BOOKS
The Charitable Impulse: NGOs and Development in East and North East AfricaOndine Barrow and Michael Jennings, editors Enriching our understanding of the "NGO industry," the authors inform the debate on the relief-to-development continuum and provide historical context for the key issues facing NGOs today. Each chapter presents a case study based on extensive fieldwork in east or northeast Africa, identifying and analyzing the roots of past and current problems. More > | ![]() |
The Charity of Nations: Humanitarian Action in a Calculating WorldIan Smillie and Larry Minear Ian Smillie and Larry Minear probe the reasons behind governmental and nongovernmental responses to urgent human need. They explain why some crises got the lion's share of attention and resources, while others are essentially forgotten. Vibrantly contrasting cases of Afghanistan, East Timor, and Sierra Leone, among others, illustrate how foreign policy and domestic politics have shaped what More > | ![]() |
The Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh: On the Difficult Road to PeaceAmena Mohsin Ending a two-decade-long armed insurgency, the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) Peace Accord was signed in December 1997 by the government of Bangladesh and the PCJSS, the political representative of the Hill people. However, because of ambiguities within the accord and the failure to implement many of its crucial elements, the situation in the CHT today is far from peaceful. Amena Mohsin considers More > | ![]() |
The Church and AIDS in Africa: The Politics of AmbiguityAmy S. Patterson Situating her analysis squarely within the context of debates about the role of religion in African politics and society, Amy Patterson systematically analyzes the efforts (and sometimes lack of effort) of Christian churches in shaping HIV/AIDS policy. Patterson considers how theological worldviews, material resources, historical interactions with the state, and global networks influence church More > | ![]() |
The City Where No One Dies [a novel]Bernard Dadie, translated by Janis A. Mayes In this witty and ironic reversal of the typical colonial travelogue, Dadié recounts the journey of a bemused African traveler who settles in Rome, continuing his inquiries into the fundamental nature of humankind. Part conqueror, part pilgrim, part worshipper, and part critic, the protagonist compares Roman and African customs, traditions, history, and above all, More > | ![]() |
The Clubwoman As Feminist: True Womanhood Redefined, 1868 to 1914Karen J. Blair | ![]() |
The Collected Papers of Kofi Annan: UN Secretary-General, 1997-2006Jean E. Krasno, editor The thousands of documents in this five-volume set illuminate the complexity and texture of the workings of the United Nations as they trace the activities of Secretary-General Kofi Annan and the conceptual evolution of his ideas. With the cooperation of the Executive Office of the Secretary-General in the release of previously classified material, the documents encompass internal notes, More > | ![]() |
The Coloured Bangles & Other Short StoriesSaloni Narang Narang describes India as a land that lives simultaneously in several centuries, “accepting much and rejecting nothing.” It is a place of contrasts and contradictions, “where volatile emotions see-saw against a phlegmatic acceptance of the writ of fate.” Her stories, set in northern India—sometimes in the westernized homes of the educated elite, sometimes in the mud More > |
The Commercialization of Microfinance: Balancing Business and DevelopmentDeborah Drake and Elisabeth Rhyne, editors While many microfinance organizations started as NGOs, there is now a growing movement for them to transform into regulated, for-profit entities. Concurrently, commercial banks, credit unions, and specialized investors are also entering the market. The Commercialization of Microfinance synthesizes case studies from Latin America and beyond, delving into the trends and challenges of converting More > | ![]() |
The Conduct of Intelligence in Democracies: Processes, Practices, CulturesFlorina Cristiana Matei and Carolyn Halladay, editors What are the role and place of secret services and covert operations in democratic settings? How do states balance the need for both secrecy and openness? What are the challenges to creating effective intelligence practices? Focusing on these crucial questions, the authors of The Conduct of Intelligence in Democracies examine the purposes and processes of intelligence communities in today's More > | ![]() |