BOOKS
Egyptian Politics: The Dynamics of Authoritarian RuleMaye Kassem Though the regimes of Egyptian presidents Nasser, Sadat, and Mubarak have been decidedly different, the nature of personal authoritarian rule in Egypt has remained virtually unchanged across more than five decades. Maye Kassem traces the shaping of contemporary Egyptian politics, considering why authoritarian rule has been so resilient and assessing the mechanisms that have allowed for its More > | ![]() |
Egyptian Short Storiesedited and translated by Denys Johnson-Davies Seventeen short stories by such well-known writers as Abdullah, Idris, Mahfouz, Taher, Ibrahim, Sharouni, Fahmy, Sibai, and More > | ![]() |
Egyptian Women in Agricultural Development: An Annotated BibliographyMohamed A. Faris and Mahmood Hasan Khan As in many developing countries, women in Egypt play a key role in the agricultural sector. This has not been adequately reflected, however, in the official statistics on services, employment, and income, nor has there been a fair appreciation of the socioeconomic constraints women encounter in participating in the development process. In response, this fully annotated bibliography represents More > | ![]() |
El Salvador's Civil War: A Study of RevolutionHugh Byrne Choice Outstanding Academic Book! This in-depth study of the recent civil war in El Salvador supports the author's broader contention that the strategies adopted by incumbent regimes and insurgent movements are key to explaining why revolutions occur—and the conditions under which they succeed or fail. Arguing that prevailing theories of revolution underemphasize the importance of More > | ![]() |
Electing Jesse Ventura: A Third-Party Success StoryJacob Lentz While many commentators and political scientists dismissed Jesse Ventura's rise to the governorship as a fluke of celebrity, Jacob Lentz shows that it was Minnesota's unique electoral rules, coupled with on-target campaign dynamics, that enabled a third-party candidate to reach office. In this first complete account of Ventura's victory, Lentz draws on tantalizing details from the More > | ![]() |
Election Night News and Voter Turnout: Solving the Projection PuzzleWilliam C. Adams In eight of the past dozen presidential elections, TV networks proclaimed the winner while citizens on the West Coast, Hawaii, and Alaska were still casting ballots. Is this a problem? Do media projections decrease voter turnout? Carefully examining data from every presidential election held from 1960 through 2004, William Adams definitively answers both questions. Adams employs a range of More > | ![]() |
Elections for Sale: The Causes and Consequences of Vote BuyingFrederic Charles Schaffer, editor Often regarded as a phenomenon of earlier times and backward places, vote buying has made an impressive comeback in recent decades—primarily as a by-product of democratization. Elections for Sale offers the first comprehensive analysis of this widespread but ill-understood practice. The authors systematically explore a series of key questions: What exactly is vote buying? What are its More > | ![]() |
Electoral Authoritarianism: The Dynamics of Unfree CompetitionAndreas Schedler, editor Today, electoral authoritarianism represents the most common form of political regime in the developing world and the one we know least about. Filling in the lacuna, this new book presents cutting-edge research on the internal dynamics of electoral authoritarian regimes. Each concise, jargon-free chapter addresses a specific empirical puzzle on the basis of careful cross-national More > | ![]() |
Electoral Malpractice in Asia: Bending the RulesNetina Tan and Kharis Templeman, editors What causes widespread abuse of the electoral process? How do political elites choose and weigh the relative costs and benefits of differing kinds of electoral manipulation? How and why have patterns of electoral conduct changed over time? The authors of Electoral Malpractice in Asia answer these questions and more as they systematically compare the quality of elections across eleven More > | ![]() |
Electoral Reform in the United States: Proposals for Combating Polarization and ExtremismLarry Diamond, Edward B. Foley, and Richard H. Pildes, editors In the midst of the political ugliness that has become part of our everyday reality, are there steps that can be taken to counter polarization and extremism—practical steps that are acceptable across the political spectrum? To answer that question, starting from the premise that the way our political processes are designed inevitably creates incentives for certain styles of politics and More > | ![]() |












