, c. 1944-75,” 93.
• Judith Scheele, “The Libyan Connection: Settlement, War, and Other Entanglements in
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
Northern Chad,” 115.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of American-East Asian Relations, Vol. 23, Issue 1 (2016)
http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/18765610
• James R. Prescott, “Ramón Magsaysay - The Myth and the Man,” 7.
• Eric Setzekorn, “Eisenhower’s Mutual Security Program: Taiwan as ‘Strategic Bargain’,” 33.
• P. Michael Rattanasengchanh, “U.S.-Thai Public Diplomacy,” 56.
_____________________________________________________________________________
The Journal of American History, Vol. 102, Issue 4 (March 2016)
http://jah.oxfordjournals.org/content/102/4.toc
• Christopher M. Florio, “From Poverty to Slavery: Abolitionists, Overseers, and the Global
Struggle for Labor in India,” 1005.
• Yael A. Sternhell, “The Afterlives of a Confederate Archive: Civil War Documents and the
Making of Sectional Reconciliation,” 1025.
• Cybelle Fox, “Unauthorized Welfare: The Origins of Immigrant Status Restrictions in American
Social Policy,” 1051.
• Frank Costigliola, “‘I React Intensely to Everything’: Russia and the Frustrated Emotions of
George F. Kennan, 1933-1958,” 1075.
Editor’s Choice
• “Surprising Opportunities for Historians: Taking Control of the Assessment Process,” 1102.
Textbooks and Teaching
• Anne Hyde, “Five Reasons History Professors Suck at Assessment,” 1104.
• Gary Kroll, Jessamyn Neuhaus, and Wendy Gordon, “Slouching toward Student-Centered
Assessment,” 1108.
• Jeffrey McClurken and Krystyn Moon, “Making Assessment Work for You,” 1123.
• James Grossman and Julia Brookins, “Assessment is What We Make of It,” 1132.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of American Studies, Vol. 50, Issue 1 (February 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=AMS&volumeId=50&issueId=01
2|Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
&iid=10145431
• Janice Radway, “Girl Zine Networks, Underground Itineraries, and Riot Grrrl History: Making
Sense of the Struggle for New Social Forms in the 1990s and Beyond,” 1.
• Esther Lezra, “The Antillean Jewel and the European Imaginary: The Language of the
Unspeakable in Denis Diderot’s Les bijoux indiscrets,” 33.
• Nicholas Higgins, “Achieving Human Perfection: Benjamin Franklin contra George
Whitefield,” 61.
• Alexander I. Olson, “Muybridge in the Parlor,” 81.
• Laura Goldblatt, “‘Can’t Repeat the Past?’ Gatsby and the American Dream at Mid-Century,”
105.
• Matt Sandler, “Music Physicianers: Blues Lyric Form and the Patent Medicine Show,” 125.
• Caroline Blinder, “American Alphabet: Photo-textual Politics in Paul Strand and Nancy
Newhall’s Time in New England (1950),” 143.
• Morgan Fritz, “Television from the Superlab: The Postmodern Serial Drama and the New Petty
Bourgeoisie in Breaking Bad,” 167.
• Joseph Darda, “The Exceptionalist Optics of 9/11 Photography,” 185.
Interview and responses
• Anna Hartnell, “When Cars Become Churches: Jesmyn Ward’s Disenchanted America. An
Interview,” 205.
• Molly Travis, “We are Here: Jesmyn Ward’s Survival Narratives Response to Anna Hartnell,
‘When Cars Become Churches’,” 219.
• Richard Crownshaw, “Agency and Environment in the Work of Jesmyn Ward Response to
Anna Hartnell, ‘When Cars Become Churches’,” 225.
Journal of American Studies, Vol. 50, Issue 2 (May 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=AMS&volumeId=50&seriesId=0&issueId=02
BAAS Keynote Speech
• Dana D. Nelson, “A Passion for Democracy: Proximity to Power and the Sovereign Immunity
3|Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
Test,” 279.
Immigration Forum
• Rebecca M. Schreiber, “The Undocumented Everday: Migrant Rights and Visual Strategies in
the Work of Alex Rivera,” 305.
• Jennifer Krause, “Madness, Entropy, Paradox: The Legacy of Political Violence in Loida
Martiza Pérez’s Geographies of Home,” 329.
• Alexander Noonan, “‘What Must Be the Answer of the United States to Such a Proposition?’
Anarchist Exclusion and National Security in the United States, 1887-1903,” 347.
• David C. Atkinson, “The International Consequences of American National Origins Quotas:
The Australian Case,” 377.
• Anne M. Blaschke, “The ‘Dulles Doctrine on Love’: Immigration, Gender, and Romance in
American Diplomacy, 1956-1957,” 397.
• Maria Lauret, “Americanization Now and Then: The ‘Nation of Immigrants’ in the Early
Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries,” 419.
Commentaries
• Stephanie Lewthwaite, “Immigration Forum Comment: Cultural Responses to Immigration,”
449.
• Meredith Oyen, “Immigration Forum Comment: Foreign Relations and Migration,” 459.
______________________________________________________________________________
The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 75, Issue 1 (February 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JAS&volumeId=75&issueId=01&i
id=10210149
• Macabe Keliher and Hsinchao Wu, “Corruption, Anticorruption, and the Transformation of
Politicla Culture in Contemporary China,” 5.
• Charles W. Hayford, “Where’s the Omelet? Bad King Deng and the Challenges of Biography
and History,” 19.
• Seungsook Moon, “Introduction to ‘Culture around the Bases: A Forum on the U.S. Military
Presence in Northeast Asia,” 31.
• Chris Ames, “Amerikamun: Consuming America and Ambivalence toward the U.S. Presence in
Postwar Okinawa,” 41.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Han Sang Kim, “My Car Modernity: What the U.S. Army Brought to South Korean Cinematic
Imagination about Modern Mobility,” 63.
• Sarah Kovner, “The Soundproofed Superpower: American Bases and Japanese Communities,
1945-1972,” 87.
• Xing Hang, “The Shogun’s Chinese Partners: The Alliance between Tokugawa Japan and the
Zheng Family in Seventeenth-Century Maritime East Asia,” 111.
• Benjamin Schonthal, “Environments of Law: Islam, Buddhism, and the State in Contemporary
Sri Lanka,” 137.
• Gerard Sasges, “Absent Maps, Marine Science, and the Reimagination of the South China Sea,
1922-1939,” 157.
• Nimrod Baranovitch, “Ecological Degradation and Endangered Ethnicities: China’s Minority
Environmental Discourses as Manifested in Popular Songs,” 181.
_____________________________________________________________________________
Journal of British Studies, Vol. 55, Issue 2 (April 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=JBR&volumeId=55&seriesId=0&issueId=02
• David Coast, “Rumor and ‘Common Fame’: The Impeachment of the Duke of Buckingham and
Public Opinion in Early Stuart England,” 241.
• William Farrell, “Smuggling Silks into Eighteenth-Century Britain: Geography, Perpetrators,
and Consumers,” 268.
• Desmond Fitz-Gibbon, “The London Auction Mart and the Marketability of Real Estate in
England, 1808-1864,” 295.
• Kate Imy, “Fascist Yogis: Martial Bodies and Imperial Impotence,” 320.
• Emily Curtis Walters, “Between Entertainment and Elegy: The Unexpected Success of R.C.
Sherriff’s Journey’s End (1928),” 344.
• Gavin Schaffer, “Fighting Thatcher with Comedy: What to Do When There is No Alternative,”
374.
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Journal of Cold War Studies, Vol. 18, Issue 1 (Winter 2016)
http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jcws/18/1
• Deborah Kaple, “Agents of Change: Soviet Advisers and High Stalinist Management in China,
1949-1960,” 5.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Denise Lynn, “Gendered Narratives in Anti-Stalinism and Anti-Communism During the Cold
War: The Case of Juliet Poyntz,” 31.
• Allen Pietrobon, “The Role of Norman Cousins and Track II Diplomacy in the Breakthrough to
the 1963 Limited Test Ban Treaty,” 60.
• Benjamin Tromly, “The Making of a Myth: The National Labor Alliance, Russian Émigrés, and
Cold War Intelligence Activities,” 80.
• Cecilia Åse, “Ship of Shame: Gender and Nation in Narratives of the 1981 Soviet Submarine
Crisis in Sweden,” 112.
• Peter Svik, “The Czechoslovak Factor in Western Alliance Building, 1945-1948,” 133.
• Cezar Stanciu, “Fragile Equilibrium: Romania and the Vietnam War in the Context of the SinoSoviet Split, 1966,” 161.
• Justin M. Jacobs, “Exile Island: Xinjiang Refugees and the ‘One China’ Policy in Nationalist
Taiwan, 1949-1971,” 188.
_____________________________________________________________________________
The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 60:1 (February 2016)
http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/60/1.toc
• Nam Kyu Kim, “Revisiting Economic Shocks and Coups,” 3.
• Claude Berrebi and Jordan Ostwald, “Terrorism and the Labor Force: Evidence of an Effect on
Female Labor Force Participation and the Labor Gender Gap,” 32.
• Dennis T. Kahn, Varda Liberman, Eran Halperin, and Lee Ross, “Intergroup Sentiments,
Political Identity, and Their Influence on Responses to Potentially Ameliorative Proposals in the
Context of an Intractable Conflict,” 61.
• Jonathan Hall, “Are Migrants More Extreme than Locals after War? Evidence from a
Simultaneous Survey of Migrants in Sweden and Locals in Bosnia,” 89.
• Graeme A.M. Davies, “Policy Selection in the Face of Political Instability: Do States Divert,
Repress, or Make Concessions?,” 118.
• Alastair Smith, “Leader Turnover, Institutions, and Voting at the UN General Assembly,” 143.
• Mark S. Manger and Mark A. Pickup, “The Coevolution of Trade Agreement Networks and
Democracy,” 164.
The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 60:2 (March 2016)
http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/60/2.toc
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Walter Enders, Gary A. Hoover, and Todd Sandler, “The Changing Nonlinear Relationship
between Income and Terrorism,” 195.
• Matthias Basedau, Birte Pfeiffer, and Johannes Vüllers, “Bad Religion? Religion, Collective
Action, and the Onset of Armed Conflict in Developing Countries,” 226.
• Anthony S. Marcum and Jonathan N. Brown, “Overthrowing the ‘Loyalty Norm’: The
Prevalence and Success of Coups in Small-coalition Systems, 1950 to 1999,” 256.
• Clionadh Raleigh, “Pragmatic and Promiscuous: Explaining the Rise of Competitive Political
Militias across Africa,” 283.
• Charles Butcher and Isak Svensson, “Manufacturing Dissent: Modernization and the Onset of
Major Nonviolent Resistance Campaigns,” 311.
• Kurt A. Ackermann, Jürgen Fleiß, and Ryan O. Murphy, “Reciprocity as an Individual
Difference,” 340.
• Stephanie Dornschneider and Nick Henderson, “A Computational Model of Cognitive Maps:
Analyzing Violent and Nonviolent Activity in Egypt and Germany,” 368.
The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 60:3 (April 2016)
http://jcr.sagepub.com/content/60/3.toc
• Alexandre Debs and Jessica Chen Weiss, “Circumstances, Domestic Audiences, and
Reputational Incentives in International Crisis Bargaining,” 403.
• Chungshik Moon and Mark Souva, “Audience Costs, Information, and Credible Commitment
Problems,” 434.
• Shakun D. Mago, Anya C. Samak, and Roman M. Sheremeta, “Facing Your Opponents: Social
Identification and Information Feedback in Contests,” 459.
• Charles A. Holt, Andrew Kydd, Laura Razzolini, and Roman Sheremeta, “The Paradox of
Misaligned Profiling: Theory and Experimental Evidence,” 482.
• Helge Holtermann, “Relative Capacity and the Spread of Rebellion: Insights from Nepal,” 501.
• Thomas Jensen, “National Responses to Transnational Terrorism: Intelligence and
Counterterrorism Provision,” 530.
• Emanuel Deutschmann, “Between Collaboration and Disobedience: The Behavior of the
Guantánamo Detainees and its Consequences,” 555.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
Journal of Contemporary Asia, Vol. 46, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjoc20/46/2#.VwOeIWPwzVo
• Paul Cammack, “World Market Regionalism at the Asian Development Bank,” 173.
• Jamie Doucette and Se-Woong Koo, “Pursuing Post-democratisation: The Resilience of Politics
by Public Security in Contemporary South Korea,” 198.
• Joonkoo Lee, Jong-Cheol Kim, and Jinho Lim, “Globalization and Divergent Paths of Industrial
Development: Mobile Phone Manufacturing in China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan,” 222.
• Ma Ngok, “The Making of a Corporatist State in Hong Kong: The Road to Sectoral
Intervention,” 247.
• Damian Tobin, “Continuity and Pragmatism: How Chinese State-Owned Banks Adapted to
Hong Kong’s Free Market (1949-1978),” 267.
• Sonny Shiu-Hing Lo and Eric King-Man Chong, “Casino Interests, Fujian Tongxiang and
Electoral Politics in Macao,” 286.
• Christian Sorace and William Hurst, “China’s Phantom Urbanisation and the Pathology of
Ghost Cities,” 304.
• Tamgid Ahmed Chowdhury and Pundarik Mukhopadhaya, “Functioning Achievements in
Urban Bangladesh: A Comparison with Rural Areas,” 323.
• Tu Phuong Nguyen, “Labour Unrest in Vietnam and China: Insurgency or Contained
Contention?,” 323.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Contemporary China, Vol. 25, Issue 98 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjcc20/25/98
China’s National Security Commission
• Weixing Hu, “Xi Jinping’s ‘Big Power Diplomacy’ and China’s Central National Security
Commission (CNSC),” 163.
• You Ji, “China’s National Security Commission: theory, evolution, and operations,” 178.
• Andrew S. Erickson and Adam P. Liff, “Installing a Safety on the ‘Loaded Gun’? China’s
institutional reforms, National Security Commission, and Sino-Japanese crisis (in)stability,”
197.
Environmental Consciousness in China
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Yang Zhong and Wonjae Hwang, “Pollution, Institutions, and Street Protests in Urban China,”
216.
• Xinhong Wang, “Requests for Environmental Information Disclosure in China: an
understanding from legal mobilization and citizen activism,” 233.
• Xiaojun Li and Christina Gai-Wai Chan, “Who Pollutes? Ownership type and environmental
performance of Chinese firms,” 248.
Research Articles
• Peter Hays Gries, Derek Steiger, and Tao Wang, “Popular Nationalism and China’s Japan
Policy: The Diaoyu Islands protests, 2012-2013,” 264.
• Nandiyang Zhang, “Political Elite Coalition and Local Administrative Reform in China - a case
study of Shunde under Wang Yang,” 277.
• Yuan Yao and Rongbin Han, “Challenging, but not Trouble-Making: cultural elites in China’s
urban heritage preservation,” 292.
Research Note
• Benjamin Tze Ern Ho, “About Face - the relational dimension in Chinese IR discourse,” 307.
_____________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Vol. 24, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjea20/24/1#.VwOqhGPwzVo
• Georgios Maris and Pantelis Sklias, “France, Germany, and the New Framework for EMU
Governance,” 1.
• Steve Wood, “Turkey-EU Relations: Practitioner Views and Political Time,” 24.
• Huseyn Aliyev, “Assessing the European Union’s Assistance to Civil Society in its Eastern
Neighbourhood: Lessons from the South Caucasus,” 42.
• Yiannos Katsourides, “Negative Images of Europe in an Era of Crisis: The Media and Public
Opinion in Cyprus,” 61.
• Gözde Yilmaz, “From Europeanization to De-Europeanization: The Europeanization Process of
Turkey in 1999-2014,” 86.
• Ioannis Tzortzis, “Mirror Images: The Greek (1973) and the Spanish (1977) Reformas Pactadas
in Comparison,” 101.
• Catherine MacMillan, “Turkey’s Carnivalesque Challenge to the EU’s Monologue: A Response
to Nykänen,” 117.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Nevena Nancheva, “Imagining Policies: European Integration and the European Minority Rights
Regime,” 132.
• Özge Yaka, “Why Not EU? Dynamics of the Changing Turkish Attitudes towards EU
Membership,” 149.
• Ramona Coman, “Strengthening the Rule of Law at the Supranational Level: The Rise and
Consolidation of a European Network,” 171.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Contemporary History, 51:1 (January 2016)
http://jch.sagepub.com/content/51/1.toc
Special Section: The Dark Side of Transnationalism
• Kiran Klaus Patel and Sven Reichardt, “The Dark Side of Transnationalism: Social Engineering
and Nazism, 1930s-40s,” 3.
• David Kuchenbuch, “Architecture and Urban Planning as Social Engineering: Selective
Transfers between Germany and Sweden in the 1930s and 1940s,” 22.
• Martin Gutmann, “Engineering the European Volksgemeinschaft: Social Engineering, Pedagogy,
and Fascism in the case of the Swiss Alfred Zander,” 40.
• Patrick Bernhard, “Hitler’s Africa in the East: Italian Colonialism as a Model for German
Planning in Eastern Europe,” 61.
Articles
• Sophie Loy-Wilson, “The Gospel of Enthusiasm: Salesmanship, Religion, and Colonialism in
Australian Department Stores in the 1920s and 1930s,” 91.
• Howard Kahm, “Between Empire and Nation: A Micro-Historical Approach to Japanese
Repatriation and the Korean Economy During the U.S. Occupation of Korea, 1945-6,” 124.
• Gadi Heimann, “A Case of Diplomatic Symbiosis: France, Israel, and the Former French
Colonies in Africa, 1958-62,” 145.
• Tobias Rupprecht, “Formula Pinochet: Chilean Lessons for Russian Liberal Reformers During
the Soviet Collapse, 1970-2000,” 165.
Journal of Contemporary History, 51:2 (April 2016)
http://jch.sagepub.com/content/51/2.toc
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Carly Beckerman-Boys, “The Reversal of the Passfield White Paper, 1930-1: A Reassessment,”
213.
• Jeronim Perovic, “Highland Rebels: The North Caucasus During the Stalinist Collectivization
Campaign,” 234.
• Giuliana Chamedes, “The Vatican, Nazi-Fascism, and the Making of Transnational
Anti-communism in the 1930s,” 261.
• Matthew Hughes, “Palestinian Collaboration with the British: The Peace Bands and the Arab
Revolt in Palestine, 1936-9,” 291.
• Bernhard Blumenau, “The Group of 7 and International Terrorism: The Snowball Effect that
Never Materialized,” 316.
• Mikael Nilsson and Marco Wyss, “The Armed Neutrality Paradox: Sweden and Switzerland in
US Cold War Armaments Policy,” 335.
• Bradford Martin, “Music Cultural Exchanges in the Age of Detente: Cultural Fixation, Trust,
and the Permeability of Culture,” 364.
• Joseba De la Torre and Maria del Mar Rubio-Varas, “Nuclear Power for a Dictatorship: State
and Business Involvement in the Spanish Atomic Program, 1950-85,” 385.
Forum
• Jim Bjork and Kristina Spohr, “Paul Preston’s The Spanish Holocaust and Recent
Historiography on the Spanish Second Republic,” 412.
• Gerald Blaney, Jr., “Violence, Continuity, and the Spanish State: Some Considerations,” 413.
• Roberto Villa García, “The Second Republic: Myths and Realities,” 420.
• Manuel Álvarez Tardío, “When Ideology Takes Precedence over Historical Understanding: The
Role of the ‘Right’ in the Spanish Interwar Crisis,” 425.
• Fernando del Rey, “The Spanish Second Republic and Political Violence,” 430.
• Cathie Carmichael, “The Need to Record the Past,” 436.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of the Early Republic, Vol. 35, No. 4 (Winter 2015)
https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_early_republic/toc/jer.35.4.html
• Wendell Bird, “Reassessing Responses to the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions: New
Evidence from the Tennessee and Georgia Resolutions and from Other States,” 519.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Anelise Hanson Shrout, “A ‘Voice of Benevolence from the Western Wilderness’: The Politics
of Native Philanthropy in the Trans-Mississippi West,” 553.
• Amanda C. Demmer, “Trick or Constitutional Treaty?: The Jay Treaty and the Quarrel over the
Diplomatic Separation of Powers,” 579.
• William Coleman, “‘The Music of a well tun’d State’: ‘The Star Spangled Banner’ and the
Development of a Federalist Musical Tradition,” 599.
• Mary Carroll Johansen, “Digitizing Dolley, and Eliza and Harriott Pinckney,” 635.
Journal of the Early Republic, Vol. 36, No. 1 (Spring 2016)
https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_the_early_republic/toc/jer.36.1.html
Introduction
• Ann Johnson, “STEM in the EAR,” 1.
Science in the Early Republic
• Ann Fabian, “The Long Life of William Blanding: Doctor, Apothecary, Naturalist,” 5.
• Emily Pawley, “The Point of Perfection: Cattle Portraiture, Bloodlines, and the Meaning of
Breeding, 1760-1860,” 37.
• Bolton Conevery Valencius, David I. Spanagel, Emily Pawley, Sara Stidstone Gronim, and Paul
Lucier, “Science in Early America: Print Culture and the Sciences of Territoriality,” 73.
Article
• Robert W. Smith, “The Foreign Intercourse Bill of 1798 and the Debate over Early American
Foreign Relations,” 125.
Review Essay
• Dan Rood, “Beckert is Liverpool, Baptist is New Orleans: Geography Returns to the History of
Capitalism,” 151.
______________________________________________________________________________
The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 76, Issue 1 (March 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JEH&volumeId=76&issueId=01&i
id=10197230
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Tracy K. Dennison and Sheilagh Ogilvie, “Instititutions, Demography, and Economic Growth,”
205.
• Sarah G. Carmichael, Alexandra de Pleijt, Jan Luiten van Zanden, and Tine De Moor, “The
European Marriage Pattern and Its Measurement,” 196.
• B. Zorina Khan, “Invisible Women: Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Family Firms in
Nineteenth-Century France,” 163.
• Jonathan Pritchett and Herman Freudenberger, “A Peculiar Sample: A Reply to Steckel and
Ziebarth,” 139.
• Richard H. Steckel and Nicolas Ziebarth, “Trader Selectivity and Measured Catch-Up Growth
of American Slaves,” 109.
• Catherine Guirkinger and Gani Aldashev, “Clans and Ploughs: Traditional Institutions and
Production Decisions of Kazakhs under Russian Colonial Settlement,” 76.
• Brian Beach, Joseph Ferrie, Martin Saavedra, and Werner Troesken, “Typhoid Fever, Water
Quality, and Human Capital Formation,” 41.
• Graeme G. Acheson, Gareth Campbell, John D. Turner, and Nadia Vanteeva, “Corporate
Ownership, Control, and Firm Performance in Victorian Britain,” 1.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Genocide Research, Vol. 18, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjgr20/18/1
• Jeffrey Ostler, “‘Just and lawful war’ as genocidal war in the (United States) Northwest
Ordinance and Northwest Territory, 1787-1832,” 1.
• David Deutsch and Niza Yanay, “The politics of intimacy: Nazi and Hutu propaganda as case
studies,” 21.
• Caroline Williamson, “Genocide, masculinity, and posttraumatic growth in Rwanda:
reconstructing male identity through ndi umunyarwanda,” 41.
• Filip Reyntjens, “(Re-)imagining a reluctant post-genocide society: the Rwandan Patriotic
Front’s ideology and practice,” 61.
• Thomas James Rogers and Stephen Bain, “Genocide and frontier violence in Australia,” 83.
_____________________________________________________________________________
The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, Vol. 15, Issue 1 (January 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JGA&volumeId=15&issueId=01&
iid=10175161
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Presidential Address
• Julie Greene, “Movable Empire: Labor, Migration, and U.S. Global Power During the Gilded
Age and Progressive Era,” 4.
Forum: Theodore Roosevelt and Europe
• Séverine Antigone Marin, “Did the United States Scare the Europeans? The Propaganda about
the “American Danger” in Europe Around 1900,” 23.
• Kenneth Weisbrode, “Roosevelt’s Man in Europe,” 45.
• J. Simon Rofe and Alan Tomlinson, “Strenuous Competition on the Field of Play, Diplomacy
Off It: The 1908 London Olympics, Theodore Roosevelt and Arthur Balfour, and Transatlantic
Relations,” 60.
• Michael Patrick Cullinane, “Theodore Roosevelt in the Eyes of the Allies,” 80.
• John M. Thompson, “A ‘Polygonal’ Relationship: Theodore Roosevelt, the United States and
Europe,” 102.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Global Ethics, Vol. 12, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjge20/12/1
• Martin Prozesky, “Ethical leadership resources in southern Africa’s Sesotho-speaking culture
and in King Moshoeshoe I,” 6.
• Alejandra Boni, Aurora Lopez-Fogues, and Melanie Walker, “Higher education and the post2015 agenda: a contribution from the human development approach,” 17.
• Joshua Schulz, “The capabilities approach and Catholic social teaching: an engagement,” 29.
• Monique Deveaux, “Exploitation, structural injustice, and the cross-border trade in human ova,”
48.
• Sara Belfrage, “Exploitative, irresistible, and coercive offers: why research participants should
be paid well or not at all,” 69.
• H.P.P. [Hennie] Lötter, “Humans as professional interactants with elephants in a global
commons,” 87
• Alasdair Cochrane and Steve Cooke, “‘Humane intervention’: the international protection of
animal rights,” 106.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
Journal of Global History, Vol. 11, Issue 1 (March 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JGH&volumeId=11&issueId=01&
iid=10177483
• William G. Clarence-Smith, “Editorial - botany in global history,” 1.
• Matthew P. Romaniello, “True rhubarb? Trading Eurasian botanical and medical knowledge in
the eighteenth century,” 3.
• John McAleer, “‘A young slip of botany’: botanical networks, the South Atlantic, and Britain’s
maritime worlds, c. 1790-1810,” 24.
• Amalia Ribi Forclaz, “Agriculture, American expertise, and the quest for global data: Leon
Estabrook and the First World Agricultural Census of 1930,” 44.
• Leo Lucassen, “Working together: new directions in global labour history,” 66.
• Stacy D. Fahrenthold, “Former Ottomans in the ranks: pro-Entente military recruitment among
Syrians in the Americas, 1916-18,” 88.
• Katharina Rietzler, “Counter-imperial orientalism: Friedrich Berber and the politics of
international law in Germany and India, 1920s-1960s,” 113.
• R. Bin Wong, “The early modern foundations of the modern world: recent works on patterns of
economic and political change,” 135.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 38, Issue 1 (March 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=HET&volumeId=38&issueId=01&
iid=10191505
• Alain Marciano, “Buchanan’s Non-Coercive Economics for Self-Interested Individuals: Ethics,
Small Groups, and the Social Contract,” 1.
• Victor Bianchini, “James Mill on Intemperance and Individual Preferences,” 21.
• Lorenzo Garbo, “Adam Smith’s Last Teachings: Dialectical Wisdom,” 41.
• Luca Fiorito and and Cosma Orsi, “Anti-Semitism and Progressive Era Social Science: The
Case of John R. Commons,” 55.
• Till Düppe, “Koopmans in the Soviet Union: A Travel Report of the Summer of 1965,” 81.
• James Forder, “A Neglected Inconsistency in Milton Friedman’s AEA Presidential Address,”
105.
______________________________________________________________________________
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 15, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjhr20/15/1#.VwZMCmPwzVo
• Matthew Evans, “Structural Violence, Socioeconomic Rights, and Transformative Justice,” 1.
• Simon Hug, “Dealing with Human Rights in International Organizations,” 21.
• Claire Garbett, “From Passive Objects to Active Agents: A Comparative Study of Conceptions
of Victim Identities at the ICTY and ICC,” 40.
• Cameron Harris and Daniel James Milton, “Is Standing for Women a Stand against Terrorism?
Exploring the Connection between Women’s Rights and Terrorism,” 60.
• Sean Bex, “Particularizing the Universal: Dave Eggers Writes Human Rights,” 79.
• Touko Piiparinen, “The Interventionist Turn of UN Peacekeeping: New Western Politics of
Protection or Bureaucratic Mission Creep?,” 98.
• Cyanne E. Loyle and Christian Davenport, “Transitional Injustice: Subverting Justice in
Transition and Postconflict Societies,” 126.
______________________________________________________________________________
The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Vol. 44, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fich20/44/1
• Dawn Burton, “Discipline, Self-discipline, and Legacy: Military and Regimental Savings Banks
in India,” 1.
• Catherine Dewhirst, “Colonising Italians: Italian Imperialism and Agricultural ‘Colonies’ in
Australia, 1881-1914,” 23.
• Matthew Stubbings, “The Partisan Nature of Race and Imperialism: Dadabhai Naoroji, M.M.
Bhownaggree and the Late Nineteenth-Century British Politics of Indian Nationalism,” 48.
• Steven Loveridge, “The ‘Other’ on the Other Side of the Ditch? The Conception of New
Zealand’s Disassociation from Australia,” 70.
• Christian Tripodi, “‘A Bed of Procrustes’: The Aden Protectorate and the Forward Policy, 193444,” 95.
• Bernard Kelly, “‘Masters in Their Own House’: Britain, the Dominions, and the 1946 ExService Free Passage Scheme,” 121.
• Gary Williams, “‘Shrouded in Some Mystery’: The Governor General’s Invitation and the 1983
Grenada Intervention,” 140.
16 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Colin Newbury, “The Semantics of Corruption: Political Science Perspectives on Imperial and
Post-Imperial Methods of State-Building,” 163.
______________________________________________________________________________
The Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Vol. 46, Issue 4 (Spring 2016)
http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/jinh/46/4
• Igor Fedyukin and Salavat Gabdrakhmanov, “Cultural Capital and Education in St. Petersburg:
The Noble Cadet Corps, 1732-1762,” 485.
• Wayne Geerling, Gary B. Magee, and Russell Smyth, “Sentencing, Judicial Discretion, and
Political Prisoners in Pre-War Nazi Germany,” 517.
• Herbert S. Klein, “The First Americans: The Current Debate,” 543.
Comment and Controversy
• John L. Brooke, “Malthus and the North Atlantic Oscillation: A Reply to Kyle Harper,” 563.
• Kyle Harper, “A Reply to John L. Brooke’s “Malthus and the North Atlantic Oscillation,” 579.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Israeli History: Politics, Society, Culture, Vol. 35, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjih20/35/1
• Yuval Ben-Bassat, “The challenges facing the first Aliyah Sephardic Ottoman colonists,” 3.
• Amir Goldstein, “The kibbutz and the ma’abara (transit camp): The case of the Upper Galilee
kibbutzim and Kiryat Shmona, 1949-1953,” 17.
• Shayna Weiss, “A beach of their own: The creation of the gender-segregated beach in Tel
Aviv,” 39.
• Elia Etkin, “The ingathering of (non-human) exiles: The creation of the Tel Aviv Zoological
Garden animal collection, 1938-1948,” 57.
• Ilan Fuchs, “The construction of an ideological curriculum: The study of Emunah in the Har
Hamor Yeshiva,” 75.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 48, Issue 1 (February 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=LAS&volumeId=48&issueId=01&
iid=10116974
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Susan Franceschet, Jennifer M. Piscopo, and Gwynn Thomas, “Supermadres, Maternal
Legacies, and Women’s Political Participation in Contemporary Latin America,” 1.
• Stéphanie Rousseau and Anahi Morales Hudon, “Paths towards Autonomy in Indigenous
Women’s Movements: Mexico, Peru, Bolivia,” 33.
• Jaime Amparo Alves, “‘Blood in Reasoning’: State Violence, Contested Territories, and Black
Criminal Agency in Urban Brazil,” 61.
• Judy Bieber, “‘The Brazilian Rhône’: Economic Development of the Doce River Basin in
Nineteenth-Century Brazil, 1819-49,” 89.
• Raúl Serrano and Vicente Pinilla, “The Declining Role of Latin America in Global Agricultural
Trade, 1963-2000,” 115.
• Oswaldo E. Do Amaral and Timothy J. Power, “The PT at 35: Revisiting Scholarly
Interpretations of the Brazilian Workers’ Party,” 147.
______________________________________________________________________________
The Journal of Legal History, Vol. 37, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/flgh20/37/1
• Paul Brand, “Judges and Juries in Civil Litigation in Later Medieval England: The Millon
Thesis Reconsidered,” 1.
• Thomas J. McSweeney, “Creating a Literature for the King’s Courts in the Later Thirteenth
Century: Hengham Magna, Fet Asaver, and Bracton,” 41.
• “Scottish Legal History Group Report 2015,” 72.
• Sir John Baker, “Migrations of Manuscripts 2015,” 75.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Military History, Vol. 80, No. 2 (April 2016)
http://www.smh-hq.org/jmh/jmhvols/802.html
• Rick Atkinson, “The 2016 George C. Marshall Lecture in Military History: Projecting American
Power in the Second World War,” 345.
• Mark A. Smith, “The Politics of Military Professionalism: The Engineer Company and the
Political Activities of the Antebellum U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,” 355.
• Richard Dunley, “Technology and Tradition: Mine Warfare and the Royal Navy’s Strategy of
Coastal Assault, 1870-1890,” 398.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Thomas E. Jeffrey, “‘Commodore’ Edison Joins the Navy: Thomas Alva Edison and the Naval
Consulting Board,” 411.
• Richard Hammond, “Fighting Under a Different Flag: Multinational Naval Cooperation and
Submarine Warfare in the Mediterranean, 1940-1944,” 447.
• Peter Paret, “On War Then and Now,” 477.
• John H. Matsui, “Seven Score and Ten: American Civil War Historiography at the Close of the
Sesquicentennial,” 487.
______________________________________________________________________________
The Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 54, Issue 1 (March 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=MOA&volumeId=54&issueId=01
&iid=10180711
• Nic Cheeseman, Gabrielle Lynch, and Justin Willis, “Decentralisation in Kenya: the governance
of governors,” 1.
• Anja Osei, “Formal party organisation and informal relations in African parties: evidence from
Ghana,” 37.
• Johan Brosché and Kristine Höglund, “Crisis of governance in South Sudan: electoral politics
and violence in the world’s newest nation,” 67.
• Sergio Fernandez and Hongseok Lee, “The transformation of the South African Public Service:
exploring the impact of racial and gender representation on organisational effectiveness,” 91.
• Mario Krämer, “Neither despotic nor civil: the legitimacy of chieftaincy in its relationship with
the ANC and the state in KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa),” 117.
• Gregor Dobler, “The green, the grey, and the blue: a typology of cross-border trade in Africa,”
145.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Modern Italian Studies, Vol. 20, Issue 5 (2015)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rmis20/20/5#.VwdkhGPwzVo
• Joshua Arthurs, “Settling Accounts: Retribution, Emotion, and Memory During the Fall of
Mussolini,” 617.
• Fulvio Conti, “From Universalism to Nationalism: Italian Freemasonry and the Great War,”
640.
• Lucy Maulsby, “Case del fascio and the Making of Modern Italy,” 663.
19 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Paolo Zanini, “Twenty years of persecution of Pentacostalism in Italy: 1935-1955,” 686.
• Rosario Forlenza, “‘The Next Wave of Italians Has Come to America’: Italian Investments and
Business in the United States, 1980-2013,” 708.
• Mauro Tosti Croce and Maria Natalina Trivisano, “Thematic Portals: Tools for Research and
Making the Archival Heritage Known,” 732.
_____________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 45, No. 1 (Autumn 2015)
http://www.palestine-studies.org/jps/issue/177
• Joshua Sperber, “BDS, Israel, and the World System,” 8.
• Tilde Rosmer, “Raising the Green Banner: Islamist Student Politics in Israel,” 24.
• Gareth Porter, “Israel’s Construction of Iran as an Existential Threat,” 43.
• Mahmood Mamdani, “The South African Movement,” 63.
• Darryl Li, “Translator’s Preface: A Note on Settler Colonialism,” 69.
• Translated by Darryl Li, “Seferovic, The Herzegovinian Muslim Colony in Caesarea, Palestine,”
76.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Policy History, Vol. 28, Issue 2 (April 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=JPH&volumeId=28&issueId=02&i
id=10232628
• Luke Messac, “No Opiates for the Masses: Untreated Pain, International Narcotics Control, and
the Bureaucratic Production of Ignorance,” 193.
• Margaret C. Rung, “The Color of Money: Race and Fair Employment in the Bureau of
Engraving and Printing, 1945-1955,” 221.
• Joseph E. Hower, “‘The Sparrows and the Horses’: Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the Family
Assistance Plan, and the Liberal Critique of Government Workers, 1955-1977,” 256.
• Judge Glock, “How the Federal Housing Administration Tried to Save America’s Cities, 19341960,” 290.
• Scott A. Hendrickson and Jason M. Roberts, “Short-Term Goals and Long-Term Effects: The
Mongrel Tariff and the Creation of the Special Rule in the U.S. House,” 318.
20 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Kenneth J. Heineman, “Asserting States’ Rights, Demanding Federal Assistance: Texas
Democrats in the Era of the New Deal,” 342.
• Juanita “Frankie” Clogston, “The Repeal of the Fairness Doctrine and the Irony of Talk Radio:
A Story of Political Entrepreneurship, Risk, and Cover,” 375.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Political Science Education, Vol. 12, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/upse20/12/1
• Wendy N. Whitman Cobb, “Turning the Classroom Upside Down: Experimenting with the
Flipped Classroom in American Government,” 1.
• Giacomo Gambino and S. Mohsin Hashim, “In Their Own Words: Assessing Global Citizenship
in a Short-Term Study-Abroad Program in Bangladesh,” 15.
• Ryan Reed and Daniel E. Smith, “Success is an Open Book: Online Diagnostic Tools and
Learning Outcomes in Introduction to American Government Courses,” 30.
• Stacy G. Ulbig, “I Like the Way This Feels: Using Classroom Response System Technology to
Enhance Tactile Learners’ Introductory American Government Experience,” 41.
• Nilay Saiya, “The Statecraft Simulation and Foreign Policy Attitudes among Undergraduate
Students,” 58.
• Debra L. DeLaet, “A Pedagogy of Civic Engagement for the Undergraduate Political Science
Classroom.” 72.
• Holley E. Hansen, “The Impact of Blog-Style Writing on Student-Learning Outcomes: A Pilot
Study,” 85.
______________________________________________________________________________
Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 39, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjss20/39/1#.VweH4GPwzVo
• Michael S. Chase and Cristina L. Garafola , “China’s Search for a ‘Strategic Air Force’,” 4.
Authoritarian Counterinsurgency
• David H. Ucko, “‘The People are Revolting’: An Anatomy of Authoritarian
Counterinsurgency,” 29.
• Daniel Byman, “‘Death Solves All Problems’: The Authoritarian Model of Counterinsurgency,”
62.
Original Articles
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Eugenio Cusumano, “Bridging the Gap: Mobilisation Constraints and Contractor Support to US
and UK Military Operations,” 94.
• Thomas Bruneau, “Impediments to Fighting the Islamic State: Private Contractors and US
Strategy,” 120.
Review Essay
• Sumit Ganguly, “A Tale of Two Trajectories: Civil-Military Relations in Pakistan and India,”
142.
Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 39, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjss20/39/2
• Barry R. Posen, “Foreword: Military doctrine and the management of uncertainty,” 159.
• Harald Høiback, “The Anatomy of Doctrine and Ways to Keep It Fit,” 185.
• Jan Angstrom and J.J. Widen, “Religion or reason? exploring alternative ways to measure the
quality of doctrine,” 198.
• Benjamin Jensen, “Escaping the iron cage: the institutional foundations of FM 3-24.
counterinsurgency doctrine,” 213.
• Antulio J. Echevarria II, “Rediscovering US Military Strategy: A Role for Doctrine,” 231.
• Martin Zapfe, “Strategic Culture Shaping Allied Integration: The Bundeswehr and Joint
Operational Doctrine,” 246.
• Jan Willem Honig, “The Tyranny of Doctrine and Modern Strategy: Small (and Large) States in
a Double Bind,” 261.
• Olof Kronvall and Magnus Petersson, “Doctrine and Defence Transformation in Norway and
Sweden,” 280.
• Thomas Slensvik and Palle Ydstebø, “The Norwegian joint operational doctrine as a case:
heritage, content, process,” 297.
______________________________________________________________________________
Labor Studies Journal, 40:4 (December 2015)
http://lsj.sagepub.com/content/40/4.toc
• Victor G. Devinatz, “Right-to-Work Laws, the Southernization of U.S. Labor Relations and the
U.S. Trade Union Movement’s Decline,” 297.
• Robert Bruno, Roland Zullo, Frank Manzo IV, and Alison Dickson, “The Economic Effects of
Adopting a Right-to-Work Law: Implications for Illinois,” 319.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Michelle Kaminski, “How Michigan Became a Right-to-Work State: The Role of Money and
Politics,” 362.
• Franz Manzo IV, “Promises Unfulfilled: Right-to-Work’s Early Economic Track Record in
Indiana,” 379.
• Don Taylor, “Can Renewal Emerge from Destruction? Crisis and Opportunity in Wisconsin,”
396.
• R. Jamil Jonna, “Comments on ‘When Hephaestus Fell to Earth’ and ‘Continuity and Change in
Labour Process Analysis Forty Years after Labor and Monopoly Capital’,” 419.
______________________________________________________________________________
The Middle East Journal, Vol. 70, No. 1 (Winter 2016)
https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_middle_east_journal/toc/mej.70.1.html
• Till F. Paasche and Michael M. Gunter, “Revisiting Western Strategies against the Islamic State
in Iraq and Syria,” 9.
• Ofra Bengio, “Game Changers: Kurdish Women in Peace and War,” 30.
• Egle Murauskaite, “Saddam’s Use of Violence against Civilians During the Iran-Iraq War,” 47.
• Hilde Henriksen Waage and Petter Stenberg, “Cementing a State of Belligerency: The 1949
Armistice Negotiations between Israel and Syria,” 69.
• Arieh J. Kochavi, “George Brown and British Policy in the Middle East Following the 1967
War,” 91.
______________________________________________________________________________
Middle East Policy, Vol. 23, Issue 1 (Spring 2016)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mepo.2016.23.issue-1/issuetoc
The Islamic State
• William Wechsler, Mark N. Katz, Charles Lister, and Audrey Kurth Cronin, “The ISIS Threat to
U.S. National Security: Policy Choices,” 1.
• Mordechai Chaziza, “China’s Middle East Policy: The ISIS Factor,” 25.
• Dylan O’Driscoll, “U.S. Policy in Iraq: Searching for the Reverse Gear?,” 34.
• Ahmed S. Hashim, “The Caliphates at War: Ideology, War Fighting, and State-Formation,” 42.
Shifting Alliances, Shifting Policy
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Hanna Notte, “Russia in Chechnya and Syria: Pursuit of Strategic Goals,” 59.
• Ora Szekely, “Proto-State Realignment and the Arab Spring,” 75.
• Robert Czulda, “The Defensive Dimension of Iran’s Military Doctrine: How Would They
Fight?,” 92.
Hydrocarbon Traffic
• Lukás Tichy and Nikita Odintsov, “Can Iran Reduce EU Dependence on Russian Gas,” 110.
• Volkan Özdemir and Slawomir Raszewski, “State and Substate Oil Trade: The Turkey-KRG
Deal,” 125.
• Omid Shokri Kalehsar, “Iran-Azerbaijan Energy Relations in the Post-Sanctions Era,” 136.
• Sara Roy, “Interview: Chris Gunness,” 144.
______________________________________________________________________________
Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 52, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fmes20/52/2
• Tim Sontheimer, “Bringing the British back in: Sephardim, Ashkenazi anti-Zionist Orthodox
and the policy of Jewish unity,” 165.
• Conor Meleady, “Negotiating the caliphate: British responses to pan-Islamic appeals, 19141924,” 182.
• Melinda Negrón-Gonzales, “The feminist movement during the AKP era in Turkey: challenges
and opportunities,” 198.
• A. Kadir Yildirim, “Between anti-westernism and development: political Islam and
environmentalism,” 215.
• Leonidas Karakatsanis, “‘We’, ‘they’ and the ‘human’ in the middle: foreign interventions for
‘humanitarian reasons’ during the nineteenth century in Turkish historiography,” 233.
• M. Talha Çiçek, “Negotiating power and authority in the desert: the Arab Bedouin and the limits
of the Ottoman state in Hijaz, 1840-1908,” 260.
• Filiz Baskan-Canyas and F. Orkunt Canyas, “The interplay between formal and informal
institutions in Turkey: the case of the Fethullah Gülen community,” 280.
• Kamala Imranli-Lowe, “Nakhchyvan, the Armenian arguments, and the Allied Powers in 1919,”
295.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Shaul Bakhash, “Britain and the abdication of Reza Shah,” 318.
• Ranin Kazemi, “Of diet and profit: on the question of subsistence crises in nineteenth-century
Iran,” 335.
• Syed Tanvir Wasti, “Ahmed Ihsan and the ‘Wealth of the Sciences’,” 359.
Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 52, Issue 3 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fmes20/52/3
• W.J. Berridge, “The frailties of prisons in post-colonial Sudan: from rehabilitation to retribution,
1956-1989,” 385.
• Kenny Kolander, “The 1967 Arab-Israeli War: Soviet policy by other means?,” 402.
• Arnon Gutfeld and Boaz Vanetik, “‘A Situation that Had to Be Manipulated’: The American
Airlift to Israel During the Yom Kippur War,” 419.
• Orit Rozin, “Infiltration and the making of Israel’s emotional regime in the state’s early years,”
448.
• Tamir Goren, “Tel Aviv and the question of separation from Jaffa 1921-1936,” 473.
• Aram Rafaat, “The fundamental characteristics of the Kurdish nationhood project in modern
Iraq,” 488.
• Alexander Nicholas Shaw, “‘Strong, United and Independent’: the British Foreign Office,
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and the internationalization of Iranian politics at the dawn of the
Cold War, 1945-46,” 505.
• Jonathan Conlin, “Debt, diplomacy and dreadnoughts: the National Bank of Turkey, 19091919,” 525.
• Haggai Ram, “Hashish traffickers, hashish consumers, and colonial knowledge in Mandatory
Palestine,” 546.
______________________________________________________________________________
Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 50, Issue 2 (March 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=ASS&volumeId=50&issueId=02&
iid=10180245
• Sangeeta Dasgupta, “‘Heathen aboriginals’, ‘Christian tribes’, and ‘animistic races’: Missionary
narratives on the Oraons of Chhotanagpur in colonial India,” 437.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Mark Condos, “License to Kill: The Murderous Outrages Act and the rule of law in colonial
India, 1867-1925,” 479.
• Abigail McGowan, “Khadi Curtains and Swadeshi Bed Covers: Textiles and the changing
possibilities of home in western India, 1900-1960,” 518.
• Nick Cheesman, “Rule-of-law Lineages in Colonial and Early Post-colonial Burma,” 564.
• Inderpal Grewal, “The Masculinities of Post-colonial Governance: Bureaucratic memoirs of
Indian Civil Service,” 602.
• Erik Mobrand, “The Street Leaders of Seoul and the Foundations of the South Korean Political
Order,” 636.
• Ritajyoti B. Bandyopadhyay, “Institutionalizing Informality: The hawkers’ question in postcolonial Calcutta,” 675.
• Sridevi Menon, “Narrating Brunei: Travelling histories of Brunei Indians,” 718.
Modern Asian Studies, Vol. 50, Issue 3 (May 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=ASS&volumeId=50&seriesId=0&issueId=03
• Jagjeet Lally, “Crafting Colonial Anxieties: Silk and the Salvation Army in British India, circa
1900-1920,” 765.
• Pratik Chakrabarti and Joydeep Sen, “‘The World Rests on the Back of a Tortoise’: Science and
mythology in Indian history,” 808.
• Deepa Das Acevedo, “Divine Sovereignty, Indian Property Law, and the Dispute over the
Padmanabhaswamy Temple,” 841.
• Rochisha Narayan, “Widows, Family, Community, and the Formation of Anglo-Hindu Law in
Eighteenth-Century India,” 866.
• Upal Chakrabarti, “Agrarian Localities: Political economy as local power in early nineteenthcentury British India,” 898.
• Nandini Gooptu, “New Spirituality, Politics of Self-empowerment, Citizenship, and Democracy
in Contemporary India,” 934.
• Benjamin Siegel, “‘Self-Help which Ennobles a Nation’: Development, citizenship, and the
obligations of eating in India’s austerity years,” 975.
• Meera Ashar, “Show or Tell? Instruction and Representation in Govardhanram’s
Saraswatichandra,” 1019.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Xiaoqing Diana Lin, “Feng Youlan and Dialectical/Historical Materialism, 1930s-1950s,” 1050.
• Xuelei Huang, “Deodorizing China: Odour, ordure, and colonial (dis)order in Shanghai, 1840s1940s,” 1092.”
______________________________________________________________________________
Modern & Contemporary France, Vol. 24, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cmcf20/24/1
• Gavin Philip Bowd, “Jean-Joseph Rabearivelo, Charles Maurras, and colonial Madagascar,” 1.
• Jennifer Howell, “Comics and the Demystification of France’s Immigration ‘Problem’: Reading
Christophe Dabitch’s Immigrants,” 15.
• Marie-Pierre Caquot and Alexis Annes, “L’Amour est dans le pré: cultural representations and
social hierarchisation of farmers,” 35.
• David Pettersen, “Transnational blackface, neo-minstrelsy, and the ‘French Eddie Murphy’ in
Intouchables,” 51.
• Fiona Haig, “Democratic centralism or ‘centres’ of power in the French Communist Party Var
Federation? A glimpse of party culture in 1956,” 71.
______________________________________________________________________________
Le Monde Diplomatique (February 2016)
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2016/02/
• Serge Halimi,“Éditorial: Des hommes à poigne,” 1.
• Florence Beaugé, “Les Iraniennes né désarment pas,” 1.
• Florence Beaugé, “Un pays grippé,” 13.
• Philippe Baqué, “Alzheimer, maladie politique,” 1.
• Philippe Baqué, “‘Excellent investissement anticrise’,” 20.
• Philippe Baqué, “Un phénomène massif, mais difficile à cerner,” 21.
• Pierre Rimbert, “Crise des missiles, épilogue,” 2.
• Anne-Cécile Robert, “La stratégie de l’émotion,” 3.
• Benoît Bréville, “Le petit peuple des mobile homes,” 4.
• Benoît Bréville, “‘Moins 10% sur toutes les maisons’,” 5.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Maude Barlow and Raoul Marc Jennar, “Le fléau de l’arbitrage international,” 6.
• Marion Giraldou, “A Cuba, José ne s’est pas levé,” 7.
• Gérard Prunier, “Cocktail meurtrier en Afrique centrale,” 8.
• Gérard Prunier, “Le mythe des Hutus et des Tutsis,” 8.
• Gabriel Gorodetsky, “Aux origines du soutien soviétique à Israël,” 10.
• Patrick Haimzadeh, “Vers une nouvelle intervention en Libye?,” 11.
• Denis Souchon, “Quand les djihadistes étaient nos amis,” 14.
• Clea Chakraverty, “En Inde, les tribus courtisées pas les nationalistes,” 16.
• Naïké Desquesnes, “Lynchés au nom de la vache sacrée,” 16.
• Bernard Cassen, “‘Brexit’, David Cameron pris à son propre piège,” 18.
• Susan Watkins, “Le Parlement européen est-il vraiment la solution?,” 18.
• Julia Beurq, “En Romanie, tous propriétaires…ou presque,” 22.
• Julia Beurq, “Ailleurs en Europe centrale…,” 22.
• Florian Gautier, “Le sport, nouvelle vitrine du Kosovo,” 23.
• Daniel Paris-Clavel, “Suffragettes et jujitsu,” 27.
• Frédéric Lordon, “Un film d’action directe,” 28.
Le Monde Diplomatique (March 2016)
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2016/02/
• Charles Enderlin, “Israël à l’heure de l’Inquisition,” 1.
• Cédric Gouverneur, “Le carburant sociale de la droite polonaise,” 1.
• Cédric Gouverneur, “Xénophobie réelle, immigrés fantômes,” 9.
• Edward Castleton, “Le banquier, l’anarchiste et le bitcoin,” 3.
• Nicolas De La Casinière,“Le sole ne se couche jamais sur l’empire Vinci,” 4.
• Alexia Eychenne, “Au Royaume-Uni, des immigrés prisonniers des castes,” 6.
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• Julien Mercille, “Les caprices du Murdoch irlandais,” 7.
• Emmanuel Raoul, “Peut-on fabriquer un téléphone équitable?,” 10.
• Philippe Hugon, “Le Sahel entre deux feux djihadistes,” 11.
• Jean-Luc Racine, “Le Pakistan cherche sa place dans une région tourmentée,” 12.
• Ashraf Khan, “Une démocratie sous bonne garde,” 12.
• Laurent Bonnefoy, “Au Yémen, une année de guerre pour rien,” 14.
• Hélène-Yvonne Meynaud, “Du droit du travail au travail sans droits,” 16.
• Jacques Bouveresse, “La vérité en question,” 21.
• Pierre Rimbert, “Le problème principal,” 21.
• John Berger, “Clins d’oeil aux fenêtres,” 27.
• Olivier Namias, “Robin des boîtes,” 28.
Dossier: Fin de cycle pour la social-démocratie
• Serge Halimi, “Le temps des colères,” 1.
• Frédéric Lordon, “Pour la république sociale,” 17.
• Thomas Frank, “Les démocrates américains envoûtés par la Silicon Valley,” 18.
Le Monde Diplomatique (April 2016)
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2016/04/
• Solenne Jouanneau, “Imams en France, loins des clichés,” 1.
• Solenne Jouanneau, “Une affaire d’Etat,” 22.
• Serge Halimi, “Guerre civile au sein de la droite américaine,” 1.
• Serge Halimi, “Le destin du Proche-Orient se joue (aussi) à Opelika,” 11.
• “Bataille gagnée, réflexion inachevée,” 2.
• Dominique Pinsolle, “Critique des médias, une histoire impétueuse,” 3.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Sophie Béroud, “Imposture de la démocratie d’entreprise,” 4.
• Vanessa Pinto, “Deux jeunesses face à la ‘loi travail’,” 4.
• Marie Kostrz, “Le Hezbollah maître du jeu libanais,” 6.
• Akram Belkaïd, “Pourquoi le Maghreb soutient Bachar Al-Assad,” 6.
• Akram Belkaïd, “Un futur président sous contrôle,” 7.
• Marie Kostrz, “L’aura de la résistance à Israël,” 7.
• Jean-Arnault Dérens and Simon Rico, “Réfugiés, l’Europe tire le rideau,” 8.
• Francesca Maria Benvenuto, “Soupçons sur la Cour pénale internationale,” 9.
• Michael T. Klare, “Maudit pétrole bon marché,” 12.
• Johann Fleuri, “Les Japonaises indésirables au travail,” 19.
• Carlos Gabetta, “En Argentine, les régimes passent, la corruption reste,” 20.
• Olivier Pironet, “Simone Weil, un engagement absolu,” 27.
• Pierre Rimbert, “Les barbares sont parmi nous,” 28.
Dossier: Diplomatie des armes
• Philippe Leymarie, “La grande chasse aux milliards,” 13.
• Olivier Zajec, “La Russie de la kalachnikov aux tueurs de satellites,” 16.
• Thibault Henneton, “Silicon Army,” 16.
• Camille François, “Penser la cyberpaix,” 18.
• Serge Halimi, “Cet avion qui émerveille ‘Le Figaro.’”
Supplément: Réussites et défis sanitaires en Afrique francophone
• Christine Holzbauer, “La prison d’Abidjan, laboratoire de la lutte contre le VIH-sida,” I.
• Lelio Marmora, “Innover sur le terrain,” I.
• Karl Blanchet, “La santé communautaire, enjeu essentiel,” II.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Mark Dybul, “Offrir des perspectives aux jeunes,” III.
• Jean-Pierre Olivier de Sardan and Aïssa Diarra, “Au Niger, les femmes en première ligne,” IV.
• Samuel Eto’o, “Une dette envers mon pays,” IV.
• Laurent Vigier, “Un lien social de solidarité,” IV.
______________________________________________________________________________
Le Monde Diplomatique - Manière de voir (February-March 2016)
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/145/
Politiques, Sociétés, L’emprise des religions
• Akram Belkaïd, “Tartuffe à la manoevre.”
Dynamiques internationales
• Nabile Mouline, “L’expansion de l’Islam traditionaliste.”
• Jean-Michel Dumay, “Ce pape qui secoue le monde.”
• Samir Amghar and Patrick Haenni , “L’idéal salafiste.”
• Philippe Leymarie, “Sant’Egidio, la ‘petite ONU du Trastevere.’”
• Georges Corm, “Sortir de l’analyse religieuse des conflits.”
• Michel Cool, “Benoît XVI et le retour au latin.”
• Wu Weiming, “Un humanisme spirituel pour le XXIe siècle.”
• André Corten, “L’essor mondial des pentecôtismes.”
• Jérôme Anciberro, “L’image normalisée de l’Opus Dei.”
• Marcel Detienne, “Les polythéismes, ces oubliés.”
Religions et pouvoirs
• William S. Hatcher, “La foi baha’ie, un défi aux intégrismes.”
• Robert Guillain, “La déesse du Soleil.”
• Jean Cardonnel, “Le communisme chinois, le capitalisme et l’Evangile.”
• Alain Gresh, “L’islam et le défi du développement.”
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Félix Lacambre, “L’engagement jésuite en Amérique centrale.”
• Ali Kazancigil, “Les paradoxes du mouvement Gülen.”
• Jean-Jacques Marie, “Retour de l’Eglise orthodoxe.”
• Marie-Claire Cécilia, “Les piliers néerlandais de la laïcité.”
• Cédric Gouverneur, “Les déchirements nord-irlandais.”
• Valia Kaimaki, “Calculs politiques contre la laïcité en Grèce.”
• Marius Schattner, “Le poids électoral des Séfarades israéliens.”
Penser les croyances
• Gilbert Achcar, “La religion peut-elle être progressiste?”
• Jacques Bouveresse, “De la nécessité de croire.”
• Dora C. Valayer, “L’Eglise, l’oecuménisme et l’engagement.”
• Paul Valadier, “La laïcité face aux fondamentalismes.”
• Dominique Vidal, “Croire mais sans religion.”
• Pierine Piras, “Le recul de la raison.”
• Akram Belkaïd, “Réflexion sur ‘l’islam des Lumières.’”
• Henry Laurens, “Renan, la langue, la race, la religion et la nation.”
• Lucien Smarth, “Le vaudou comme ferment identitaire.”
• André Dumas, “La foi face au doute.”
Le Monde Diplomatique - Manière de voir (April-May 2016)
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/mav/146/
Faire sauter le verrou médiatique
• Pierre Rimbert, “Journalisme de marché, permis d’inhumer.”
Désintégration numérique
• Serge Halimi, “‘On n’a plus le temps…’”
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Evgeny Morozov, “Un robot m’a volé mon Pulitzer.”
• Pierre Lagrange, “La guerre des mondes n’a pas en lieu.”
• Yves Gonzalez-Quijano, “Et l’étoile d’Al-Jazira pâlit.”
• Christian Caujolle, “Mort et résurrection du photojournalisme.”
• Marc Endeweld, “Les JT au gré des époques.”
• Dan Schiller, “Ces anges pas si blancs de la Silicon Valley.”
• Marie Bénilde, “La traque méthodique de l’internaute.”d
• Benjamin Fernandez, “Une presse populaire qui ignore le peuple.”
• Mona Chollet, “Twitter jusqu’au vertige.”
Un obstacle politique
• Maurice Lemoine, “Le putsch était presque parfait.”
• Renaud Lambert, “Le beurre et l’argent du beurre.”
• Pierre Rimbert, “Syriza, six mois de brutit et de fureur.”
• Olivier Cyran, “‘Bild’ contre les cyclo-nudistes.”
• Jacques Bouveresse, “14-18, les petits soldats de la plume.”
• Ignacio Romanet, “Télévision nécrophile.”
• Akram Belkaïd, “‘Dabiq’, magazine de la fin du monde.”
• Jérôme Berthaut, “Tintin au périphéristan.”
• Razmig Keucheyan and Pierre Rimbert, “Au carnaval de l’investigation.”
• Jorge Magasich, “Ce plan Z qui a épouvanté le Chili.”
• Alain Accardo, “Derrière la subjectivité des journalistes.”
Vers une information libre
• Serge Halimi, “De la critique à la riposte.”
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Dominique Pinsolle, “Poudre de l’histoire, étincelle du désir.”
• Steve Randall, “Le principe d’impartialité.”
• Renaud Lambert, “En Amérique latine, des Etats imposent le pluralisme.”
• Claude Julien, “Pour des sociétés à but non lucratif.”
• Daniel Mermet, “Rapprocher le micro de la fenêtre.”
• Pierre Rimbert, “Projet pour une presse libre.”
______________________________________________________________________________
National Identities, Vol. 18, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cnid20/18/2
• Mari-Liis Madisson and Andreas Ventsel, “‘Freedom of speech’ in the self-descriptions of the
Estonian extreme right groupuscles,” 89.
• Zinovia Lialiouti, “Contesting the anti-totalitarian consensus: the concept of national
independence, the memory of the Second World War and the ideological cleavages in post-war
Greece,” 105.
• Eva Pluharova-Grigiene, “A national discovery and the loss of a landscape - photographic
images of the Curonian Spit,” 125.
• David Blaazer, “Sharks and Shylocks: Englishness and otherness in popular discourse on ‘the
City’ 1870-1914,” 139.
• Ben Wellings and Ben Power, “Euro-myth: nationalism, war and the legitimacy of the European
Union,” 157.
• Susan E. Maguire, “Brother Jonathan and John Bull build a nation: the transactional nature of
American nationalism in the early nineteenth century,” 179.
• Anna Maria Droumpouki, “Shaping Holocaust memory in Greece: memorials and their public
history,” 199.
• Tarja Vayrynen, “The Finnish national identity and the sacrificial male body: war, postmemory,
and resistance,” 217.
______________________________________________________________________________
Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, Vol. 22, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fnep20/22/1#.Vwqe2WPwzVo
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Clémence Scalbert Yücel, “Diversity Talk and Identity Politics: Between Consensus and
Resistance,” 1.
• Lionel Arnaud, “The Marketing of Diversity and Esthetization of the Difference: The Cultural
Expressions of Ethnic Minorities Put to the Test of New Urban Cultural Policies,” 9.
• Mary N. Taylor, “Intangible Heritage Protection and the Cultivation of a Universal Chain of
Equivalency,” 27.
• Stéphanie Pouessel, “The Democratic Turn in Tunisia: Civic and Political Redefinition of
Canons of Cultural Diversity,” 50.
• Clémence Scalbert Yücel, “Common Ground or Battlefield?: Deconstructing the Politics of
Recognition in Turkey,” 71.
• Céline Barrère, “The Silenced Memory of Paris Hôtels Meublés: Narratives of a Low-Key
Diversity from an Uncertain Place,” 94.
______________________________________________________________________________
Orbis, Vol. 60, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/00304387
• Arthur Waldron, “Could Four Simmering Global Crises Boil Over?,” 162.
• Paul Bracken, “The Cyber Threat to Nuclear Stability,” 188.
• Adam Garfinkle, “The Fall of Empires and the Formation of the Modern Middle East,” 204.
• F.G. Hoffman and Ryan Neuhard, “Avoiding Strategic Inertia: Enabling the National Security
Council,” 217.
• Paul D. Miller, “On Strategy, Grand and Mundane,” 237.
• Lionel Beehner and Gustav Meibauer, “The Futility of Buffer Zones in International Politics,”
248.
• Douglas Peifer, “Why Germany Won’t Be Dropping Bombs on Syria, Iraq, and Mali,” 266.
• Harvey Rubin and Nicholas Saidel, “Global Governance Structure for Infectious Disease: An
Enforceable Strategy,” 279.
• Michael Clarke, “Beijing’s March West: Opportunities and Challenges for China’s Eurasian
Pivot,” 296.
______________________________________________________________________________
Peace & Change: A Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 41, Issue 1 (January 2016)
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pech.2016.41.issue-1/issuetoc
• Jerry Lembcke, “Editor’s Introduction: World War I and the Gendered Subtexts of War
Trauma,” 5.
• Scott H. Bennett, “Foreword: The Wounds and the Legacies of World War I,” 7.
• John V.H. Dippel, “Avenging the Primal Wound: Women as the Unacknowledged Enemy in
World War I,” 13.
• Andrew M. Johnston, “Jeanne Halbwachs, International Feminist Pacifism, and France’s Société
d’Études Documentaires et Critiques sur la Guerre,” 22.
• Tara M. Fueshko, “The Intricacies of Shell Shock: A Chronological History of The Lancet’s
Publications by Dr. Charles S. Myers and His Contemporaries,” 38.
• Johanna Church, “Literary Representations of Shell Shock as a Result of World War I in the
Works of Virginia Woolf and Ernest Hemingway,” 52.
• Fiona Reid, “‘My Friends Looked at Me in Horror’: Idealizations of Wounded Men in the First
World War,” 64.
• Jerry Lembcke, “‘Shell Shock’ in the American Imagination: World War I’s Most Enduring
Legacy,” 78.
• Scott H. Bennett, “Shell Shock in Context: A Conversation with Harriet Hyman Alonso and
Adam Hochschild,” 87.
Peace & Change: A Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 41, Issue 2 (April 2016)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pech.2016.41.issue-2/issuetoc
• Cécile Mouly, María Belén Garrido, and Annette Idler, “How Peace Takes Shape Socially: The
Experience of Civil Resistance in Samaniego, Colombia,” 129.
• Andreas Hackl, “Cross-Border Activists in a Palestinian Village,” 167.
• Ilham Nasser and Mohammed Abu-Nimer, “Examining Views and Attitudes about Forgiveness
among Teachers in the Arab World: A Comparison between Five Communities,” 194.
• E. Timothy Smith, “Roots of the Peace Corps: Youth Volunteer Service in the 1950s,” 221.
______________________________________________________________________________
Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, Vol. 22, Issue 1 (February 2016)
http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/pac/22/1/
• Brady Wagoner and Ignacio Brescó, “Conflict and memory: The past in the present,” 3.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Cathy Nicholson, “The role of historical representations in Israeli-Palestinian relations:
Narratives from abroad,” 5.
• Sandra Obradovic, “Don’t forget to remember: Collective memory of the Yugoslav wars in
present-day Serbia,” 12.
• Charis Psaltis, “Collective memory, social representations of intercommunal relations, and
conflict transformation in divided Cyprus,” 19.
• Raul Garagozov, “Painful collective memory: Measuring collective memory affect in the
Karabakh conflict,” 28.
• Ignacio Brescó, “Conflict, memory, and positioning: Studying the dialogical and multivoiced
dimension of the Basque conflict,” 36.
• Alicia Barreiro, Cecilia Wainryb, and Mario Carretero, “Narratives about the past and cognitive
polyphasia: Remembering the Argentine conquest of the desert,” 44.
• Erin McFee, “The double bind of ‘playing double’: Passing and identity among ex-combatants
in Colombia,” 52.
• Séamus A. Power, “A violent past but a peaceful present: The cultural psychology of an Irish
recession,” 60.
• Gilad Hirschberger, Tom Pyszczynski, Tsachi Ein-Dor, Tal Shani-Sherman, Eihab Kadah, Pelin
Kesebir, and Young Chin Park, “Fear of death amplifies retributive justice motivations and
encourages political violence,” 67.
• Coen Wirtz, Joop van der Pligt, and Bertjan Doosje, “Negative attitudes toward Muslims in the
Netherlands: The role of symbolic threat stereotypes, and moral emotions,” 75.
• Marc Gelkopf, Rony Berger, and David Roe, “Soldiers perpetrating or witnessing acts of
humiliation: A community-based random sample study design,” 84.
• Ronald Gardner and William Barcella, “The value of forgiveness in Western and Arab/Muslim
conceptualizations of interstate conflict resolution,” 91.
• Lynn Davies, “The inescapable persistence of conflict,” 94.
• Laura Lee Janik, “An interdisciplinary approach to international peace negotiations,” 96.
• Soeren Keil, “Why power-sharing (still) matters,” 98.
______________________________________________________________________________
Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice, Vol. 28, Issue 1 (2016)
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cper20/28/1
Original Articles
• Dorothy Kidd, “‘Extra-Activism’,” 1.
• Nergis Canefe, “The Politics of Public Protests against Extractivism in Turkey,” 10.
• Michael S. Wilson, “Before the Outbreak of Violence,” 20.
• Roland G. Simbulan, “Indigenous Communities’ Resistance to Corporate Mining in the
Philippines,” 29.
• Mariana Lyra, “The Beginnings of the Anti-Mining Movement in Brazil,” 38.
• Anne Bartlett, “Conflict Extractivism in Darfur’s Gold Mines,” 46.
• Jane Regan, “Resisting the Gold Rush in Haiti,” 55.
• Asmaa N. Khadim, “Defending Glaciers in Argentina,” 65.
• Leontina M. Hormel, “Nez Perce Defending Treaty Lands in Northern Idaho,” 76.
• Stephanie Friede and Rosa Lehmann, “Consultas, Corporations, and Governance in
Tehuantepec, Mexico,” 84.
Other Features
• Rachel Halfrida Cunliffe, “Preparing Peacebuilders,” 93.
• Ian R. Gibson, “Actors and Action for Peace in Japan,” 99.
• Michelle I. Gawerc, “Advocating Peace During the 2014 War in Gaza,” 108.
• H. Patricia Hynes, “The Legacy of Agent Orange in Vietnam,” 114.
• Geneviève Souillac, “Peace Profile: Jean Jaurès,” 123.
______________________________________________________________________________
Politique Étrangère (2016/1)
http://www.cairn.info/revue-politique-etrangere-2016-1.htm
Migrations en Afrique: Un Regard Neuf
• Alain Antil, Christophe Bertossi, Victor Magnani, Matthieu Tardis, “Migrations: logiques
africaines,” 11.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Jean-Pierre Cassarino, “Réadmission des migrants: les faux-semblants des partenariats euroafricains,” 25.
• Alexandra Bilak, “L’Afrique face à ses déplacés internes,” 39.
• Zaheera Jinnah, translated from the English by Cécile Tarpinian, “L’Afrique du Sud face aux
migrations économiques,” 53.
Contrechamps: Le retour de la question allemande?
• Hans Stark, “De la question allemande à la question européenne?,” 67.
• Stephan Martens, “L’Allemagne du vivre ensemble,” 79.
Actualités
• Dominique Thomas, “État islamique vs. Al-Qaïda: autopsie d’une lutte fratricide,” 95.
• Elisabeth Marteu, “L’État islamique et la nébuleuse djihadiste au Liban et en Jordanie,” 107.
• Rémy Hémez, “Les Kurdes face à Daech: quelle efficacité militaire?,” 123.
• Vivien Pertusot,“Brexit: les risques du référendum,” 135.
Repères
• Isabelle Facon,”Que vaut l’armée russe?,” 151.
• Aurélien Denizeau, “La Turquie entre stabilité et fragilité,” 165.
• Hadrienne Terres, “Le ‘pivot’ français vers l’Asie: une ébauche déjà dépassée?,” 177.
______________________________________________________________________________
Raisons Politiques (2015/4)
http://www.cairn.info/revue-raisons-politiques-2015-4.htm
Sommaire: Un Texte, Un Auteur
• “Un texte, un auteur: Andrew Abbott,” 5.
• Andrew Abbott, translated from the English by Mathieu Hauchecorne and Étienne Ollion,
“Actualité de la tradition sociologique de Chicago,” 9.
• Interview with Andrew Abbott, translated from the English by Sarah Martin, “Le monde est un
monde d’événements,” 45.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
Varia
• Stéphane Haber, “L’idéal démocratique filtré par la théorie sociologique: Pour une philosophie
politique sans surenchères,” 65.
• Carole Widmaier, “De la servitude voluntaire aux impasses de la volonté: Politique et
imagination chez La Boétie et Hannah Arendt,” 79.
• Antoine Chollet, “Défaire son action: Quatre figures possibles d’une réversibilité politique en
démocratie,” 105.
• Didier Mineur, “La délibération préalable à la décision majoritaire: justification substantielle
ou procédurale?,” 129.
• Romain Felli, “La durabilité ou l’escamotage du développement durable,” 149.
Raisons Politiques (2016/1)
http://www.cairn.info/revue-raisons-politiques-2016-1.htm
Sommaire: Éditorial
• Charlotte Epstein and Thomas Lindemann, “La reconnaissance. Lectures hégéliennes,” 5.
Dossier
• Charlotte Epstein and Thomas Lindemann, “Vers une reformulation antagonique de la lutte
pour la reconnaissance,” 7.
• Haud Guéguen, “La lecture honnéthienne de Hegel dans La Lutte pour la reconnaissance,” 27.
• Bernard Bourgeois, “Hegel: de la reconnaissance à l’intégration,” 45.
• Gaëlle Demelemestre, “La charge affective de la non-reconnaissance dans la dialectique
hégélienne du maître et du serviteur,” 53.
• Jean-François Kervégan, “La rationalité normative: impulsions hégéliennes,” 69.
• Christian Lazzeri, “Institutionnaliser la reconnaissance: Ou comment classer les institutions?,”
87.
• Alain Caillé, “La luttre pour la reconnaissance entre États, nations et cultures,” 105.
Varia
• Thibaut Rioufreyt, “Le social-libéralisme, du label politique au concept scientifique,” 115.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Razmig Keucheyan, “Le marxisme et les guerres du climat: Les théories critiques face aux
évolutions de la violence collective,” 129.
• Paul Mengal, “Faire régner la discipline: La fonction-Psy à l’épreuve de l’histoire récente de la
psychologie,” 145.
______________________________________________________________________________
Renewal: A Journal of Social Democracy, Vol. 24, No. 1 (2016)
http://renewal.org.uk/issues/vol-24-no-1-2016
• James Stafford and Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, “Editorial: Reorienting the Left.”
• Patrick Diamond and Ken Spours, “Roundtable: The Osborne Supremacy.”
• Eunice Goes, “The Labour Party under Ed Miliband.”
• Emily Robinson, “Labour and the New Englishness.”
• Lisa Nandy, “What is the significance of the Paris agreement?”
• Bridget Anderson, “Against Fantasy Citizenship: the politics of migration and austerity.”
• Tom Barker, “Are we all entrepreneurs now?”
• Danny Dorling, “A Better Politics - A More Enlightened Economics.”
______________________________________________________________________________
Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice, Vol. 20, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rrhi20/20/1
Special Issue: History as Creative Writing
• Robert Rosenstone, “Adventures of a postmodern historian - Japan,” 2.
• Marjorie Becker, “Had Pilar Ternera co-written Cien Años de Soledad, Gabo, I’d never write
you now: toward a letter to the dead,” 39.
• Ralph Shain, “Benjamin and collecting,” 52.
• Paul Wake, “‘Except in the case of historical fact’: history and the historical novel,” 80.
• Andrew J. Salvati, “History bites: mashing up history and gothic fiction in Abraham Lincoln:
Vampire Hunter,” 97.
Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice, Vol. 20, Issue 2 (2016)
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rrhi20/20/2
Special Issue: History in the World
• Kalle Pihlainen, “Historians and ‘the current situation’,” 143.
• Marek Tamm, “The republic of historians: historians as nation-builders in Estonia (late 1980searly 1990s),” 154.
• Kenan Van De Mieroop, “The ‘age of commemoration’ as a narrative construct: a critique of the
discourse on the contemporary crisis of memory in France,” 172.
• Claire Norton and Mark Donnelly, “Thinking the past politically: Palestine, power, and
pedagogy,” 192.
• Anton Froeyman, “The ideal of objectivity and the public role of the historian: some lessons
from the Historikerstreit and the History Wars,” 217.
• Rik Peters, “Calliope’s ascent: defragmenting philosophy of history by rhetoric,” 235.
• Zoltán Boldizsár Simon, “We are history: the outlines of a quasi-substantive philosophy of
history,” 259.
• Katherine Hepworth, “History, power, and visual communication artefacts,” 280.
• Alun Munslow, “Regimes of historicity: presentism and experiences of time,” 303.
• Alexander Lyon Macfie and Beverley Southgate, “The fiction of history; a new type of history,”
305.
______________________________________________________________________________
The Review of Faith & International Affairs, Vol. 14, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rfia20/14/1
Orthodox Christianity and Humanitarianism
• Elizabeth H. Prodromou and Nathanael Symeonides, “Orthodox Christianity and
Humanitarianism: An Introduction to Thought and Practice, Past and Present,” 1.
• Maxim Vasiljevic, “Orthodox Theological Foundations for an Ecclesial Humanitarianism,” 9.
• Timothy S. Miller, “Byzantine Philanthropic Institutions and Modern Humanitarianism,” 18.
• Susan R. Holman, “Orthodox Humanitarianisms: Patristic Foundations,” 26.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Alexandros K. Kyrou, “From Russia with Love, from the West with Ambivalence: Orthodox
Christian Relief During the Greek Revolution and the New Historiography on Humanitarian
Intervention,” 34.
• Cyril Hovorun, “Humanitarianism and the Churches in Ukraine,” 43.
• Pascalis Papouras, “Faith Through Deeds: Case Studies of a Faith-Based Humanitarian
Organization,” 51.
• Dana L. Robert, “Orthodoxy and Humanitarianism: Realities, Resources, and Future Research,”
58.
Articles
• Christopher Marsh, “The Desecularization of Conflict: The Role of Religion in Russia’s
Confrontation with Chechnya, 1785-Today,” 66.
• Brent F. Nelsen and James L. Guth, “Religion and the Creation of European Identity: The
Message of the Flags,” 80.
• Ben Peterson, “Tocqueville and Qutb: Religion, Democracy, and the Needs of the Soul,” 89.
______________________________________________________________________________
Review of International Studies, Vol. 42, Issue 2 (April 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=RIS&volumeId=42&seriesId=0&issueId=02
• Anna Holzscheiter, “Representation as power and performative practice: Global civil society
advocacy for working children,” 205.
• Amin Samman, “Conjuring the spirit of multilateralism: Histories of crisis management during
the ‘great credit crash’,” 227.
• Andrew Davenport, “The international and the limits of history,” 247.
• Linus Hagström and Ulv Hanssen, “War is peace: the rearticulation of ‘peace’ in Japan’s China
discourse,” 266.
• Jong Kun Choi, “Crisis stability or general stability? Assessing Northeast Asia’s absence of war
and prospects for liberal transition,” 287.
• Alan Bloomfield, “Norm antipreneurs and theorising resistance to normative change,” 310.
• Mervyn Frost and Silviya Lechner, “Two conceptions of international practice: Aristotelian
praxis or Wittgensteinian language-games?,” 334.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Deniz Kuru, “Historicising Eurocentrism and anti-Eurocentrism in IR: A revisionist account of
disciplinary self-reflexivity,” 351.
• Cornelius Friesendorf, “Police assistance as foreign policy: Explaining donor practices,” 377.
______________________________________________________________________________
Revista de Historia Económica/Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History, Vol. 34, Issue
1 (March 2016)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?decade=2010&jid=RHE&seriesId=2&volumeId=34&i
ssueId=01&iid=10207664
• Stephen Broadberry and Leigh Gardner, “Economic Development in Africa and Europe:
Reciprocal Comparisons,” 11.
• Sara Torregrosa-Hetland, “Sticky Income Inequality in the Spanish Transition (1973-1990),”
39.
• Leticia Arroyo Abad, “The Limits of the Estado Docente: Education and Political Participation
in Peru, 1876-1940,” 81.
• Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia, “Common Lands and Economic Development in Spain,” 111.
• Luis Perdices De Blas and José Luis Ramos-Gorostiza, “Rediscovering America: Political
Economy of Spanish Colonies according to the Explorers Juan-Ulloa, Malaspina, and
Humboldt,” 135.
______________________________________________________________________________
Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine (2015/4)
http://www.cairn.info/revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2015-4.htm
Des Statistiques Très Politiques
• Marine Dhermy-Mairal, “Du danger des enquêtes savantes. Faire oeuvre de science dans
l’entre-deux-guerres au Bureau International du Travail,” 7.
• Vincent Bonnecase, “Généalogie d’une evidence statistique: de la ‘réussite économique’ du
colonialisme tardif à la ‘faillite’ des États-africains (v. 1930-v. 1980),” 33.
Déportations Staliniennes en URSS
• Alain Blum, “Décision politique et articulation bureaucratique: les déportés lituaniens de
l’opération ‘Printemps’ (1948),” 64.
L’Économie des Spectacles
44 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Olivier Spina, “La veuve et le menuisier. L’économie du théâtre élisabethain au miroir des
archives judiciaires,” 89.
Revue d’histoire moderne et contemporaine (2015/5)
http://www.cairn.info/revue-d-histoire-moderne-et-contemporaine-2015-5.htm
• “Économie et politique de l’ ’accès ouvert’: les revues à l’âge numérique,” 7.
Économie et Politique de l’ ‘Accès Ouvert’: Les Revues à l’Âge Numérique
• Philippe Minard, “Les revues à l’âge numérique: au péril de l’idéologie,” 8.
• Étienne Anheim, “Le numérique et l’économie éditoriale des revues scientifiques,” 22.
• Guillaume Calafat and Eric Monnet, “À la recherche de l’accès ouvert. Revues et nouveaux
formats numériques,” 33.
• Claire Lemercier, “Pour qui écrivons-nous?,” 43.
• Odile Contat and Didier Torny, “Les revues en sciences humaines et sociales à l’heure des
communs,” 62.
• Marc Minon, Thomas Parisot, and Stéphane Bureau, “Les revues SHS de langue française
à la croisée des chemins,” 71.
• Patrick Fridenson, “En France, au coeur de la révolution numérique internationale,” 83.
______________________________________________________________________________
Revue Française de Science Politique (2016/1)
http://www.cairn.info/revue-francaise-de-science-politique-2016-1.htm
Prétendre Représenter: La Représentation Politique Comme Revendication
• Virginie Dutoya and Samuel Hayat, “Prétendre représenter: La construction sociale de la
représentation politique,” 7.
• Marieke Louis, “Un parlement mondial du travail? Enquête sur un siècle de représentation
tripartite à l’Organisation internationale du travail,” 27.
• Virginie Dutoya, “Une demande faite au nom des femmes? Quotas et représentation politique
des femmes en Inde et au Pakistan (1917-2010),” 49.
• Marie-Hélène Sa Vilas Boas, “L’ancrage social de la représentation: Devenir porte-parole
dans les conférences municipales des femmes de Recife, au Brésil,” 71.
45 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Julien Talpin, “La représentation comme performance: Le travail d’incarnation des classes
populaires au sein de deux organisations communautaires à Los Angeles, USA,” 91.
Article
• John Pitseys, “Publicité et transparence: Le statut de la représentation et de la visibilité
politique chez Kelsen et Schmitt,” 117.
______________________________________________________________________________
Revue Internationale et Stratégique (2016/1)
http://www.cairn.info/revue-internationale-et-strategique-2016-1.htm
Autre Regard
• Interview with Magyd Cherfi by Pascal Boniface, “Je me sens dans l’obligation morale d’être
engagé,” 7.
Éclairages
• Mohammed Faraj Ben Lamma, “L’application de la responsabilité de protéger en Libye: retour
à la case départ?,” 14.
• Rémi Bourgeot, “Le euro contre l’Europe?,” 26.
• Emmanuel Hache, “La géopolitique des énergies renouvelables: amélioration de la sécurité
énergétique et/ou nouvelle dépendances?,” 36.
Dossier: Corruption: Phénomène Ancien, Problème Nouveau?
• Carole Gomez and Sylvie Matelly, “La corruption: phénomène ancien, problème nouveau?,”
47.
• Gaspard Koenig, “Quelle morale pour la corruption?,” 55.
• Frédéric Monier, “La corruption, fille de la modernité politique?,” 65.
• Pascal Boniface, “La lutte contre la corruption, nouveau paradigme des relations
internationales,” 75.
• Olivier de France and Carole Gomez, “La corruption est-elle condamnable?,” 83.
• Jean-Dominique Lafay, “L’économie politique de la corruption: Aperçu analytique,” 91.
• Interviews with Nicola Bonucci and Daniel Lebègue by Carole Gomez and Marc Verzeroli,
“Lutte contre la corruption: dépasser le ‘tous pourris’,” 101.
46 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Sylvie Matelly, “Les entreprises face à la corruption,” 121.
• Barthélemy Courmont and Emmanuel Lincot, “La lutte anticorruption en Chine: ‘la chasse aux
tigres et aux renards’,” 131.
• Pim Verschuuren, “La corruption institutionnelle au sein du sport international: phénomène
nouveau, problèmes anciens?,” 141.
______________________________________________________________________________
The Royal United Services Institute Journal, Vol. 161, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rusi20/161/1
UK Defence Debates
• Malcolm Chalmers, “The 2015 SDSR in Context: From Boom to Bust - and Back Again?,” 4.
• Fitriani, Randolf G.S. Cooper, and Ron Matthews, “Women in Ground Close Combat,” 14.
The Third Offset Strategy
• Daniel Fiott, “Europe and the Pentagon’s Third Offset Strategy,” 26.
The Armed Forces and Society
• Rachel Woodward, K. Neil Jenkings, and Alison J. Williams, “The UK Armed Forces and the
Value of the University Armed Service Units,” 32.
International Peacekeeping
• Paul D. Williams, “AMISOM under Review,” 40.
• Peter Albrecht and Cathy Haenlein, “Fragmented Peacekeeping: The African Union in
Somalia,” 50.
• Stephanie Blair and Maureen Brown, “Beyond Muddling Through: Towards a Blueprint for UK
International Policing and Law Enforcement,” 62.
The Military and the State
• Eduardo W. Aboultaif, “The Lebanese Army: Saviour of the Republic?,” 70.
Conflict, War and Culture
• Michaela Crimmin and Jemima Montagu, “The Art of Power and the Power of Art,” 80.
______________________________________________________________________________
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
Scandinavian Economic History Review, Vol. 64, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/sehr20/64/1
• Jari Ojala and Alfred Reckendrees, “Towards debate and open conversation,” 1.
• Deirdre Nansen McCloskey, “The great enrichment: a humanistic and social scientific account,”
6.
• Staffan Albinsson, “A salary bass: a study of bassists’ earnings in the Royal Swedish Opera,
1799-1980,” 19.
• Daniel Waldenström, “The national wealth of Sweden, 1810-2014,” 36.
• Mats Olsson and Patrick Svensson, “The landlord lag - productivity on peasant farms and
landlord demesnes during the agricultural revolution in Sweden, 1700-1860,” 55.
______________________________________________________________________________
Scandinavian Journal of History, Vol. 41, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/shis20/41/1
• Rosa Vilkama, Ritva Kylli, and Anna-Kaisa Salmi, “Sugar Consumption, Dental Health, and
Foodways in Late Medieval Iin Hamina and Early Modern Oulu, Northern Finland,” 2.
• Björn Grip and Hans Nilsson, “Perspectives on the Rise and Fall of Swedish Cardiac Epidemics:
The cases of Linköping and Norrköping,” 32.
• Kristina Lenz and Nils Hybel, “The Black Death: Its origin and routes of dissemination,” 54.
• Jørgen Mührmann-Lund, “‘Good order and the police’: Policing in the towns and countryside
during Danish absolutism (1660-1800),” 71.
• Katarina Leppänen, “The Politics of Hella Wuolijoki’s Autobiography,” 91.
• Staffan Förhammar, “Scientific Philanthropy and Welfare Politics of Solidarity: A discussion of
the roots of the Swedish welfare state,” 110.
Scandinavian Journal of History, Vol. 41, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/shis20/41/2
• Paula Pinto Costa, Luís Adão da Fonseca, Kurt Villads Jensen, and Cristina Pimenta, “Military
Orders between Territorialization and Periphery from the 12th to the 16th Century: A
comparative perspective on Portugal and Denmark,” 141.
• Helena Haage, Erling Häggström Lundevaller, and Lotta Vikström, “Gendered death risks
among disabled individuals in Sweden: A case study of the 19th-century Sundsvall region,” 160.
• Bo Poulsen, “Imitation in European herring fisheries, c. 1550-1860,” 185.
48 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Frode Ulvund, “Travelling images and projected representations: Perceptions of Mormonism in
Norway, c. 1840-1860,” 208.
• Regin Schmidt, “Denmark, Scandinavia, and the International Conference of Free Trade Unions
in the early Cold War,” 231.
______________________________________________________________________________
Security Studies, Vol. 25, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fsst20/25/1
Symposium on Qualitative and Multimethod Research
• Andrew Bennett, Colin Elman, and John M. Owen, “Symposium on Qualitative and
Multimethod Research: Note to Readers,” 1.
• Gary Goertz, “Multimethod Research,” 3.
• Hein Goemans and William Spaniel, “Multimethod Research: A Case for Formal Theory,” 25.
• Tanisha M. Fazal, “An Occult of Irrelevance? Multimethod Research and Engagement with the
Policy World,” 34.
• Jason Seawright, “Better Multimethod Design: The Promise of Integrative Multimethod
Research,” 42.
Original Articles
• Andrea Gilli and Mauro Gilli, “The Diffusion of Drone Warfare? Industrial, Organizational,
and Infrastructural Constraints,” 50.
• Romain Malejacq, “Warlords, Intervention, and State Consolidation: A Typology of Political
Orders in Weak and Failed States,” 85.
• Caitlin Talmadge, “Different Threats, Different Militaries: Explaining Organizational Practices
in Authoritarian Armies,” 111.
• Scott L. Kastner, Margaret M. Pearson, and Chad Rector, “Invest, Hold Up, or Accept? China
in Multilateral Governance,” 142.
______________________________________________________________________________
Small Wars & Insurgencies, Vol. 27, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fswi20/27/1
• George Joffé, “The fateful phoenix: the revival of Al-Qa’ida in Iraq,” 1.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Austin Long, “After ISAF: partners and proxies in Afghanistan after 2014,” 22.
• Mattia Toaldo, “Decentralising authoritarianism? The international intervention, the new
‘revolutionaries’ and the involution of Post-Qadhafi Libya,” 39.
• Susanna D. Wing, “French intervention in Mali: strategic alliances, long-term regional
presence?,” 59.
• B.W. Morgan and M.L.R. Smith, “Northern Ireland and minimum force: the refutation of a
concept?,” 81.
• Paul Lushenko and John Hardy, “Panjwai: a tale of two COINs in Afghanistan,” 106.
• Timothy J. Lomperis, “The ‘first’ surge: the repulse of the Easter invasion in South Vietnam,
1972 - Implications for Iraq and Afghanistan,” 132.
• Andrea Beccaro, “Carlo Bianco and Guerra per bande: an Italian approach to irregular
warfare,” 154.
Small Wars & Insurgencies, Vol. 27, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fswi20/27/2
• Alex Marshall, “From civil war to proxy war: past history and current dilemmas,” 183.
• Geraint Hughes, “Militias in internal warfare: From the colonial era to the contemporary Middle
East,” 196.
• Carsten F. Roennfeldt, “Conducting counterinsurgency with productive power,” 226.
• Seyom Brown, “Purposes and pitfalls of war by proxy: A systemic analysis,” 243.
• Vanda Felbab-Brown, “Hurray for militias? Not so fast: Lessons from the Afghan Local Police
experience,” 258.
• Mark Galeotti, “Hybrid, ambiguous, and non-linear? How new is Russia’s ‘new way of war’?,”
282.
• Eva Magdalena Stambøl, “EU initiatives along the ‘cocaine routes’ to Europe: Fighting drug
trafficking and terrorism by proxy?,” 302.
• Robert J. Bunker and Pamela Ligouri Bunker, “The modern state in epochal transition: The
significance of irregular warfare, state deconstruction, and the rise of new warfighting entities
beyond neo-medievalism,” 325.
______________________________________________________________________________
Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 97, Issue 1 (2016)
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ssqu.2016.97.issue-1/issuetoc
• Janet Ward and Stephanie Pilat, “Terror, Trauma, Memory: Reflections on the Oklahoma City
Bombing - An Introduction,” 1.
Terror: Analyzing Perpetrator Narrative, Identity, and Results
• Steven R. Corman, “The Narrative Rationality of Violent Extremism,” 9.
• Jytte Klausen, Tyler Morrill, and Rosanne Libretti, “The Terrorist Age-Crime Curve: An
Analysis of American Islamist Terrorist Offenders and Age-Specific Propensity for Participation
in Violent and Nonviolent Incidents,” 19.
• Rebecca S. Cruise, “Enough with the Stereotypes: Representations of Women in Terrorist
Organizations,” 33.
• James L. Regens, Nick Mould, Elizabeth Vernon, and Amanda Montgomery, “Operational
Dynamics of Boko Haram’s Terrorist Campaign Following Leadership Succession,” 44.
Trauma: How Society Responds to and Prepares for Terrorism
• Ben Fenwick, “Media in the Wake of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building Bombing: A 20Year Retrospective,” 53.
• Stephen Sloan, “Placing Terrorism in an Academic and Personal Context: A Case Study of the
Oklahoma City Bombing,” 65.
• Maya Siman-Tov, Moran Bodas, and Kobi Peleg, “The Social Impact of Terrorism on Civilian
Populations: Lessons Learned from Decades of Terrorism in Israel and Abroad,” 75.
Memory: Remembering Disaster, Building for the Future
• Angela Person, “Interview with Hanz Butzer and Torrey Butzer, Designers of the Oklahoma
City National Memorial,” 86.
• Ronald H. Frantz, Jr., “Rebuilding Oklahoma City: The Development of Automobile Alley in
the Wake of the Bombing,” 96.
• Jason Williamson, “A Survivor’s Perspective on Memory and Memorial Culture: Recollections
on the 20th Anniversary of the Oklahoma City Bombing,” 101.
• Erika Doss, “Commemorating Disaster and Disobedience: National Park Service Initiatives in
the 21st Century,” 105.
• Kenneth Foote, “On the Edge of Memory: Uneasy Legacies of Dissent, Terror, and Violence in
the American Landscape,” 115.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
______________________________________________________________________________
South African Historical Journal, Vol. 68, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rshj20/68/1
• Andrew Cohen, Rory Pilossof, and Sandra Swart, “Special Issue: The State, The Citizen, and
Power,” 1.
• Cornelis Hermanus Muller, “‘The Greatest State Scandal’: Personality, Power, and the South
African Republic Police, 1886-1896,” 13.
• Andrew Cohen, “Lonrho and the Limits of Corporate Power in Africa, c. 1961-1973,” 31.
• Alfred Tembo, “Coerced African Labour for Food Production in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia)
During the Second World War, 1942-1945,” 50.
• Lazlo Passemiers, “Safeguarding White Minority Power: The South African Government and
the Secession of Katanga, 1960-1963,” 70.
• Clement Masakure, “‘We will make sure they are rehabilitated’: Nation-building and Social
Engineering in Operation Clean-up, Zimbabwe, 1983,” 92.
• Anusa Daimon, “ZANU (PF)’s Manipulation of the ‘Alien’ Vote in Zimbabwean Elections:
1980-2013,” 112.
______________________________________________________________________________
Strategic Analysis, Vol. 40, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsan20/40/2
• Mukul Sanwal, “Asian-African Century with Two Centres of Gravity: Reconciling the Potential
of India with China, Already a Peer of the U.S.,” 81.
• Udai Bhanu Singh, “Significance of the November 2015 Myanmar Elections,” 88.
• Jakub Drmola, “Modelling Multi-actor Security Dilemma,” 92.
• Nihar R. Nayak, “Landlocked and Transit Developing Countries: Nepal’s Transit Route
Negotiations with India,” 101.
• Christo Odeyemi, “Re-emerging Powers and the Impasse in the UNSC over R2P Intervention in
Syria,” 122.
Strategic Analysis, Vol. 40, Issue 3 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsan20/40/3
• Vivek Mishra, “U.S. Power and Influence in the Asia-Pacific Region: The Decline of ‘Alliance
Mutuality’,” 159.
52 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Andrew Chater, “Explaining Non-Arctic States in the Arctic Council,” 173.
• Sreemati Ganguli, “Energy Interdependence as a Strategic Factor in the Post-Cold War
Context,” 185.
• Shebonti Ray Dadwal, “Impact of Iran’s Return for the Oil Market and India,” 199.
• Ashok K. Behuria, “India and Pakistan: Will They Move Beyond ‘Sharing of Intelligence’?,”
204.
• Smruti S. Pattanaik, “Sub-regionalism as New Regionalism in South Asia: India’s Role,” 210.
______________________________________________________________________________
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 39, Issue 3 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/39/3
• Gabriel Weimann, “Going Dark: Terrorism on the Dark Web,” 195.
• Ariel I. Ahram, “Pro-Government Militias and the Repertoires of Illicit State Violence,” 207.
• Daniel Detzi and Steven Winkleman, “Hitting Them Where It Hurts: A Joint Interagency
Network to Disrupt Terrorist Financing in West Africa,” 227.
• Victor Asal, Kathleen Deloughery, and Amanda Murdie, “Responding to Terrorism? Human
Rights Organization Shaming and Terrorist Attacks,” 240.
• Daniel Byman, “Intelligence and Its Critics,” 260.
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 39, Issue 4 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/39/4
• Leena Malkki and Teemu Sinkkonen, “Political Resilience to Terrorism in Europe: Introduction
to the Special Issue,” 281.
• Phil Edwards, “Closure through Resilience: The Case of Prevent,” 292.
• Charlotte Heath-Kelly, “Building a New Utøya; Re-Placing the Oslo Bombsite - Counterfactual
Resilience at Postterrorist Sites,” 308.
• Teemu Sinkkonen, “Can Political Leaders Make a Difference? Norwegian versus Spanish
Experiences Responding to Terrorist Attacks,” 326.
• Leena Malkki, “International Pressure to Perform: Counterterrorism Policy Development in
Finland,” 342.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Javier Argomaniz and Peter Lehr, “Political Resilience and EU Responses to Aviation
Terrorism,” 363.
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 39, Issue 5 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/39/5
• Kurt Braddock and John Horgan, “Towards a Guide for Constructing and Disseminating
Counternarratives to Reduce Support for Terrorism,” 381.
• Marcus Schulzke, “The Antinomies of Population-Centric Warfare: Cultural Respect and the
Treatment of Women and Children in U.S. Counterinsurgency Operations,” 405.
• Eran Zohar, “A New Typology of Contemporary Armed Non-State-Actors: Interpreting the
Diversity,” 423.
• Dimitrios Anagnostakis, “Securing the Transatlantic Maritime Supply Chains from
Counterterrorism: E.U.-U.S. Cooperation and the Emergence of a Transatlantic Customs
Security Regime,” 451.
• Michael Becker, “A Response to ‘Key Issues and Research Agendas in Lone Wolf Terrorism’,”
472.
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 39, Issue 6 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/39/6
• Michael J. Suttmoeller, Steven M. Chermak, and Joshua D. Freilich, “Only the Bad Die Young:
The Correlates of Organizational Death for Far-Right Extremist Groups,” 477.
• Sivan Hirsch-Hoefler, Daphna Canetti, and Ehud Eiran, “Radicalizing Religion? Religious
Identity and Settlers’ Behavior,” 500.
• Annette Ranko and Justyna Nedza, “Crossing the Ideological Divide? Egypt’s Salafists and the
Muslim Brotherhood After the Arab Spring,” 519.
• Michael Jonsson, Elliot Brennan, and Christopher O’Hara, “Financing War or Facilitating
Peace? The Impact of Rebel Drug Trafficking on Peace Negotiations in Colombia and
Myanmar,” 542.
• Emily Corner, Paul Gill, and Oliver Mason, “Mental Health Disorders and the Terrorist: A
Research Note Probing Selection Effects and Disorder Prevalence,” 560.
Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, Vol. 39, Issue 7-8 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uter20/39/7-8
• Joshua D. Freilich and Gary LaFree, “Measurement Issues in the Study of Terrorism:
Introducing the Special Issue,” 569.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Jasper L. De Bie and Christianne J. De Poot, “Studying Police Files with Grounded Theory
Methods to Understand Jihadist Networks,” 580.
• Daniel J. Harris, Pete Simi, and Gina Ligon, “Reporting Practices of Journal Articles that
Include Interviews with Extremists,” 602.
• Gary A. Ackerman and Lauren E. Pinson, “Speaking Truth to Sources: Introducing a Method
for the Quantitative Evaluation of Open Sources in Event Data,” 617.
• Brandon Behlendorf, Jyoti Belur, and Sumit Kumar, “Peering through the Kaleidoscope:
Variation and Validity in Data Collection on Terrorist Attacks,” 641.
• William S. Parkin and David A. Green, “Terrorism in the News: The Efficiency and Impact of
Sampling Methods on Data Collection and Content Analysis,” 668.
• Ashmini G. Kerodal, Joshua D. Freilich, and Steven M. Chermak, “Commitment to Extremist
Ideology: Using Factor Analysis to Move Beyond Binary Measures of Extremism,” 687.
• Katharine A. Boyd, “Modeling Terrorist Attacks: Assessing Statistical Methods to Evaluate
Domestic and Ideologically International Attacks,” 712.
• Shuki J. Cohen, “Mapping the Minds of Suicide Bombers Using Linguistic Methods: The
Corpus of Palestinian Suicide Bombers’ Farewell Letters (CoPSBFL),” 749.
______________________________________________________________________________
Survival: Global Politics and Strategy, Vol. 58, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tsur20/58/1
The darkness online
• Daniel Moore and Thomas Rid, “Cryptopolitik and the Darknet,” 7.
• Ben Buchanan, “The Life Cycles of Cyber Threats,” 39.
Commentary
• Erik Jones, “Confronting Europe’s Single Market,” 59.
Russian worldviews
• Nadezhda K. Arbatova and Alexander A. Dynkin, “World Order after Ukraine,” 71.
• Alexander Lukin, “Russia in a Post-Bipolar World,” 91.
Original Articles
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Florence Gaub, “The Cult of ISIS,” 113.
• Nick Childs, “The Measure of Britain’s New Maritime Ambition,” 131.
• William C. Potter, “The Unfulfilled Promise of the 2015 NPT Review Conference,” 151.
Review Essay
• Ben Fishman, “Defining ISIS,” 179.
Survival: Global Politics and Strategy, Vol. 58, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tsur20/58/2
Sovereignty and Disorder
• Ariel I. Ahram and Ellen Lust, “The Decline and Fall of the Arab State,” 7.
• Michael J. Boyle, “The Coming Illiberal Disorder,” 35.
Commentary
• F. Stephen Larrabee, “Turkey and the Changing Dynamics of the Kurdish Issue,” 67.
The Future of NATO
• Daniel Fiott, “Modernising NATO’s Defence Infrastructure with EU Funds,” 77.
• Stephan Frühling and Guillaume Lasconjarias, “NATO, A2/AD and the Kaliningrad
Challenge,” 95.
• Tomasz Paszewski, “Can Poland Defend Itself?,” 117.
German Questions
• Matthias Matthijs, “The Three Faces of German Leadership,” 135.
• Bastian Giegerich and Maximilian Terhalle, “The Munich Consensus and the Purpose of
German Power,” 155.
• Jonathan D. Caverley and Ethan B. Kapstein, “Who’s Arming Asia?,” 167.
______________________________________________________________________________
Terrorism and Political Violence, Vol. 28, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ftpv20/28/2
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
Special Section: Four Waves Theory
• Tom Parker and Nick Sitter, “The Four Horsemen of Terrorism: It’s Not Waves, It’s Strains,”
197.
Four Waves Theory: Responses
• David C. Rapoport, “It is Waves, Not Strains,” 217.
• Charles Townshend, “Wave and Strain,” 225.
• Jeffrey Kaplan, “A Strained Criticism of Wave Theory,” 228.
Original Articles
• Susanne Martin and Leonard B. Weinberg, “Terrorism in an Era of Unconventional Warfare,”
236.
• Ami Ayalon, Elad Popovich, and Moran Yarchi, “From Warfare to Imagefare: How States
Should Manage Asymmetric Conflicts with Extensive Media Coverage,” 254.
• Sambuddha Ghatak, “Willingness and Opportunity: A Study of Domestic Terrorism in PostCold War South Asia,” 274.
• Tahir Abbas and Ismail Hakki Yigit, “Perspectives on Ethno-National Conflict among Kurdish
Families with Members in the PKK,” 297.
• Helge Holtermann, “How Can Weak Insurgent Groups Grow? Insights from Nepal,” 316.
• Heather Selma Gregg, “Three Theories of Religious Activism and Violence: Social Movements,
Fundamentalists, and Apocalyptic Warriors,” 338.
Analytical Article
• Joanna Rak, “Contra-Acculturative Thought as the Source of Political Violence,” 363.
Review Article
• Ryan Shaffer, “Jihad and Counter-Jihad in Europe: Islamic Radicals, Right-Wing Extremists,
and Counter-Terrorism Responses,” 383.
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Third World Quarterly, Vol. 37, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/37/1
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Jan Pospisil and Florian P. Kühn, “The resilient state: new regulatory modes in international
approaches to state building?,” 1.
• Kristin Bergtora Sandvik, “The humanitarian cyberspace: shrinking space or an expanding
frontier?,” 17.
• Courtney J. Fung, “Global South solidarity? China, regional organisations, and intervention in
the Libyan and Syrian civil wars,” 33.
• Sebastian Biba, “The goals and reality of the water-food-energy security nexus: the case of
China and its southern neighbours,” 51.
• Ziya Önis and Suhnaz Yilmaz, “Turkey and Russia in a shifting global order: cooperation,
conflict, and asymmetric interdependence in a turbulent region,” 71.
• Ben Reid, “The geopolitical economy of social policy in the Philippines: securitisation,
emerging powers, and multilateral policies,” 96.
• Sylvia Bawa, “Paradoxes of (dis)empowerment in the postcolony: women, culture, and social
capital in Ghana,” 119.
• Pablo Yanguas and Badru Bukenya, “‘New’ approaches confront ‘old’ challenges in African
public sector reform,” 136.
• Jason Tockman, “Decentralisation, socio-territoriality, and the exercise of indigenous selfgovernance in Bolivia,” 153.
• Riccarda Flemmer and Almut Schilling-Vacaflor, “Unfulfilled promises of the consultation
approach: the limits to effective indigenous participation in Bolivia’s and Peru’s extractive
industries,” 172.
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 37, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/37/1
• Gabriel Garcia, “The rise of the Global South, the IMF, and the future of Law and
Development,” 191.
• Ben Cormier, “Empowered borrowers? tracking the World Bank’s Program-for-Results,” 209.
• Edwina Pio and Smita Singh, “Vulnerability and resilience: critical reflexivity in gendered
violence research,” 227.
• Glenn Banks, Regina Scheyvens, Sharon McLennan, and Anthony Bebbington,
“Conceptualising corporate community development,” 245.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Hakan Seckinelgin, “Social policy and conflict: the Gezi Park-Taksim demonstrations and uses
of social policy for reimagining Turkey,” 264.
• Andrew Delatolla, “War and state formation in Lebanon: can Tilly be applied to the developing
world?,” 281.
• James M. Scott and Ralph G. Carter, “Promoting democracy in Latin America: foreign policy
and U.S. democracy assistance, 1975-2010,” 299.
• Annika Björkdahl and Johanna Mannergren Selimovic, “A tale of three bridges: agency and
agonism in peace building,” 321.
• Andrew Rosser and Maryke van Diermen, “Law, democracy, and the fulfilment of
socioeconomic rights: insights from Indonesia,” 336.
• Graham Harrison, “Rwanda: an agrarian developmental state?,” 354.
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 37, Issue 3 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/37/3
• Anne Roemer-Mahler and Simon Rushton, “Introduction: Ebola and International Relations,”
373.
• Colin McInnes, “Crisis! What crisis? Global health and the 2014-15 West African Ebola
outbreak,” 380.
• Adam Kamradt-Scott, “WHO’s to blame? The World Health Organization and the 2014 Ebola
outbreak in West Africa,” 401.
• Sara E. Davies and Simon Rushton, “Public health emergencies: a new peacekeeping mission?
Insights from UNMIL’s role in the Liberia Ebola outbreak,” 419.
• Clare Wenham, “Ebola respons-ibility: moving from shared to multiple responsibilities,” 436.
• Sudeepa Abeysinghe, “Ebola at the borders: newspaper representations and the politics of
border control,” 452.
• Emma-Louise Anderson and Alexander Beresford, “Infectious injustice: the political
foundations of the Ebola crisis in Sierra Leone,” 468.
• Anne Roemer-Mahler and Stefan Elbe, “The race for Ebola drugs: pharmaceuticals, security,
and global health governance,” 487.
• Polly Pallister-Wilkins, “Personal Protective Equipment in the humanitarian governance of
Ebola: between individual patient care and global biosecurity,” 507.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Sophie Harman, “Ebola, gender, and conspicuously invisible women in global health
governance,” 524.
• João Nunes, “Ebola and the production of neglect in global health,” 542.
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 37, Issue 4 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/37/4
• Kevin Gray and Barry K. Gills, “Introduction: South-South cooperation and the rise of the
Global South,” 557.
• Deepak Nayyar, “BRICS, developing countries, and global governance,” 575.
• Fantu Cheru, “Emerging Southern powers and new forms of South-South cooperation:
Ethiopia’s strategic engagement with China and India,” 592.
• Patrick Bond, “BRICS banking and the debate over sub-imperialism,” 611.
• Thomas Muhr, “Beyond ‘BRICS’: ten theses on South-South cooperation in the twenty-first
century,” 630.
• Soyeun Kim and Kevin Gray, “Overseas development aid as spatial fix? Examining South
Korea’s Africa policy,” 649.
• James H. Mittelman, “Repositioning in global governance: horizontal and vertical shifts amid
pliable neoliberalism,” 665.
• Markus Kröger and Rickard Lalander, “Ethno-territorial rights and the resource extraction boom
in Latin America: do constitutions matter?,” 682.
• Maria Guadalupe Moog Rodrigues, “The prospects for transnational advocacy across the IBSA
bloc - a view from Brazil,” 703.
• Eduardo Gudynas, “Beyond varieties of development: disputes and alternatives,” 721.
• Branislav Gosovic, “The resurgence of South-South cooperation,” 733.
• Barry K. Gills, “Interview with Boris Kagarlitsky,” 744.
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 37, Issue 5 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/37/5
• Jason Hickel, “The true extent of global poverty and hunger: questioning the good news
narrative of the Millennium Development Goals,” 749.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Sally Brooks, “Inducing food insecurity: financialisation and development in the post-2015 era,”
768.
• Benjamin Selwyn, “Elite development theory: a labour-centred critique,” 781.
• James M. Cypher, “Hegemony, military power projection, and U.S. structural economic
interests in the periphery,” 800.
• João Márcio Mendes Pereira, “Recycling and expansion: an analysis of the World Bank agenda
(1989-2014),” 818.
• Anna Stavrianakis, “Legitimising liberal militarism: politics, law, and war in the Arms Trade
Treaty,” 840.
• Ernesto Vivares and Michele Dolcetti-Marcolini, “Two regionalisms, two Latin Americas, or
beyond Latin America? Contributions from a critical and decolonial IPE,” 866.
• Marcela Palomino-Schalscha, Cristian Leaman-Constanzo, and Sophie Bond, “Contested water,
contested development: unpacking the hydro-social cycle of the Ñuble River, Chile,” 883.
• Cristian Lorenzo and Patricio Yamin Vazquez, “The rise of biofuels in IR: the case of Brazilian
foreign policy towards the EU,” 902.
• Shabnam J. Holliday, “The legacy of subalternity and Gramsci’s national-popular: populist
discourse in the case of the Islamic Republic of Iran,” 917.
• Ladan Affi, Afyare E. Elmi, W. Andy Knight, and Said Mohamed, “Countering piracy through
private security in the Horn of Africa: prospects and pitfalls,” 934.
Third World Quarterly, Vol. 37, Issue 6 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctwq20/37/6
• Roy Culpeper and Nihal Kappagoda, “The new face of developing country debt,” 951.
• April R. Biccum, “What might celebrity humanitarianism have to do with empire?,” 998.
• Adam K. Webb, “Can the global South take over the baton? What cosmopolitanism in
‘unlikely’ places means for future world order,” 1016.
• Benjamin Selwyn, “Theory and practice of labour-centred development,” 1035.
• Waleed Hazbun, “Assembling security in a ‘weak state’: the contentious politics of plural
governance in Lebanon since 2005,” 1053.
• Catherine Thorleifsson, “The limits of hospitality: coping strategies among displaced Syrians in
Lebanon,” 1071.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Daniel S. Lacerda, “The production of spatial hegemony as statecraft: an attempted passive
revolution in the favelas of Rio,” 1083.
• Claire Bénit-Gbaffou, “Do street traders have the ‘right to the city’? The politics of street trader
organisations in inner city Johannesburg, post-Operation Clean Sweep,” 1102.
• Jürgen Rüland, “Why (most) Indonesian businesses fear the ASEAN Economic Community:
struggling with Southeast Asia’s regional corporatism,” 1130.
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Twentieth Century British History, Vol. 27, Issue 1 (March 2016)
http://tcbh.oxfordjournals.org/content/27/1.toc
• Nicola Verdon, “‘Left out in the Cold’: Women and Agricultural Labour in England and Wales
During the First World War,” 1.
• Christopher R. Hill, “Nations of Peace: Nuclear Disarmament and the Making of National
Identity in Scotland and Wales,” 26.
• Alexander Hutton, “Literature, Criticism, and Politics in the Early New Left, 1956-62,” 51.
• Jim Tomlinson, “De-industrialization Not Decline: A New Meta-narrative for Post-war British
History,” 76.
• Amy Edwards, “‘Manufacturing Capitalists’: The Wider Share Ownership Council and the
Problem of ‘Popular Capitalism’, 1958-92,” 100.
• Paul O’Leary, “States of Union: Modern Scotland and British History,” 124.
______________________________________________________________________________
Vingtième Siècle (2016/1)
http://www.cairn.info/revue-vingtieme-siecle-revue-d-histoire-2016-1.htm
• Olivier Dard and Gérard Fabre, “Pourquoi étudier l’histoire du Québec aujourd’hui?,” 5.
• Éric Bédard, “La réaction en héritage? Représentation de la France chez les intellectuels
québécois depuis les années 1960,” 13.
• Michel Bock, “Le rapport des groulxistes au politique: Entre méfiance et tentation,” 27.
• E.-Martin Meunier, “La Grande Noirceur canadienne-française dans l’historiographie et la
mémoire québécoises: Revisiter une interprétation convenue,” 43.
• Jean-Philippe Warren, “Les années 68 au Québec: Mise en perspective des expériences
québécoise et française autour des mouvements étudiants,” 61.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Marcel Martel and Martin Pâquet, “L”enjeu linguistique au Québec: Relations de domination et
prise de parole citoyenne depuis les années 1960,” 75.
• Giovanni Cavagnini, “Les conférences de guerre du père Sertillanges (1914-1918),” 95.
• Marianne González Alemán, “La Marche sur Buenos Aires de 1935: Fraude électorale et
mobilisation de masse au temps de la crise de la démocratie,” 109.
• Jean Lamarre, “Les relations entre les mouvements étudiants américain et français dans les
années 1960: Une méfiance cordiale,” 123.
• Sylvain Brunier, “Management public et développement agricole: Histoire méconnue d’un
mariage précoce (1972-1983),” 141.
Vingtième Siècle (2016/2)
http://www.cairn.info/revue-vingtieme-siecle-revue-d-histoire-2016-2.htm
• Dominque Avon and Denis Pelletier, “Sciences et religions au 20e siècle: Introduction,” 4.
• Dominique Trimbur, “Science et religion, culture universelle et spécificités juives: L’Université
hébraïque de Jérusalem des origines aux années 1940,” 17.
• Amin Elias and Youssef Aschi, “Science et islam aux 19e et 20e siècles: De la primauté des
sciences religieuses au ‘miracle scientifique’ dans le Coran,” 31.
• Dominique Avon, “L’Université al-Azhar et les sciences venues d’Europe: Le retournement de
la fin des années 1950,” 45.
• Agnès Desmazières, “L’expérience mystique de saint Jean de la Croix à l’aune des sciences
humaines,” 59.
• Pauline Picco, “Penser et dire la race à l’extrême droite (France-Italie, 1960-1967),” 77.
• Laura Schmitt, “Alain de Sérigny, homme de presse et acteur politique,” 89.
• Fabrice Virgili, “Les viols commis par l’armée allemande en France (1940-1944),” 103.
• Fabrice Grenard, “La Résistance en accusation: Les procès d’anciens FFI et FTP en France
dans les années d’après-guerre,” 121.
• Pedro Pereira Barroso, “La coopération entre le Brésil et l’Organisation internationale des
réfugiés (1946-1951),” 137.
• Morgan Poggioli, “La CGT et la répression antisyndicale (août 1939-décembre 1940): Entre
légalisme apprentissage de la clandestinité,” 149.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
______________________________________________________________________________
The William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 73, No. 1 (January 2016)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5309/willmaryquar.73.issue-1
• Sarah Knott, “Narrating the Age of Revolution,” 3.
• Christopher M. Parsons, “The Natural History of Colonial Science: Joseph-François Lafitau’s
Discovery of Ginseng and Its Afterlives,” 37.
• Miles P. Grier, “Staging the Cherokee Othello: An Imperial Economy of Indian Watching,” 73.
• Emma Hart, “From Field to Plate: The Colonial Livestock Trade and the Development of an
American Economic Culture,” 107.
______________________________________________________________________________
Women’s History Review, Vol. 25, Issue 1 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwhr20/25/1
• Jane Mackelworth, Angharad Eyre, and Elsa Richardson, “Inspired by Constance Maynard:
exploring women’s sexual, emotional, and religious lives through their writings,” 1.
Part One: Constance Maynard
• Pauline Phipps, “Constance Maynard’s Languages of Love,” 17.
• Angharad Eyre, “Love, Passion, Conversion: Constance Maynard and evangelical missionary
writing,” 35.
• Naomi Lloyd, “Religion, Same-Sex Desire, and the Imagined Geographies of Empire: the case
of Constance Maynard (1849-1935),” 53.
• Elisabeth Jay, “Constance Maynard’s Life-Writing Considered as Spiritual Autobiography,” 74.
• Lorraine Screene, “An Exploration of Religion and Education in the Life of Constance
Maynard, Mistress of Westfield College,” 89.
• Lisa C. Robertson, “‘We Must Advance, We Must Expand’: architectural and social challenges
to the domestic model at the College for Ladies at Westfield,” 105.
Part Two: Love, Friendship, and Desire
• Lesley Hall, “‘Sentimental Follies’ or ‘Instruments of Tremendous Uplift’? reconsidering
women’s same-sex relationships in interwar Britain,” 124.
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Alison Twells, “‘Went into raptures’: reading emotion in the ordinary wartime diary, 19411946,” 143.
Women’s History Review, Vol. 25, Issue 2 (2016)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rwhr20/25/2
• James Keating, “‘The Defection of Women’: the New Zealand Contagious Diseases Act repeal
campaign and transnational feminist dialogue in the late nineteenth century,” 187.
• Maria Tamboukou, “The Work of Memory: embodiment, materiality, and home in Jeanne
Bouvier’s autobiographical writings,” 207.
• Ian Ward and Clare McGlynn, “Women, Law, and John Stuart Mill,” 227.
• Samantha Caslin, “‘One Can Only Guess What Might Have Happened If the Worker Had Not
Intervened in Time’: the Liverpool Vigilance Association, moral vulnerability, and Irish girls in
early- to mid-twentieth-century Liverpool,” 254.
• Birgitta Bader-Zaar, “Women’s Citizenship and the First World War: general remarks and a
case study of women’s enfranchisement in Austria and Germany,” 274.
• Anders Ottosson, “One History or Many Herstories? Gender politics and the history of
physiotherapy’s origins in the nineteenth and early twentieth century,” 296.
• Michelle Arrow, “‘Everyone needs a holiday from work, why not mothers?’ Motherhood,
Feminism, and Citizenship at the Australian Royal Commission on Human Relationships, 19741977,” 320.
______________________________________________________________________________
World Policy Journal, Vol. 33, No. 1 (Spring 2016)
http://wpj.dukejournals.org/content/33/1.toc
Upfront
• Joshua Hitchcock, Melanie Smuts, Sigal Alon, and Sharmani Patricia Gabriel, “The Big
Question: Is Affirmative Action Necessary to Overcome Institutional Racism?,” 1.
• Hisham Aidi, “‘What Will Happen to All That Beauty?’: Black Power in the Banlieues,” 5.
• “Anatomy: Race and Incarceration,” 12.
• Kehinde Andrews, “Black is a Country: Building Solidarity Across Borders,” 15.
• “Map Room: Mind the Gap: Ethnic Divisions of London,” 20.
Black Lives Matter Everywhere
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], J-Z, First Quarter 2016
• Devyn Spence Benson, “‘Not Blacks but Citizens’: Race and Revolution in Cuba,” 23.
• T.O. Molefe, “Oppression Must Fall: South Africa’s Revolution in Theory,” 30.
• Tianna S. Paschel, “How Are They Dying? Politicizing Black Death In Latin America,” 38.
Conversation
• “Our Issues, Our Struggles: A Conversation Between Activists Daniela Gomes and Janaya
Khan,” 47.
Portfolio
• Guillaume Darribau and Brenda Bhandar, “Foreclosed City: A Barcelona Neighborhood Unites
to Fight Evictions,” 58.
Features
• Jill Filipovic, “The Unintended Consequences of India’s War on Sex Selection,” 71.
• Douglas Gillison, “‘Sometimes They Burn the Whole Village’: In Apparent Violation of the
Leahy Law, U.S. Provided Training to Alleged Human Rights Abusers in Cambodia,” 80.
• Khadija Sharife, “Big Pharma’s Taxing Situation,” 88.
• Jonathan Power, “When the Pope Turned His Back,” 96.
• Sam Winter-Levy and Jacob Trefethen, “Safety First: Entering the Age of Artificial
Intelligence,” 105.
• Christopher Shay, “Coda: In Living Color,” 114.
Copyright © 2016 The Authors
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United
States License.
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