BOOKS
Foreign Policy Analysis Beyond North AmericaKlaus Brummer and Valerie M. Hudson, editors North American scholars typically do not hesitate to make pronouncements about foreign policy processes and outcomes in other countries. And despite ample evidence to the contrary, the perception that foreign policy analysis is still largely a North American scholarly enterprise persists. Foreign Policy Analysis Beyond North America challenges this perception, providing a rich overview of work by More > | ![]() |
Foreign Policy and Regionalism in the AmericasGordon Mace and Jean-Philippe Thérien, editors This comparative analysis of foreign policy behavior in the Americas focuses on the emerging trend toward regionalism. Following a discussion of the phenomenon of regionalism in general, chapters on the countries of North America, the Caribbean, and South America address three questions fundamental to the relationship between national foreign policy and hemispheric cooperation and integration: More > | ![]() |
Forging the Anvil: Combat Units in the US, British, and German Infantries of World War IIG. Stephen Lauer It has long been accepted wisdom that Germany's infantrymen possessed superior tactical ability relative to their Anglo-American adversaries in World War II. Now, drawing on newly available information, Stephen Lauer unpacks that assumption, exploring the conscription, classification, and training methods of the US, British, and German infantries from 1919 through 1945. How did conscripted More > | ![]() |
Fountain and Tomb [a novel]Naguib Mahfouz, translated by Soad Sobhi, Essam Fattouh, and James Kenneson "I enjoy playing in the small square between the archway and the takiya [monastery] where the Sufis live. Like all the other children, I admire the mulberry trees in the takiya garden, the only bit of green in the whole neighborhood. Our tender hearts yearn for their dark berries. But it stands like a fortress, this takiya, circled by its garden wall. Its stern gate is broken and always, like More > | ![]() |
Fragile Nation, Shattered Land: The Modern History of SyriaJames A. Reilly How did the lands that are today Syria survive the vicissitudes of centuries of Ottoman, Egyptian, and French rule, only to stand in ruins today, shattered by a brutal civil war? To provide answers, James Reilly traces five centuries of Syrian history, from the Ottoman period to the present. Reilly brings to life the myriad historical, cultural, social, economic, and political factors that have More > | ![]() |
Frantz Fanoncompiled by Leo Zeilig This book is part of a unique series that presents the reader with the original writings and relevant source texts of liberation heroes of Africa, together with a coherent contextual framework and analysis of their legacy. More > | ![]() |
Freedom From Want: The Remarkable Success Story of BRAC, the Global Grassroots Organization That's Winning the Fight Against PovertyIan Smillie Freedom From Want traces the evolution of BRAC from it beginnings as a small relief operation in Bangladesh into what is arguably the largest and most successful social experiment in the developing world. Ranging from distant villages in Bangladesh to New York's financial district, from war-torn Afghanistan to the plains of eastern Africa, Ian Smillie's book—part adventure story, More > | ![]() |
French Cities in the Nineteenth Century: Class, Power, and UrbanizationJohn M. Merriman, editor | ![]() |
From Cape to Congo: Southern Africa's Evolving Security ChallengesMwesiga Baregu and Christopher Landsberg, editors From the ongoing war in Angola, to sporadic instability in Zimbabwe and Lesotho, to the conflict in Congo, to issues of land reform and the ravages of AIDS, southern Africa faces varied and complex threats to its peace and security. The authors of From Cape to Congo assess the region's major security challenges, as well as the roles of local, regional, and external actors in managing them. More > | ![]() |
From Dictatorship to Democracy: Rebuilding Political Consensus in ChileJoseph S. Tulchin and Augusto Varas, editors Representing one of the first efforts to evaluate the transition to democracy in Chile, this book is the fruit of a meeting of key participants in the extraordinary effort at political convergence that made possible the victory over Pinochet in the Chilean plebiscite and the subsequent election of Patricio Alwyn to the presidency. The authors show how the various segments of Chilean politics More > | ![]() |