BOOKS
Shaping the Immigration Debate: Contending Civil Societies on the US-Mexico BorderCari Lee Skogberg Eastman Stories of interactions between unauthorized immigrants crossing the border into Arizona and the US citizens they encounter have made headlines not only in areas adjacent to the border, but across the entire United States. How have these stories, along with adamant members of civil society—those who provide help to travelers in need, as well as those who wish to stop what they see as an More > | ![]() |
Shattered Vision [a novel]Rabah Belamri, translated by Hugh A. Harter The violence of war leads to the euphoria of Algeria's newly won independence from France—and then quickly deteriorates into a harsh and cynical reality in this brutal yet lyrical autobiographical novel. Shattered Vision (first published in France as Le regard blesse) was awarded the Prix France Culture in 1987. More > | ![]() |
Shifting Burdens: Gender and Agrarian Change under NeoliberalismShahra Razavi, editor The authors of Shifting Burdens explore the often overlooked gender-related effects of the neoliberal policy shifts in rural development that have reduced the role of government and switched costs of services to the rural poor themselves. More > | ![]() |
Shots Fired: Gun Violence in the United StatesHoward Rahtz Mass killings. Gang violence. Street crimes. Suicides. Accidental shootings. The United States is enduring a literal epidemic of gun violence. Howard Rahtz, drawing on decades of experience as a police officer all too familiar with the horrors that guns can cause, delves deeply into the nature and impact of this epidemic. Rahtz explores each element of the triangle of ability, desire, and More > | ![]() |
Sierra Leone: Diamonds and the Struggle for DemocracyJohn L. Hirsch Sierra Leone's bitter experience with civil war garnered international attention only after the May 1997 coup, though the conflict between the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) and successive governments had raged for at least a decadeĀ against the backdrop of more than three decades of progressive state collapse. John Hirsch traces Sierra Leone's downward spiral, drawing on his first-hand More > | ![]() |
Silence and Invisibility: A Study of the Literature of the Pacific, Australia, and New ZealandNorman Simms Simms explores the methodological and theoretical problems faced by creative writers in the Pacific, perceptively discussing not only the native author’s dilemma in expressing ideas and forms generally unfamiliar to Westerners, but also the problems that foreign critics and general readers face in evaluating works by Pacific authors. He considers, too, how a writer evolves in a culture where More > |
Singular Stories: Tales from SingaporeRobert Yeo, editor At the beginning of the 1980s, Singapore’s public relied largely on a literary diet of traditional British and North American authors. By 1990, however, books by Singaporeans were rapidly replacing imports on the bestseller lists and in the review columns. Singular Stories exemplifies the range of the new Singaporean prose. The pieces in this diverse collection explore the conflict between More > |
Situational Crime Prevention: Successful Case Studies, 2nd editionRonald V. Clarke, editor | ![]() |
Situational Prevention of Child Sexual AbuseRichard Wortley and Stephen Smallbone What practical steps can reduce child abuse? The authors of this provocative work argue that child sex offending is strongly influenced by opportunities to offend, and that analyzing the environmental contexts of offending may offer new insights into preventing the behavior. More > |
Six Days [a novel]Halim Barakat, translated by Bassam Frangieh and Scott McGehee Prophetically named for a real war yet to come, Six Days depicts the struggle of a fictional city under siege. Barakat tells the story of shy lovers, friends, increasing fear and anger, and finally the terror of war. The people of Dayr Albahr are confronted with an ultimatum: surrender or be destroyed. They choose to resist, knowing that they face inevitable defeat, but sustained by a More > | ![]() |