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[jw]<br />

H-Diplo<br />

JOURNAL WATCH, A <strong>to</strong> I<br />

H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review<br />

www.h-net.org/~diplo/journals/<br />

Third Quarter 2013<br />

1 August 2013<br />

Compiled by Erin Black, University of Toron<strong>to</strong><br />

African Affairs, Vol.112, No. 448 (July 2013)<br />

http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol112/issue448/<br />

• “The roots of resilience: Exploring popular support for African traditional authorities,” by<br />

Carolyn Logan, 353-<br />

• “Fighting gender-based violence: The women's movement and the enforcement of rape<br />

law in Liberia,” by Peace A. Medie, 377-<br />

• “Democratic revolutionaries or pocketbook protesters? The roots of the 2009–2010<br />

uprisings in Niger,” by Lisa Mueller, 398-<br />

• “From warlords <strong>to</strong> freedom fighters: Political violence and state formation in Umbumbulu,<br />

South Africa,” by Sarah M. Mathis, 421-<br />

• “Songs of a new era: Popular music and political expression in the Ivorian crisis,” by Anne<br />

Schumann, 440-<br />

Response/Reply<br />

• “The theory and practice of Meles Zenawi: A response <strong>to</strong> Alex de Waal,” by René Lefort,<br />

460-<br />

• “The theory and practice of Meles Zenawi: A reply <strong>to</strong> <strong>to</strong> René Lefort,” by Alex de Waal, 471-<br />

Briefings<br />

• “ Mali: Politics of a crisis,” by Susanna D. Wing, 476-<br />

Copyright © 2013 H-<strong>Net</strong>: Humanities and Social Sciences Online.<br />

H-<strong>Net</strong> permits the redistribution and reprinting of this work for non-profit, educational purposes, with full<br />

and accurate attribution <strong>to</strong> the author(s), web location, date of publication, H-Diplo, and H-<strong>Net</strong>:<br />

Humanities & Social Sciences Online. For other uses, contact the H-Diplo edi<strong>to</strong>rial staff at h-diplo@hnet.msu.edu.


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Military (mis)adventures in Mali,” by Roland Marchal, 486-<br />

• “The myth of global Islamic terrorism and local conflict in Mali and the Sahel,” by Caitriona<br />

Dowd and Clionadh Raleigh,” 498-<br />

African His<strong>to</strong>rical Review, Vol. 45, No.1 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/rahr20/45/1<br />

• “Amy Biehl and the ANC: A Scholar-Activist in South Africa, 1992-93,” by Steven Gish, 1-<br />

• “Lords of All They Surveyed? The Royal Engineers, Surveying, Mapping and Development<br />

in South Africa's Eastern Cape,” by Denver A. Webb, 22-<br />

• “Pathways out of Poverty: Women – the ‘forgotten gender’ – and the Artisanal Fisheries<br />

Sec<strong>to</strong>r of Sierra Leone,” by Andy Thorpe, David Whitmarsh, Ranita Sandi, Andrew Baio,<br />

Ndomahina Lebbie, Thomas Lebbie & Roberta Curiazi, 46-<br />

American Foreign Policy Interests, Vol.35, No.2 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/uafp20/35/2<br />

• “Al Qaeda in Africa: The Creeping Menace <strong>to</strong> Sub-Sahara's 500 Million Muslims,” by<br />

Herman J. Cohen, 63-<br />

• “Women's Role in Syria Uprising Obscured by War and Islamists, but Still Crucial,” by Eva<br />

Sohlman, 70-<br />

• “Ten Challenges for China's New Leader,” by P. H. Yu, 75-<br />

• “Maritime Governance as an Instrument of National Security: A New Perspective for DHS<br />

and the U.S. Coast Guard,” by Peter J. Hatch, 82-<br />

• “Strategic Competition in South Asia: Gwadar, Chabahar, and the Risks of Infrastructure<br />

Development,” by Rorry Daniels, 83-<br />

• “Common Interests of the United States and Russia: A Reflection,” by Michael Rywkin, 101-<br />

• “The Great Triangle Drama: The Euro Zone Debt Crisis, the U.S. Fiscal Cliff, and Chinese<br />

Growth Prospects,” by Dan Steinbock, 108-<br />

For the Record<br />

• “Africa Policy in President Obama's Second Administration,” 119-<br />

American Foreign Policy Interests, Vol.35, No.3 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/uafp20/35/3<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

Special Issue: Perspective on East Asian Security Issues<br />

• “Introduction <strong>to</strong> Perspective on East Asian Security Issues,” by Donald S. Zagoria, 127-<br />

• “Forging a New Type of Great Power Relations in the Global Commons,” by Abraham M.<br />

Denmark, 129-<br />

• “Getting Back on Track: China, the United States, and Asia-Pacific Security,” by Roger<br />

Irvine, 137-<br />

• “Rebalancing or De-Balancing: U.S. Pivot and East Asian Order,” by Wei Ling, 148-<br />

• “Delivering on the Promise of Trustpolitik: Park Geun-hye's Daunting Challenge on the<br />

Korean Peninsula,” by John Delury, 155-<br />

• “Strategic Choices: Why Europe Still Matters,” by Blaine D. Holt, 160-<br />

For the Record<br />

• “Policy Recommendations for the DPRK,” 169-<br />

American His<strong>to</strong>rical Review, Vol.118, No.2 (April 2013)<br />

http://ahr.oxfordjournals.org/content/118/2.<strong>to</strong>c<br />

• “Unleashing the Beast: Animals, Energy, and the Economy of Labor in Ot<strong>to</strong>man Egypt,” by<br />

Alan Mikhail, 317-<br />

• “Running in<strong>to</strong> Whales: The His<strong>to</strong>ry of the North Pacific <strong>from</strong> below the Waves,” by Ryan<br />

Tucker Jones, 349-<br />

• “Interfaith Encounters between Jews and Christians in the Early Modern Period and<br />

Beyond: Toward a Framework,” by Daniel Jütte, 378-<br />

• “Spacetime and the Muslim Journey West: Industrial Communications in the Making of the<br />

‘Muslim World,’” by Nile Green, 401-<br />

• “Seeing Subjectivity: Erotic Pho<strong>to</strong>graphy and the Optics of Desire,” by Jennifer V. Evans,<br />

430-<br />

Featured Reviews<br />

• “Adrian Johns, Piracy: The Intellectual Property Wars <strong>from</strong> Gutenberg <strong>to</strong> Gates,” by Clare<br />

Pettitt, 463-<br />

• “John Tutino, Making a New World: Founding Capitalism in the Bajío and Spanish North<br />

America,” by Margaret Chowning, 456-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Emmanuelle Saada, Empire's Children: Race, Filiation, and Citizenship in the French<br />

Colonies,” by Gary Wilder, 468-<br />

• “Mary Fulbrook, Dissonant Lives: Generations and Violence through the German<br />

Dicta<strong>to</strong>rships,” by Charles B. Lansing, 470-<br />

American His<strong>to</strong>rical Review, Vol.118, No.3 (June 2013)<br />

http://ahr.oxfordjournals.org/content/118/3.<strong>to</strong>c<br />

Articles<br />

• “‘Is It a Book That You Would Even Wish Your Wife or Your Servants <strong>to</strong> Read?’ Obscenity<br />

Law and the Politics of Reading in Modern England,” by Chris<strong>to</strong>pher Hilliard, 653-<br />

• “Sudden Nationhood: The Microdynamics of Intercommunal Relations in Bosnia-<br />

Herzegovina after World War II,” by Max Bergholz, 679-<br />

AHR Forum: Investigating the His<strong>to</strong>ry in Prehis<strong>to</strong>ries<br />

• “His<strong>to</strong>ry and the ‘Pre,’” by Daniel Lord Smail and Shryock Andrew, 709-<br />

• “Women, Men, and Cycles of Evangelism in the Southwest Borderlands, a.d. 750 <strong>to</strong> 1750,”<br />

by James F. Brooks, 738-<br />

• “Contested Conjunctures: Brahman Communities and ‘Early Modernity’ in India,” by<br />

Rosalind O'Hanlon, 765-<br />

• “The End of Prehis<strong>to</strong>ry? An Africanist Comment,” by Akinwumi Ogundiran, 788-<br />

Featured Reviews<br />

• “Carl H. Nightingale, Segregation: A Global His<strong>to</strong>ry of Divided Cities,” by Alex Lichtenstein,<br />

802-<br />

• “Ronald G. Witt, The Two Latin Cultures and the Foundation of Renaissance Humanism in<br />

Medieval Italy,” by Robert Black, 804-<br />

• “Andrew Pettegree, The Book in the Renaissance,” by Ann Blair, 806-<br />

• “Stephen Tuck, We Ain't What We Ought <strong>to</strong> Be: The Black Freedom Struggle <strong>from</strong><br />

Emancipation <strong>to</strong> Obama,” by Robert J. Norrell, 809-<br />

• “Sheldon Garon, Beyond Our Means: Why America Spends While the World Saves,” by<br />

Kenneth Liparti<strong>to</strong>, 811-<br />

American Political Science Review, Vol. 101, No. 2 (May 2013)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=PSR&volumeId=107&seriesId=0&issueId=02<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Technology and Collective Action: The Effect of Cell Phone Coverage on Political Violence<br />

in Africa,” by Jan H. Pierskalla and Florian M. Hollenbach, 207-<br />

• “Capi<strong>to</strong>l Mobility: Madisonian Representation and the Location and Relocation of Capitals<br />

in the United States,” by Erik J. Engstrom, Jesse R. Hammond and John T. Scott, 225-<br />

• “Cold Case File: Indictable Acts and Officer Accountability in Marbury v. Madison,” by<br />

Karen Orren and Chris<strong>to</strong>pher Walker, 241-<br />

• “Representation and Rights: The Impact of LGBT Legisla<strong>to</strong>rs in Comparative Perspective,”<br />

by Andrew Reynolds, 259-<br />

• “Politics in the Mind's Eye: Imagination as a Link between Social and Political Cognition,”<br />

by Michael Bang Petersen and Lene Aarøe, 275-<br />

• “Social Identification and Ethnic Conflict,” by Nicholas Sambanis and Moses Shayo, 294-<br />

• “How Censorship in China Allows Government Criticism but Silences Collective<br />

Expression,” by Gary King, Jennifer Pan and Margaret E. Roberts, 326-<br />

• “Crossing the Line: Local Ethnic Geography and Voting in Ghana,” by Nahomi Ichino And<br />

Noah L. Nathan, 344-<br />

Forum: The Debate Over Genopolitics<br />

• “In Defense of Genopolitics,” by James H. Fowler and Chris<strong>to</strong>pher T. Dawes, 362-<br />

• “Candidate Genes and Voter Turnout: Further Evidence on the Role of 5-HTTLPR,” by<br />

Kristen Diane Deppe, Scott F. S<strong>to</strong>ltenberg, Kevin B. Smith and John R. Hibbing, 375-<br />

• “Genopolitics and the Science of Genetics,” by Evan Charney and William English, 382-<br />

American Quarterly, Vol.65, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/american_quarterly/<br />

ASA Presidential Address<br />

• “Where We Stand: US Empire at Street Level and in the Archive,” by Matthew Frye<br />

Jacobson, 265-<br />

• “Epistemologies of Empire: Sexuality and Knowledge within the Neoliberal Academy,” by<br />

Meg Wesling, 291-<br />

• “Notes <strong>from</strong> Antigua Naval Base,” by Laura Briggs, 303-<br />

Essays<br />

• “Where in the World Is Juan—and What Color Is He?: The Geography of Latina/o Racial<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

Identity in Southern California,” by Laura Pulido and Manuel Pas<strong>to</strong>r, 309-<br />

• “The Balcony and the Street: Gender, Virtue, and Politics in George Caleb Bingham's<br />

Antebellum America,” by Wynne Walker Moskop, 343-<br />

• “‘Crazy for This Democracy”: Postwar Psychoanalysis, African American Blues Narratives,<br />

and the Lafargue Clinic,” by Catherine A. Stewart, 371-<br />

Event Review<br />

• “Ballad of an Untimely Man: Bob Dylan at the Hollywood Bowl,” by Taylor Black, 397-<br />

Reviews<br />

• “How His<strong>to</strong>ry Happens and Why Culture Counts: Twenty Years after Becoming Mexican<br />

American,” by George Lipsitz, 405-<br />

• “Punkademia,” by Maria Elena Buszek, 413-<br />

• “New Cosmopolitanisms of Forgotten Diasporas,” by J. Daniel Elam, 425-<br />

• “The Flesh of Amalgamation: Reconsidering the Position (and the Labors) of Blackness,” by<br />

Tryon P. Woods, 437-<br />

• “MP3s and Other Evil Media: American Pathologies in Critical Information Studies,” by<br />

Aaron Trammell, 447-<br />

American Review of Canadian Studies, Vol. 43, No. 2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/rarc20/43/2<br />

Special Issue: Québec Cinema in the 21st Century<br />

• “Special Issue of the American Review of Canadian Studies on Québec Cinema,” by Miléna<br />

San<strong>to</strong>ro, Denis Bachand, Vincent Desroches & André Loiselle, 157-<br />

Miscellany<br />

• “An interview with Carolle Brabant Executive Direc<strong>to</strong>r of Telefilm Canada,” by Miléna<br />

San<strong>to</strong>ro, Denis Bachand, Vincent Desroches & André Loiselle, 163-<br />

• “An Interview with François Macerola, President and CEO of la Société de développement<br />

des entreprises culturelles (SODEC),’’ by Miléna San<strong>to</strong>ro, Denis Bachand, Vincent<br />

Desroches & André Loiselle, 170-<br />

Original Articles<br />

• “Deterri<strong>to</strong>rialization and the Crisis of Recognition in Turn of the Millennium Québec Film,”<br />

by Amy J. Ransom, 176-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Tales of Terror in Québec Popular Cinema: The Rise of the French Language Horror Film<br />

since 2000,” by Gina Freitag & André Loiselle, 190-<br />

• “Recovering Québec Culture: The Feature Films of Bernard Émond,” By Jerry White, 204-<br />

• “Cultural Encounters in Québec Cinema. Identity and Otherness in Denis Chouinard's Tar<br />

Angel,” by Denis Bachand, 218-<br />

• “Suspicions and Castrations: Robert Morin's Que Dieu Benisse l'Amérique,’’ by Vincent<br />

Desroches, 231-<br />

• ‘‘Benoît Pilon: Dwelling in Québec: A Young Filmmaker's Gaze,” by Alessandra M. Pires,<br />

241-<br />

• “Patrimonialization and Filiation at the National Film Board of Canada: Cinema as a<br />

Heritage,” by Marion Froger, 253-<br />

• “The Rise of First Nations’ Fiction Films: Shelley Niro, Jeff Barnaby, and Yves Sioui<br />

Durand,” by Miléna San<strong>to</strong>ro, 267-<br />

• “The Wapikoni Mobile and the Birth of a New Indigenous Cinema in Québec,” by Karine<br />

Bertrand, 283-<br />

The Americas, Vol.70, No.1 (July 2013)<br />

http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_americas/<strong>to</strong>c/tam.70.1.html<br />

2013 CLAH Luncheon Address<br />

• “Life, Luck, and How I Became a His<strong>to</strong>rian,” by Susan M. Socolow, 1-<br />

Articles<br />

• “Militão and the Guerreiros: Local Feuds, Long Memories, and Brazil's Struggle <strong>to</strong> Control<br />

the São Francisco River,” by Elizabeth W. Kiddy, 9-<br />

• “Educating a City's Children: British Immigrants and Primary Education in Buenos Aires<br />

(1820-1880),” by Alina Silveira, 33-<br />

• “The Calles Government and Catholic Dissidents: Mexico's Transnational Projects of<br />

Repression, 1926-1929,” by Julia G. Young, 63-<br />

Archivaria, Number 75 (Spring 2013)<br />

http://journals.sfu.ca/archivar/index.php/archivaria/issue/current<br />

• “Past Imperfect? Reflections on the Evolution of Canadian Federal Government Records<br />

Appraisal,” by Catherine A. Bailey<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “A PIM Perspective: Leveraging Personal Information Management Research in the<br />

Archiving of Personal Digital Records,” by Jordan Bass<br />

• “Reaching Out, Reaching In: A Preliminary Investigation in<strong>to</strong> Archives’ Use of Social Media<br />

in Canada,” by Wendy M. Duff, Catherine A. Johnson, and Joan M. Cherry<br />

• “A System of Their Own: Records Creation and Recordkeeping in Canada’s Department of<br />

External Affairs in the 1920s,” by Anna Shumilak<br />

• “Lester J. Cappon and the Creation of Records: The Diary and the Diarist,” by Richard J. Cox<br />

• “Improving Access <strong>to</strong> the Records of Landed Estates: Balancing Archival and User<br />

Perspectives,” by Julie Mathias<br />

Study in Documents<br />

• “Indian Department Headquarters Records, 1844–1861: A Case Study in Recordkeeping<br />

and Archival Cus<strong>to</strong>dy,” by Bill Russell<br />

Asian Security, Vol.9, No. 1 (March 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fasi20/9/1<br />

• “The Struggle for Soft Power in Asia: Public Diplomacy and Regional Competition,” by Ian<br />

Hall & Frank Smith, 1-<br />

• “Waves of Change: Evolution in the US Navy's Strategic Approach <strong>to</strong> Disaster Relief<br />

Operations between the 2004 and 2011 Asian Tsunamis,” by John Bradford, 19-<br />

• “Taking Disaster Seriously: East Asian Military Involvement in International Disaster<br />

Relief Operations and the Implications for Force Projection,” by Jeffrey Engstrom, 38-<br />

Research Note<br />

• “Operation Lal Dora: India's Aborted Military Intervention in Mauritius,” by David<br />

Brewster & Ranjit Rai, 62-<br />

Australian Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 67, No.2 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/caji20/67/2<br />

• “Australia and the challenges of order-building in the Indian Ocean region,” by Andrew<br />

Phillips, 125-<br />

• “A delicate balance: Australia's ‘tilt’ <strong>to</strong> Pakistan and its impact on Australia–India<br />

relations,” by Meg Gurry, 141-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Pakistan, militancy and identity: parallel struggles,” by Samina Yasmeen, 157-<br />

• “China, India and Pakistan: models for an intermediate stage <strong>to</strong>wards disarmament?” by<br />

Rajesh Basrur, 176-<br />

• “How <strong>to</strong> promote human rights in the world's most repressive states: lessons <strong>from</strong><br />

Myanmar,” by Morten B. Pedersen, 190-<br />

• “‘General interests’ as a rationale for the US–Republic of Korea alliance between 1998 and<br />

2008,” by Jae Jeok Park, 203-<br />

• “The 2012 TRIP survey of international relations in Australia: one problem <strong>to</strong> rule us all,”<br />

by Lee Morgenbesser, 218-<br />

The final word<br />

• “Rejoinder <strong>to</strong> ‘Menzies’ Asia Policy and the Anachronistic Fallacy,’” by James Cot<strong>to</strong>n, 235-<br />

• “Anachronism refuted or irrefutable? A reply <strong>to</strong> James Cot<strong>to</strong>n,” by David Jones & Andrea<br />

Benve, 243-<br />

Australian Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 67, No.3 (May 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/caji20/67/3<br />

Special Issue: Post-coup societies and processes of redemocratization in Southeast Asia and<br />

the Pacific<br />

• “Coups, military consolidation and redemocratisation in South-East Asia and the Pacific,”<br />

by Marcus Mietzner & Nicholas Farrelly, 259-<br />

• “Coups and post-coup politics in South-East Asia and the Pacific: conceptual and<br />

comparative perspectives,” by Aurel Croissant, 264-<br />

• “Why democracy struggles: Thailand's elite coup culture,” by Nicholas Farrelly, 281-<br />

• “Prae<strong>to</strong>rian rule and redemocratisation in South-East Asia and the Pacific Islands: the case<br />

of Indonesia,” by Marcus Mietzner, 297-<br />

• “Discipline without democracy: military dominance in post-colonial Burma,” by Nicholas<br />

Farrelly, 312-<br />

• “The origins of military au<strong>to</strong>nomy in Fiji: a tale of three coups,” by Jon Fraenkel, 327-<br />

• “Mutinies, coups and military interventionism: Papua New Guinea and South-East Asia in<br />

comparison,” by Marcus Mietzner & Nicholas Farrelly, 342-<br />

• “Australia's policy <strong>to</strong>wards coup-prone and military regimes in the Asia-Pacific: Thailand,<br />

Fiji and Burma,” by Stewart Firth, 357-<br />

9 | Page


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Vol.40, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/cbjm20/40/2<br />

• “A Shi‘a Debate on Arabism: The Emergence of a Multiple Communal Membership,” by<br />

Elisheva Machlis, 95-<br />

• “Sectarian Relations in Arab Iraq: Contextualising the Civil War of 2006–2007,” by Fanar<br />

Haddad, 115-<br />

• “Conflicting Accounts of Early Zionist Settlement: A Note on the Encounter between the<br />

Colony of Re ovot and the Bedouins of Khirbat Duran,” by Yuval Ben-Bassat, 139-<br />

• “Inventing Egypt for the Emerging British Travel Class: Amelia Edwards' A Thousand Miles<br />

up the Nile,” by Nicholas Lanoie, 149-<br />

• “Re-confessionalising the Shi‘ites and the Druzes: The Failure of Secularism in Lebanon,”<br />

by Yusri Hazran, 162-<br />

• “The ‘Forgotten’ People: Turkey's Artisans in the 1950s,” by M. Asim Karaömerlioğlu &<br />

Emre Balikçi, 183-<br />

The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, Vol.15, No.3 (August 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bjpi.2013.15.issue-3/issue<strong>to</strong>c<br />

• “Where There is Discord, Can They Bring Harmony? Managing Intra-party Dissent on<br />

European Integration in the Conservative Party,” by Philip Lynch and Richard<br />

Whitaker, 317-<br />

• “Cameron and Liberal Conservatism: Attitudes within the Parliamentary Conservative<br />

Party and Conservative Ministers,” by Timothy Heppell, 340-<br />

• “The Think Tanks behind ‘Cameronism,’” by Hartwig Pautz, 362-<br />

• “How <strong>to</strong> Read Padding<strong>to</strong>n Bear: Liberalism and the Foreign Subject in A Bear Called<br />

Padding<strong>to</strong>n,” by Kyle Grayson, 378-<br />

• “Counter-Terrorism and the Counterfactual: Producing the ‘Radicalisation’ Discourse and<br />

the UK PREVENT Strategy,” by Charlotte Heath-Kelly, 394-<br />

• “Paramilitaries, Peace Processes and the Dilemma of Protection: The Ulster Defence<br />

Association's Role in ‘Keeping a Lid on Loyalism,’” by Audra Mitchell & Sara Templer,<br />

416-<br />

• “Was Labour Penalised where it S<strong>to</strong>od All Women Shortlist Candidates? An Analysis of the<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

2010 UK General Election,” by David Cutts and Paul Widdop, 435-<br />

• “Elec<strong>to</strong>ral Competition, Issue Salience and Public Policy for Older People: The Case of the<br />

Westminster and Regional UK Elections 1945–2011,” by Paul Chaney, 456-<br />

Policy Matters<br />

• “UK Debt in Comparative Perspective: The Pernicious Legacy of Financial Sec<strong>to</strong>r Debt,” by<br />

Helen Thompson, 476-<br />

Bulletin of Latin American Research, Vol. 32, No.3 (July 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1470-9856<br />

• “Cut Loose in the Caribbean: Neoliberalism and the Demise of the Commonwealth Sugar<br />

Trade,” by Ben Richardson and Pamela Richardson Ngwenya, 263-<br />

• “Nationalism and the Rise of Peru's General Velasco,” by George Philip, 279-<br />

• “Racialisation of Immigrants at Work: Labour Mobility and Segmentation of Peruvian<br />

Migrants in Chile,” by Claudia Mora and Eduardo A. Undurraga, 294-<br />

• “Exile and Diaspora in an Atypical Context: Chileans and Argentineans in the United States<br />

(1973–2005),” by Benedetta Calandra, 311-<br />

• “On the Ruins of the Democratic Transition: Human Rights as an Agenda Item in Abeyance<br />

for the Brazilian Democracy,” by Alfredo Alejandro Gugliano And Carlos Artur Gallo,<br />

325-<br />

• “The Death of the Author through False Translation in Mario Bellatin's Orientalised Japan,”<br />

by Ignacio López-Calvo, 339-<br />

Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Vol. 26, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/ccam20/26/2<br />

Humanitarian Intervention<br />

• “Introduction,” by Oliver Daddow & Pauline Schnapper, 285-<br />

• “Humanitarian intervention and post-conflict reconstruction in the post-Cold War era: a<br />

provisional balance-sheet,” by Jolyon Howorth, 288-<br />

• “France, Britain and the intervention in Libya: an integrated analysis,” by Jason W<br />

Davidson, 310-<br />

• “Liberal intervention in the foreign policy thinking of Tony Blair and David Cameron,” by<br />

Oliver Daddow & Pauline Schnapper, 330-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

Afghanistan<br />

• “Introduction,” by Lori Maguire, 350-<br />

• “The UK response <strong>to</strong> the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan: proposals for a neutral and nonaligned<br />

Afghanistan, 1980–1981,” by Richard Smith, 355-<br />

• “Afghan refugees in Indo-Afghan relations,” by Anne-Sophie Bentz, 374-<br />

• “Sixty years of Sino-Afghan relations,” by Jonathan Z. Ludwig, 392-<br />

• “British and American military operations in the Battle of Helmand, 2006–2011,” by<br />

Chris<strong>to</strong>pher Griffin, 411-<br />

• “The US Congress and the politics of Afghanistan: an analysis of the Senate Foreign<br />

Relations and Armed Services Committees during George W Bush's second term,” by<br />

Lori Maguire, 430-<br />

• “Insurgents, accidental guerrillas and valley-ism: an oral his<strong>to</strong>ry of oppositional US<br />

soldiers' attitudes <strong>to</strong>ward the enemy in Afghanistan,” by Carl Mirra, 453-<br />

Canadian Journal of His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.47, No. 1 (Spring-Summer 2012)<br />

http://www.usask.ca/his<strong>to</strong>ry/cjh/e/iss/<strong>to</strong>c/12spring.shtml<br />

• “Sacred People, Sacred Spaces: Evidence of Parish Respect and Contempt <strong>to</strong>ward the Pre-<br />

Reformation Clergy,” by Sara M. Butler, 1-<br />

• “La rédemption par l’his<strong>to</strong>ire: le cas de Pierre Matthieu (1563-1621),’’ par Michel De<br />

Waele et Félix Lafrance, 29-<br />

• ‘‘Entre monde atlantique et jeune république: Charles Mame et la librairie française à New<br />

York au début du 19ème siècle,’’ par Tangi Villerbu, 59-<br />

• “The American Civil War and British Intervention: the Threat of Anglo-American Conflict,”<br />

by Francis M. Carroll, 87-<br />

Canadian Journal of His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.47, No. 2 (Autumn 2012)<br />

http://www.usask.ca/his<strong>to</strong>ry/cjh/e/iss/<strong>to</strong>c/12autumn.shtml<br />

• “‘God’s Hat’ and the Highwayman’s Shoes: Gestural and Sar<strong>to</strong>rial His<strong>to</strong>ry of Seventeenthand<br />

Eighteenth-Century English Trial and Execution,” by Andrea McKenzie, 231-<br />

• “Voltaire on Mazepa and Early Eighteenth-Century Ukraine,” by Thomas M. Prymak, 259-<br />

• “Jeu de Tarot et jeux corporels ‘fin de siècle’ : Les bambochades civilisées des cartes<br />

12 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

d’a<strong>to</strong>ut du Tarot Grimaud,’’ par Christian Vivier et Jean-Yves Guillain, 285-<br />

• ‘‘Le contrôle des Tsiganes en Europe de la fin du XIXe siècle aux années trente,’’ par<br />

Emmanuel Filhol, 317-<br />

• “June 1940: The Italian Army and the Battle of the Alps,” by Emanuele Sica, 355-<br />

Canadian Journal of His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.47, No. 3 (Winter 2012)<br />

http://www.usask.ca/his<strong>to</strong>ry/cjh/e/iss/<strong>to</strong>c/index.shtml<br />

• “Vinland and Wishful Thinking: Medieval and Modern Fantasies,” by Sverrir Jakobsson,<br />

493-<br />

• “The Sensitivities of ‘Small, backward nations’: Austria-Hungary, Serbia, and the<br />

Regulation of the Danube 1870-71,” by Ian D. Armour, 515-<br />

• “Black Nurses in the Great War: Fighting for and with the American Military in the Struggle<br />

for Civil Rights,” by Andrea Patterson, 545-<br />

• “Imperial <strong>Net</strong>works, Imperial Defence, and Perceptions of American Influence on the<br />

British Empire in the Interwar Period: The Case of the 27th Earl of Crawford and<br />

Balcarres,” by Greg Kennedy, 567-<br />

• “Economics, Diplomacy, and War: Britain and Bulgaria, 1936-38,” by Glenn Leonard, 597-<br />

Canadian Journal of Political Science, Vol. 45, No.4 (December 2012)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayBackIssues?jid=CJP<br />

• “Beyond Parochialism and Domestic Preoccupation: The Current State of Comparative<br />

Politics in Canada - Presidential Address <strong>to</strong> the Canadian Political Science Association,<br />

Edmon<strong>to</strong>n, June 14, 2012,” by Reeta Chowdhari Tremblay, 741-<br />

• “Policy Work in Multi-Level States: Institutional Au<strong>to</strong>nomy and Task Allocation among<br />

Canadian Policy Analysts,” by Michael Howlett and Adam M. Wellstead, 757-<br />

• “Mixing Politics and Business in the Canadian Arctic: Inuit Corporate Governance in<br />

Nunavik and the Inuvialuit Settlement Region,” by Gary N. Wilson and Chris<strong>to</strong>pher<br />

Alcantara, 781-<br />

• “Autism, Neurodiversity and the Welfare State: The Challenges of Accommodating<br />

Neurological Difference,” by Michael Orsini, 805-<br />

• “Regions, Regionalism and Regional Differences in Canada,” by Chris<strong>to</strong>pher Cochrane and<br />

Andrea Perrella, 829-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “The Domestic Politics of the International Dollar Standard: A Statistical Analysis of<br />

Support for the Reserve Currency, 2000–2008,” by Vic<strong>to</strong>r Shih and David A. Steinberg,<br />

855-<br />

• “La course vers le milieu des régions. Compétition et politiques régionales d'éducation en<br />

France et en Allemagne,” by Claire Dupuy, 881-<br />

Research Note/Note de recherche<br />

• ‘‘L'abstention sélective, ou pourquoi certains jeunes qui votent au fédéral boudent les<br />

élections municipales,’’ by Eugénie Dostie-Goulet, André Blais, Patrick Fournier and<br />

Elizabeth Gidengil, 909-<br />

• ‘‘Homegrown Islamist Radicalization in Canada: Process Insights <strong>from</strong> an Attitudinal<br />

Survey,” by David B. Skillicorn, Christian Leuprecht and Conrad Winn, 929-<br />

Central European His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.46, No.1 (March 2013)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=CCC&volumeId=46&seriesId=0&issueId=01<br />

• “Authorship in Transition: Enthusiasts and Malcontents on Press Freedoms, an Expanding<br />

Literary Market, and Vienna's Reading Public,” by Heather Morrison, 1-<br />

• “Art <strong>from</strong> the Gutter: Heinrich Zille's Berlin,” by Amanda M. Brian, 28-<br />

• “Global Politics and Germany's Destiny “<strong>from</strong> an East Asian Perspective”: Alfred von<br />

Tirpitz and the Making of Wilhelmine Navalism,” by Dirk Bönker, 61-<br />

• “Nazi Germany as a Christian State: The ‘Protestant Experience’ of 1933 in Württemberg,”<br />

by Samuel Koehne, 97-<br />

• “A Jewish ‘Nature Preserve’: League of Nations Minority Protections in Nazi Upper Silesia,<br />

1933–1937,” by Brendan Karch, 124-<br />

The China Quarterly, Vol.214 (June 2013)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?iid=8944055<br />

Special Section on Dying for Development<br />

• “Introduction; Dying for Development: Pollution, Illness and the Limits of Citizens' Agency<br />

in China,” by Anna Lora-Wainwright, 243-<br />

• “Environment and Health Research in China: The State of the Field,” by Jennifer Holdaway,<br />

255-<br />

• “Industrial Pollution and Environmental Health in Rural China: Risk, Uncertainty and<br />

Individualization,” by Bryan Tilt, 283-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “The Inadequate Life: Rural Industrial Pollution and Lay Epidemiology in China,” by Anna<br />

Lora-Wainwright, 302-<br />

• “Pollution and Protest in China: Environmental Mobilization in Context,” by Yanhua Deng<br />

and Guobin Yang, 321-<br />

• “Contesting Food Safety in the Chinese Media: Between Hegemony and Counter-<br />

Hegemony,” by Guobin Yang, 337-<br />

• “The Health Fac<strong>to</strong>r in Anti-Waste Incinera<strong>to</strong>r Campaigns in Beijing and Guangzhou,” by<br />

Thomas Johnson, 356-<br />

• “Everyday Approaches <strong>to</strong> Food Safety in Kunming,” by Jakob A. Klein, 376-<br />

Articles<br />

• “Secret Codes of Political Propaganda: The Unknown System of Writing Teams,” by Wen-<br />

Hsuan Tsai and Peng-Hsiang Kao, 394-<br />

• “Leadership in China's Urban Middle Class Protest: The Movement <strong>to</strong> Protect<br />

Homeowners' Rights in Beijing,” by Zhengxu Wang, Long Sun, Liuqing Xu and Dragan<br />

Pavlićević, 411-<br />

• “China's Defence Industrial Base in 1985,” by David Bachman, 432-<br />

Research Report<br />

• “College is a Rich, Han, Urban, Male Club: Research Notes <strong>from</strong> a Census Survey of Four<br />

Tier One Colleges in China,” by Xiaobing Wang, Chengfang Liu, Linxiu Zhang, Yaojiang<br />

Shi and Scott Rozelle, 456-<br />

Chinese His<strong>to</strong>rical Review, Vol.20, No.1 (May 2013)<br />

http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/maney/tcr<br />

• “Symposium on Christianity and China. Introduction: A New Journey in the Study of<br />

Christianity in China,” by Lian Xi, 1-<br />

• “Reflections on Protestantism and Modern China: Problems of Periodization,” by Daniel H.<br />

Bays, 5-<br />

• “Chinese Christian Virgins and Catholic Communities of Women on Northeast China,” by Ji<br />

Li, 16-<br />

• “The Church as a Protec<strong>to</strong>r: Anti-Christian Cases and Resource Conflicts in Post-Boxer<br />

Chaozhou,” by Joseph Tse-Hei Lee, 33-<br />

15 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “‘Wants Learn Cut, Finish People’: American Missionary Medical Education for Chinese<br />

Women and Cultural Imperialism in the Missionary Enterprise, 1890s-1920,” by<br />

Connie Shemo, 54-<br />

• “‘Cultural Christians’ and the Search for Civil Society in Contemporary China,” by Lian Xi,<br />

70-<br />

Forum<br />

• “From Texas <strong>to</strong> Zhejiang: The Intellectual Journey of a China Scholar - An Interview aith R.<br />

Keith Schoppa,” by Alan Baumler and R. Keith Schoppa, 88-<br />

Chinese Journal of International Politics, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Summer 2013)<br />

http://cjip.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol6/issue2/index.dtl?e<strong>to</strong>c<br />

• Edi<strong>to</strong>r's Choice: “China and the US: Comparable Cases of ‘Peaceful Rise’”? by Barry Buzan<br />

and Michael Cox, 109-<br />

• “Measuring Political Barriers in US Exports <strong>to</strong> China,” by Li Bin and Yang Xiao, 133-<br />

• “Enhancing Climate Change Mitigation Efforts through Sino-American Collaboration,” by<br />

Scott Vic<strong>to</strong>r Valentine, 159-<br />

• “Images of the United States: Explaining the Attitudes of Chinese Scholars and Students in<br />

the United States,” by Han Donglin, Chen Dingding, and Fang Changping, 183-<br />

Cold War His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.13, No.2 (May 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fcwh20/13/2<br />

Special Issue: Radio Wars: Broadcasting during the Cold War<br />

• “Radio Wars: Broadcasting in the Cold War,” by Linda Risso, 145-<br />

• “‘A hideously difficult country’: British propaganda <strong>to</strong> France in the early Cold War,” by<br />

Hilary Footitt, 153-<br />

• “Did the RAI buy it? The role and limits of American broadcasting in Italy in the Cold War,”<br />

by Simona Tobia, 171-<br />

• “Voices, letters, and literature through the Iron Curtain: exiles and the (trans)mission of<br />

radio in the Cold War,” by Friederike Kind-Kovács, 193-<br />

• “Cold War radio and the Hungarian Uprising, 1956,” by Alban Webb, 221-<br />

• “Captive audience? GDR radio in the mirror of listeners' mail,” by Chris<strong>to</strong>ph Classen, 293-<br />

16 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Listening behind the curtain: BBC broadcasting <strong>to</strong> East Germany and its Cold War echo,”<br />

by Patrick Major, 255-<br />

Colonial Latin American Review, Vol.22, No.1 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/ccla20/22/1<br />

• “Art and Evangelization: Creating A New Art in 16th-Century Mexican Missions,” by Eloise<br />

Quiñones Keber, 2-<br />

• “The Discovery of the Caja de Agua of Tlatelolco: Mural Painting <strong>from</strong> the Dawn of New<br />

Spain,” by Salvador Guilliem Arroyo, 19-<br />

• “Transculturation in Art: Sculpture in the Posa Chapels at the Monastery of Calpan,<br />

Mexico,” by Manuel Aguilar-Moreno, 39-<br />

• “The Conven<strong>to</strong> of Yanhuitlan and its Altarpiece: Patronage and the Making of a Colonial<br />

Iconography in 16th-Century Mixteca Alta,” by Alessia Frassani, 67-<br />

• “Modalities of Representation: Symbol and Narrative in 16th-Century Murals at the<br />

Convent of Izamal, Yucatán,” by Linda K. Williams, 98-<br />

• “Los murales del Conven<strong>to</strong> de Ixmiquilpan, México, y la imagen de guerra occidental,’’ by<br />

José Luis Pérez Flores & Sergio González Varela, 126-<br />

(The Round Table) The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs, Vol.102, No.2<br />

(March 2013) http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/ctrt20/102/2<br />

Special Issue: The Invasion of Grenada 30 Years On: A Retrospective<br />

• “Edi<strong>to</strong>rial: The Invasion of Grenada 30 Years on—A Retrospective,” by Peter Clegg & Gary<br />

Williams, 121-<br />

• “Commonwealth Update,” by Oren Gruenbaum, 127-<br />

• “Ferrets in the Caribbean: Britain, Grenada and the Curious Case of the Armoured Cars,” by<br />

Gary Williams, 135-<br />

• “The Revolution and its Discontents: Grenadian Newspapers and Attempts <strong>to</strong> Shape Public<br />

Opinion during Political Transition,” by Laurie R. Lambert, 143-<br />

• “Coming in <strong>from</strong> the Cold: Grenada and Cuba since 1983,” by John Wal<strong>to</strong>n Cotman, 155-<br />

• “Party Politics and Governance in Grenada: An Analysis of the New National Party (1984–<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

2012),” by Wendy C. Grenade, 167-<br />

• “Grenada’s Fractured Years: Some Reflections,” by Peter Gay, 177-<br />

• “Crisis in Grenada—The View <strong>from</strong> 14 Church Street,” by John Kelly, 181-<br />

• “The Days before the US Intervention: An American Diplomat’s Diary,” by Kenneth Kurze,<br />

185-<br />

• “The ‘Grenada Diaries,’” by Richard Hart, 187-<br />

Review Articles<br />

• “Islands Matter,” by Godfrey Baldacchino, 195-<br />

• “Nigeria: Fragile, Failed or Fizzling with Energy?” by Richard Bourne, 199-<br />

(The Round Table) The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs, Vol.102, No.3<br />

(May 2013) http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/ctrt20/102/3<br />

• “Edi<strong>to</strong>rial: Mrs Thatcher and the Commonwealth,” by Sir Shridath Ramphal, 215-<br />

• “Commonwealth Update,” by Oren Gruenbaum, 217-<br />

• “The Commonwealth and China: Upholding Values, Containing the Dragon?” by Sir Ronald<br />

Sanders KCMG AM, 223-<br />

• “Religious Extremism in Northern Nigeria Past and Present: Parallels between the Pseudo-<br />

Tijanis and Boko Haram,” by J. N. C. Hill, 235-<br />

• “Size and Personalistic Politics: Characteristics of Political Competition in Four<br />

Microstates,” by Wouter Veenendaal, 245-<br />

• The Developmental State Experiment in Africa: the Experiences of Ghana and South<br />

Africa,” by Joseph R. A. Ayee, 259-<br />

• “The Grenada Invasion, International Law and the Scoon Invitation: A 30-year<br />

Retrospective,” by Robert J. Beck, 281-<br />

Opinion<br />

• “Britain and Europe: Conceding Sovereignty,” by Malcolm Rifkind, 291-<br />

• “The United Kingdom Overseas Terri<strong>to</strong>ries: Reform and Renewal?” Peter Clegg, 295-<br />

• “New Directions for the Commonwealth Foundation: Implications for the Commonwealth<br />

Family,” by Vijay Krishnarayan, 297-<br />

18 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “The Commonwealth should do more <strong>to</strong> Promote Democratic Local Government,” by Carl<br />

Wright, 301-<br />

• “Malaysia: This is No Election,” by Zaid Ibrahim, 303-<br />

Review Article<br />

• “In the Ring: A Commonwealth Memoir,” by Stuart Mole, 305-<br />

Communist and Post-Communist Studies, Vol.46, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0967067X<br />

• “Political instability and economic growth: Evidence <strong>from</strong> two decades of transition in<br />

CEE,” by Henryk Gurgul and Łukasz Lach, 189-<br />

• “External debt of post-communist countries,” by Viachaslau Yarashevich, 203-<br />

• “Problem of early elections and dissolution power in the Czech Republic,” by Milos<br />

Brunclik, 217-<br />

• “Distributive justice attitudes in Ukraine: Need, desert or social minimum?” by Kseniia<br />

Gatskova, 227-<br />

• “Elec<strong>to</strong>ral breakthroughs in Croatia and Serbia: Women's organizing and international<br />

assistance,” by Jill A. Irvine, 243-<br />

• “Problems of corruption and distrust in political and administrative institutions in<br />

Slovenia,” by Miro Hacek, Simona Kukovic, Marjan Brezovsek, 255-<br />

• “Economic reasons for the break-up of Yugoslavia,” by Viachaslau Yarashevich and Yuliya<br />

Karneyeva, 263-<br />

• “The new great game in Central Asia post 2014: The US ‘New Silk Road’ strategy and Sino-<br />

Russian rivalry,” by Younkyoo Kim and Fabio Indeo, 275-<br />

• “The determinants of foreign direct investment inflows in the Central and Eastern<br />

European Countries: The importance of institutions,” by Cem Tintin, 287-<br />

________________________________________________________________________________<br />

Contemporary British His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.27, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fcbh20/27/2<br />

• “‘Waving the Banners of a Bygone Age’, Nostalgia and Labour's Clause IV Controversy,<br />

1959–60,” by Richard Jobson, 123-<br />

• “Bad Strategy and Bomber Dreams: A New View of the Blue Streak Cancellation,” by<br />

Richard Moore, 145-<br />

19 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Translating the Transnational: American ‘Science’ and the British Regional Problem,<br />

1962–1965,” by James Hopkins, 167-<br />

• “‘A Reputation for Parsimony <strong>to</strong> Uphold’: Harold Wilson, Richard Nixon and the Re-Valued<br />

‘Special Relationship’ 1969–1970,” by Alex Spelling, 192-<br />

• “Street Gangs in the Interwar Gorbals: The Jewish Experience,” by Avram George Taylor,<br />

214-<br />

Contemporary European His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.22, No.3 (August 2013)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=CEH&volumeId=22&issueId=03<br />

Special Issue: Recycling and Reuse in the Twentieth Century<br />

• “Introduction: Reconsidering Recycling,” by Ruth Oldenziel & Heike Weber, 347-<br />

Times of War and Crisis<br />

• “Towards ‘Total’ Recycling: Women, Waste and Food Waste Recovery in Germany, 1914–<br />

1939,” by Heike Weber, 371-<br />

• “‘Récupérez!’ The German Origins of French Wartime Salvage Drives, 1939–1945,” by Chad<br />

Den<strong>to</strong>n, 399-<br />

• “Salvage and Destruction: The Recycling of Books and Manuscripts in Great Britain during<br />

the Second World War,” by Peter Thorsheim, 431-<br />

The Ecological Turn<br />

• “The Glass Recycling Container in the <strong>Net</strong>herlands: Symbol in Times of Scarcity and<br />

Abundance, 1939–1978,” by Ruth Oldenziel & Milena Veenis, 453-<br />

• “When Consumer Citizens Spoke Up: West Germany's Early Dealings with Plastic Waste,”<br />

by Andrea Westermann, 477-<br />

• “Green Citizenship at the Recycling Junction: Consumers and Infrastructures for the<br />

Recycling of Packaging in Twentieth-Century Norway,” by Finn Arne Jørgensen, 499-<br />

Conclusion<br />

• “Complications and Complexities: Reflections on Twentieth-Century European Recycling,”<br />

by Susan Strasser, 517-<br />

Review Articles<br />

• “His<strong>to</strong>ry Meets Social Science,” by Thomas Fetzer, 527-<br />

• “Spatial Legacies of the Welfare State: Housing and Beyond,” by Cristina Renzoni, 537-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

Cooperation and Conflict, Vol. 48, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://cac.sagepub.com/content/vol48/issue2.<strong>to</strong>c<br />

Special Issue on Normative Power Europe<br />

• “Introduction,” by Kalypso Nicolaïdis and Richard G Whitman, 167-<br />

• “The neo-normative turn in theorising the EU’s international presence,” by Richard G<br />

Whitman, 171-<br />

• “Normative power as hegemony,” by Thomas Diez, 194-<br />

• “EU normative power and regionalism: Ideational diffusion and its limits,” by Tobias Lenz,<br />

211-<br />

• “‘Normative power Europe’ meets economic liberalism: Complicating cosmopolitanism<br />

inside/outside the EU,” by Owen Parker and Ben Rosamond, 229-<br />

• “The struggle for recognition of normative powers: Normative power Europe and<br />

normative power China in context,” by Emilian Kavalski, 247-<br />

• “The naming of powers,” by Edward Keene, 268-<br />

• “The Decentring Agenda: Europe as a post-colonial power,” by Nora Fisher Onar and<br />

Kalypso Nicolaïdis, 283-<br />

• “Assessing the decennial, reassessing the global: Understanding European Union<br />

normative power in global politics,” by Ian Manners, 304-<br />

Diplomacy & Statecraft, Vol.24, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fdps20/24/2<br />

• “(O)n the side of justice and peace”: Canada on the League of Nations Council 1927–1930,”<br />

by Lorna Lloyd, 171-<br />

• “Avant-garde or Supplement? Advisory Bodies of Transnational Associations as<br />

Alternatives <strong>to</strong> the League's Minority Protection System, 1919–1939,” by Stefan Dyroff,<br />

192-<br />

• “Conceptualising the Role and Responsibility of Great Power: China's Participation in<br />

Negotiations <strong>to</strong>ward a Post-Second World War Order,” by Beverley Loke, 209-<br />

• “The Rise and Fall of the United States Trusteeship Plan for Korea as a Peace-maintenance<br />

Scheme,” by Seung-Young Kim, 227-<br />

21 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “A Rebirth of Diplomacy: The Foreign Policy of Communist Romania between<br />

Subordination and Au<strong>to</strong>nomy, 1948–1962,” by Cezar Stanciu, 253-<br />

• “Britain and Kashmir, 1948: ‘The Arena of the UN,’” by Rakesh Ankit, 273-<br />

• “‘A Very Careful Balance:’ The 1961 Triangular Agreement and the Conduct of Canadian–<br />

American Relations,” by Michael D. Stevenson, 291-<br />

• “Diplomacy of Estrangement: The Dealings of the United States with Pakistan before<br />

9/11,” by Juergen Kleiner, 312-<br />

Diplomatic His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.37, No.3 (June 2013)<br />

http://dh.oxfordjournals.org/content/by/year<br />

• “A Convergence of Crises: The Expansion of Slavery, Geopolitical Realignment, and<br />

Economic Depression in the Post-Napoleonic World,” by Martin Öhman, 419-<br />

• “The American Press, Public, and the Reaction <strong>to</strong> the Outbreak of the First World War,” by<br />

Phillips Payson O’Brien, 446-<br />

• “Abandoning Democracy: Woodrow Wilson and Promoting German Democracy, 1918–<br />

1919,” by Daniel Larsen, 476-<br />

• “Purging the Forces of Darkness: The United States, Monetary Stabilization, and the<br />

Containment of the Bolivian Revolution,” by Kevin Young, 509-<br />

• “Uptight in Babylon: Eldridge Cleaver’s Cold War,” by Sean L. Malloy, 538-<br />

• “The United States, the World Bank, and the Challenges of International Development in<br />

the 1970s,” by Patrick Sharma, 572-<br />

East European Politics (Formally the Journal of Communist Studies and Transition<br />

Politics), Vol. 29, No. 1 (February 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fjcs21/29/1<br />

• Identifying key players in the government-formation process: strong and dominant parties<br />

in Central and Eastern Europe,” by Lee Michael Savage, 1-<br />

• “Europeanisation and conflict networks: private sec<strong>to</strong>r development in post-conflict<br />

Bosnia–Herzegovina,” by Vesna Bojicic-Dzelilovic & Denisa Kos<strong>to</strong>vicova, 19-<br />

• “Russia and multipolarity since the end of the Cold War,” by Martin A. Smith, 36-<br />

22 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Representative claims and expected gains. Minority council elections and intra-ethnic<br />

competition in Serbia,” by Christina Isabel Zuber & Jan Jakub Muś, 52-<br />

• “The diffusion of public interest mobilisation: a his<strong>to</strong>rical sociology perspective on<br />

advocates without members in the post-communist Czech Republic,” by Ondřej Císař,<br />

69-<br />

• “The politics of pension reform reversal: a comparative analysis of Hungary and<br />

Argentina,” by Giselle Datz & Katalin Dancsi, 83-<br />

East European Politics (Formally the Journal of Communist Studies and Transition<br />

Politics), Vol. 29, No. 2 (May 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fjcs21/29/2<br />

• Two decades of semi-presidentialism: issues of intra-executive conflict in Central and<br />

Eastern Europe 1991–2011,” by Thomas Sedelius & Olga Mashtaler, 109-<br />

• “Making a connection in the provinces? Russia's tweeting governors,” by Bettina Renz &<br />

Jonathan Sullivan, 131-<br />

• “Candidate quality across different orders of elections: the cases of the Czech Republic and<br />

Slovakia,” by Jan Kovář & Kamil Kovář, 152-<br />

• “‘From words <strong>to</strong> deeds’: European Union democracy promotion in Armenia,” by M. R.<br />

Freire & L. Simão, 175-<br />

• “Democratic performance in post-communist Bulgaria: election pledges and levels of<br />

fulfillment, 1997–2005,” by Petia Kostadinova, 190-<br />

• “Why do parties fail? Cleavages, government fatigue and elec<strong>to</strong>ral failure in the Czech<br />

Republic, Slovakia and Hungary 1992–2012,” by Elisabeth Bakke & Nick Sitter, 208-<br />

• “The Europeanisation of regional policy in Poland: did political parties make a difference?”<br />

by Anna Gwiazda, 226-<br />

English His<strong>to</strong>rical Review, Vol. 128, No. 532 (June 2013)<br />

http://ehr.oxfordjournals.org/content/by/year<br />

• “An Early Private Indenture of Retainer: The Agreement Between Hugh Despenser the<br />

Younger and Sir Robert De Shirland,” by Nigel Sau, 519-<br />

• “The Return of the ‘Deade Alive’: The Earl of Bris<strong>to</strong>l and Dr Eglisham in the Parliament of<br />

1626 and in Caroline Political Culture,” by Thomas Cogswell, 535-<br />

• “William Froude, John Henry Newman and Scientific Practice in the Culture of Vic<strong>to</strong>rian<br />

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Doubt,” by Don Leggett, 571-<br />

• “Counting the Cost of Intelligence: The Treasury, National Service and GCHQ,” by Richard J.<br />

Aldrich, 596-<br />

Review-Article<br />

• “In Search of the Industrial Revolution,” by David Meredith, 628-<br />

______________________________________________________________________________<br />

European His<strong>to</strong>ry Quarterly, Vol.43, No.2 (April 2013)<br />

http://ehq.sagepub.com/content/vol43/issue2/<br />

• “Images and Meaning-Making in a World of Resemblance: The Bavarian-Saxon Kidney<br />

S<strong>to</strong>ne Affair of 1580,” by Claudia Stein, 205-<br />

• “A Great Family of Sovereign Men: Democratic Discourse in Nineteenth-Century Spain,” by<br />

Florencia Peyrou, 235-<br />

• “Resentment and the Right: A Twentieth-Century Cycle of Reaction, Revaluation, and<br />

Retreat by the French Extreme Right,” by Sarah E Shurts, 257-<br />

• “‘Jammin’ with Karlik’: The German-Polish ‘Radio War’ and the Gleiwitz ‘Provocation’,<br />

1925–1939,” by Peter Polak-Springer, 279-<br />

• “Science, Politics, and Prejudice: The Dynamics and Significance of British Anthropology’s<br />

Failure <strong>to</strong> Confront Nazi Racial Ideology,” by Bradley W Hart, 301-<br />

Review Article<br />

• “Ethnic Cleansing and Its Legacies in Twentieth-Century East Central Europe,” by Andrew<br />

Demshuk, 326-<br />

European Journal of East Asian Studies, Vol. 11, No. 1 (June 2012)<br />

http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/brill/eeas<br />

• “Introduction <strong>to</strong> the First Four Articles: Governance, Decentralisation and Democratisation<br />

in Southeast Asia,” by Jürgen Rüland, 5-<br />

• “Striking the Right Balance. Economic Concentration and Local Government Performance<br />

in Indonesia and the Philippines,” by Christian von Lübke, 17-<br />

• “Environmental Governance in Democratic and Decentralised Indonesia: Between State,<br />

Family and Conservation, Paruedee Nguitragool, 45-<br />

• “Decentralisation in Thailand and the Limits of The Functionalist Perspective of<br />

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Institutional Reform, Chaiwatt Mansrisuk, 71-<br />

• “Gifts and Promises: Patronage Democracy in a Decentralised Indonesia,” by Deasy<br />

Simandjuntak, 99-<br />

• “A Review of Thailand's Foreign Policy in Mainland Southeast Asia: Exploring an Ideational<br />

Approach, Pongphisoot Busbarat, 127-<br />

• “The Role of Hallyu in the Construction of East Asian Regional Identity in Vienna,” by Sang-<br />

Yeon Loise Sung, 155-<br />

European Journal of International Relations, Vol.19, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://ejt.sagepub.com/content/vol19/issue2/<br />

• “International hierarchies and contemporary imperial governance: A tale of three<br />

kingdoms,” by J.C. Sharman, 189-<br />

• “Market imperative meets normative power: Human rights and European arms transfer<br />

policy,” by Jennifer L. Erickson, 209-<br />

• “The future of critical security studies: Ethics and the politics of security,” by Chris<strong>to</strong>pher<br />

S. Browning and Matt McDonald, 235-<br />

• “(Un)Natural and contractual international society: A conceptual inquiry,” by Evgeny<br />

Roshchin, 257-<br />

• “Republican continuities in the Vienna Order and the German Confederation (1815–66),”<br />

by Peter Haldén, 281-<br />

• “The rise of Chinese exceptionalism in international relations,” by Feng Zhang, 305-<br />

• “Global norms and major state behaviour: The cases of China and the United States,” by<br />

Rosemary Foot and Andrew Walter, 329-<br />

• “Redeeming the universal: Postcolonialism and the inner life of Eurocentrism,” by Kamran<br />

Matin, 353-<br />

• “Analysing discourse as a causal mechanism,” by Benjamin Banta, 379-<br />

The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms, Vol.18, No.2 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/cele20/18/2<br />

• “Ferdinand Tönnies and Enlightenment: A Friend or Foe of Reason?” by Niall Bond, 127-<br />

• “‘Poisons Disguised with Honey’: European Expansion and the Sacred Trust of<br />

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Civilization,” by Brett Bowden, 151-<br />

• “Why the World Matters: Hannah Arendt’s Philosophy of New Beginnings,” by Siobhan<br />

Kattago, 170-<br />

• “‘For the Honor and Glory of the Jewish People‘: Arendt’s Ambivalent Jewish Nationhood,”<br />

by Ruth Starkman, 185-<br />

• “Pleasure: ‘The Choice of Hercules,’” by Lorraine Marie Arangno, 197-<br />

Reviews<br />

• “Theology and the Deconstruction of Derrida,” by Bray<strong>to</strong>n Polka, 209-<br />

• “His<strong>to</strong>ry of Generalship 101, or ‘The More Things Change . . .’” by Vic<strong>to</strong>r Castellani, 216-<br />

• “Time, Guilt, and Philosophy,” by Brendan Moran, 221-<br />

The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms, Vol.18, No.3 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/cele20/18/3<br />

• “Hobbes and the Rationality of Self-Preservation: Grounding Morality on the Desires We<br />

Should Have,” by C. D. Meyers, 269-<br />

• “Tanūnapāt: Kalos, Philos, and the Vestiges of Trace,” by D. Venkat Rao, 287-<br />

• “Hegel and the Paradox of Democratic Education,” by Joshua D. Goldstein, 308-<br />

• “Italian Jews: From Social Integration <strong>to</strong> the Construction of a New European Identity,” by<br />

Cristina M. Bettin, 327-<br />

Reviews<br />

• “Where’s the Joy in Secularism?” by Steven Cassedy, 345-<br />

• “Kierkegaard and Theology,” by Bray<strong>to</strong>n Polka, 358-<br />

• “Memory and Media,” by Irving Louis Horowitz (deceased), 367-<br />

European Review of His<strong>to</strong>ry: Revue Europeenne d'His<strong>to</strong>ire, Vol.20, No.2 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/cerh20/20/2<br />

Special Issue: His<strong>to</strong>ry of the Workplace: Environment and Health at Stake<br />

• “His<strong>to</strong>ry of the workplace: Environment and health at stake – An introduction,” by Judith<br />

Rainhorn & Lars Bluma, 171-<br />

• “The hygienic movement and German mining 1890–1914,” by Lars Bluma, 177-<br />

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• “The banning of white lead: French and American experiences in a comparative<br />

perspective (early twentieth century),” by Judith Rainhorn, 197-<br />

• “Aluminium in health and food: a gradual global approach,” by Florence Hachez-Leroy,<br />

217-<br />

• “Fiddling, drinking and stealing: moral code in the Soviet Es<strong>to</strong>nian mining industry,” by<br />

Eeva Kesküla, 237-<br />

• “Hygienists, workers' bodies and machines in nineteenth-century France,” by Thomas Le<br />

Roux, 255-<br />

• “The fac<strong>to</strong>ry as environment: social engineering and the ecology of industrial workplaces<br />

in inter-war Germany,” by Timo Luks, 271-<br />

• “The ideal of Lebensraum and the spatial order of power at German fac<strong>to</strong>ries, 1900–45,”<br />

by Karsten Uhl, 287-<br />

European Review of His<strong>to</strong>ry: Revue Europeenne d'His<strong>to</strong>ire, Vol.20, No.3 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/cerh20/20/3<br />

• “(De)slaving his<strong>to</strong>ry: Mostafa al-Azemmouri, the sixteenth-century Moroccan captive in<br />

the tale of conquest,” by Lhoussain Simour, 345-<br />

• “Crusade narratives in French and German his<strong>to</strong>ry textbooks, 1871–1914,” by Ines Anna<br />

Guhe, 367-<br />

• “Culture, structure and reciprocity: his<strong>to</strong>ire croisée and its uses for the conceptualization<br />

of the rise and spread of national movements in Europe and the Atlantic World during<br />

the Age of Revolutions,” by Dean Kostantaras, 383-<br />

• “An<strong>to</strong>n Dumitriu, the ‘Axiomatic Culture’ and the ‘Crisis of the West,’” by Diana Stanciu,<br />

407-<br />

• “‘The labour market under the iron fist of the state’: the Franco dicta<strong>to</strong>rship in the mirror<br />

of Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin,” by Margarita Vilar-Rodríguez, 427-<br />

• “Communist regimes and his<strong>to</strong>rical legitimacy: polemics regarding the role of the Red<br />

Army in Romania at the end of the Second World War,” by Cezar Stanciu, 445-<br />

• “Indigènes after Indigènes: post-war France and its North African troops,” by K. H Adler,<br />

463-<br />

• “Caricatures of clergymen in nineteenth-century Sweden,” by Jakob Evertsson, 479-<br />

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Europe-Asia Studies, Vol.65, No.3 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/ceas20/65/3<br />

Special Issue: Transition Economies after the Crisis of 2008: Ac<strong>to</strong>rs and Policies<br />

• “Transition Economies after the Crisis of 2008: Ac<strong>to</strong>rs and Policies,” by Martin Myant & Jan<br />

Drahokoupil, 373-<br />

Policy Paradigms and Forms of Development in and after the Crisis<br />

• “The Political Economy of Crisis Management in East–Central European Countries,” by<br />

Martin Myant, Jan Drahokoupil & Ivan Lesay, 383-<br />

• “Avoiding the Economic Crisis: Pragmatic Liberalism and Divisions over Economic Policy<br />

in Poland,” by Gavin Rae, 411-<br />

• “The Baltic Republics and the Crisis of 2008–2011,” by Rainer Kattel & Ringa Raudla, 426-<br />

• “Russia's Response <strong>to</strong> Crisis: The Paradox of Success,” by Neil Robinson, 450-<br />

• “Belarus' Anti-Crisis Management: Success S<strong>to</strong>ry of Delayed Recession?” by Dzmitry Kruk,<br />

473-<br />

Continuity and change in the enterprise sec<strong>to</strong>r<br />

• “Crisis and Upgrading: The Case of the Hungarian Au<strong>to</strong>motive and Electronics Sec<strong>to</strong>rs,” by<br />

Magdolna Sass & Andrea Szalavetz, 489-<br />

• “Actions and Reactions of Russian Manufacturing Companies <strong>to</strong> the Crisis Shocks <strong>from</strong><br />

2008–2009: Evidence <strong>from</strong> the Empirical Survey,” by Ksenia Gonchar, 508-<br />

Banks – the Role of Ownership and Regulation<br />

• “Central and East European Bank Responses <strong>to</strong> the Financial ‘Crisis’: Do Domestic Banks<br />

Perform Better in a Crisis than their Foreign-Owned Counterparts?” by Rachel A.<br />

Epstein, 528-<br />

• “The Return of Political Risk: Foreign-Owned Banks in Emerging Europe,” by Zdenek<br />

Kudrna & Daniela Gabor, 548-<br />

Europe-Asia Studies, Vol.65, No.4 (May 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/ceas20/65/4<br />

Special Issue: Explaining Policy Change in the European Union's Eastern Neighbourhood<br />

• “Introduction: Explaining Policy Change in the European Union's Eastern Neighbourhood,’<br />

by Julia langbein & Tanja A. Börzel, 571-<br />

• “Migration, Energy and Good Governance in the EU's Eastern Neighbourhood,” by Esther<br />

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Ademmer & Tanja A. Börzel, 581-<br />

• “Selective Adoption of EU Environmental Norms in Ukraine. Convergence á la Carte,” by<br />

Aron Buzogány, 609-<br />

• “Unpacking the Russian and EU Impact on Policy Change in the Eastern Neighbourhood:<br />

The Case of Ukraine's Telecommunications and Food Safety,” by Julia Langbein, 631-<br />

• “Shaping Convergence with the EU in Foreign Policy and State Aid in Post-Orange Ukraine:<br />

Weak External Incentives, Powerful Ve<strong>to</strong> Players,” by An<strong>to</strong>aneta Dimitrova & Rilka<br />

Dragneva, 658-<br />

Regular Articles<br />

• “Differing Effects of the Global Financial Crisis on the Central Asian Countries: Kazakhstan,<br />

the Kyrgyz Republic and Uzbekistan,” by Kobil Ruziev & Toshtemir Majidov, 682-<br />

• “The Preponderance and Effects of Sec<strong>to</strong>ral Ties in the State Duma,” by Paul Chaisty, 717-<br />

• “Sub-National Elections in Russia: Variations in United Russia's Domination of Regional<br />

Assemblies,” by Petr Panov & Cameron Ross, 737-<br />

• “Spark of Revolution? Railway Disorganisation, Freight Traffic and Tsarist Russia's War<br />

Effort, July 1914–March 1917,” by Anthony Heywood, 753-<br />

Foreign Affairs, Vol. 92, No.3 (May/June 2013)<br />

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/issues/2013/92/3<br />

Comments<br />

• “Regula<strong>to</strong>ry Moneyball,” by Cass R. Sunstein<br />

• “India's Feeble Foreign Policy,” by Manjari Chatterjee Miller<br />

• “The Real S<strong>to</strong>ry Behind Executive Pay,” by Steven N. Kaplan<br />

Essays<br />

• “The Rise of Big Data,” by Kenneth Neil Cukier and Vik<strong>to</strong>r Mayer-Schoenberger<br />

• “The Austerity Delusion,” by Mark Blyth<br />

• “The Irony of American Strategy,” by Richard N. Haass<br />

• “Africa's Economic Boom,” by Shantayanan Devarajan and Wolfgang Fengler<br />

• “The Clin<strong>to</strong>n Legacy,” by Michael Hirsh<br />

• “America's Energy Opportunity,” by Michael Levi<br />

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• “Why American Education Fails,” by Jal Mehta<br />

• “The Church Undivided,” by Vic<strong>to</strong>r Gaetan<br />

• “Why the U.S. Army Needs Armor,” by Chris McKinney, Mark Elfendahl, and H. R. McMaster<br />

• “Why the U.S. Army Needs Missiles,” by Jim Thomas<br />

Interview<br />

• “The Polish Model”: Poland's minister of foreign affairs speaks with Foreign Affairs about<br />

his country's his<strong>to</strong>ry, its future, and its place in Europe<br />

Reviews & Responses<br />

• “The Persistence of Arab Anti-Americanism,” by Marc Lynch<br />

• “Bolívar's Botched Bequest,” by Ilan Stavans<br />

• Response: “How <strong>to</strong> Fix America,” by Edward Conard and Fareed Zakar<br />

Foreign Affairs, Vol. 92, No.4 (July/August 2013)<br />

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/issues/2013/92/4<br />

Comments<br />

• “Mutual Assured Production,” by Richard Katz<br />

• “Fake It Till You Make It,” by Kal Raustiala and Chris<strong>to</strong>pher Sprigman<br />

Essays<br />

• “Why Drones Work,” by Daniel Byman<br />

• “Why Drones Fail,” by Audrey Kurth Cronin<br />

• “The Road <strong>to</strong> D-Day,” by Rick Atkinson<br />

• “The Coming Arctic Boom,” by Scott G. Borgerson<br />

• “Syria's Collapse,” by Andrew J. Tabler<br />

• “Cuba After Communism,” by Julia E. Sweig and Michael J. Bustamante<br />

• “The War of Law,” by Jon Kyl, Douglas J. Feith, and John Fonte<br />

• “In Defense of Citizens United,” by R. Glenn Hubbard and Tim Kane<br />

• “The Next Europe,” by Nicolas Berggruen and Nathan Gardels<br />

• “The Rise of Mexico’s Self-Defense Forces,” by Patricio Asfura-Heim and Ralph H. Espach<br />

Interview<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Japan Is Back,” by Shinzo Abe<br />

• “Beijing's Brand Ambassador,” by Cui Tiankai<br />

Reviews & Responses<br />

• “Lesser Israel,” by Jeffrey Goldberg<br />

• “The Second Great Depression,” by J. Bradford DeLong<br />

• “The Myth of the Omnipotent Central Banker,” by Adam S. Posen<br />

• “The Frankfurt School at War,” by William E. Scheuerman<br />

• “Pyongyang Perseveres,” by John Delury<br />

• Letter <strong>to</strong> the Edi<strong>to</strong>r: “Against Activism,” by Benjamin H. Friedman and Justin Logan<br />

Foreign Policy, Issue 198 (May/June) 2013)<br />

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/<br />

The Power Issue<br />

• “Minister No: Sergei Lavrov and the blunt logic of Russian power,” by Susan B. Glasser,<br />

PLUS: A conversation with Sergei Lavrov<br />

• “The Driver: An exclusive look inside the mysterious death and life of the world's most<br />

dangerous terrorist not named Osama bin Laden,” by Mark Perry<br />

• “Xi's War Drums,” by John Garnaut<br />

• “Soft (Drink) Power: The head of the world's most global beverage company on climate<br />

change, power in the post-crisis era, and how Coke's secret formula stays safe <strong>from</strong><br />

hackers,” Interview By Ian Bremmer<br />

• “The End of the Gandhis,” by James Traub<br />

• “The 0.000007 Percent,” FP's list of the 500 most powerful people on the planet<br />

Features<br />

• “The Balance of Power: Why the underrepresentation of women in positions of power is<br />

proof of the most destructive pattern of human rights abuses in the his<strong>to</strong>ry of<br />

civilization,” by David Rothkopf<br />

• “Think Again: European Decline,” by Mark Leonard and Hans Kundnani<br />

Inbox<br />

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• “Opening Gambit: In Defense of Leading <strong>from</strong> Behind,” by Leslie H. Gelb<br />

• “11 BuzzFeed Lists That Explain the World,” by Ben Smith<br />

• “The Optimist: Give Sam Wal<strong>to</strong>n the Nobel Prize,” by Charles Kenny<br />

• “Anthropology of an Idea: Hacktivism,” by Ty Mccormick<br />

• “Ideas: Gun Runner No. 1,” by Joshua E. Keating<br />

• “Ideas: Empire of the Sons (and Daughters),” by Joshua E. Keating<br />

• Ideas: How Much Is It Worth <strong>to</strong> Know Dick?” by Joshua E. Keating<br />

• “Epiphanies <strong>from</strong> Chris Anderson,” Interview by Benjamin Pauker<br />

• “The New New Normal: In<strong>to</strong> Africa,” by Mohamed A. El-Erian<br />

• “The Things They Carried: The Doc<strong>to</strong>r Without Borders,” Interview by Eric Pape<br />

• “Dispatch: You Can't Go Home Again,” by Min Zin<br />

• “Pictured: Museum of War,” by Tammam Azzam<br />

In other words<br />

• “The Singularity of Fools” A special report <strong>from</strong> the u<strong>to</strong>pian future,” by David Rieff<br />

• “Cities on a Hill” Today's most intriguing u<strong>to</strong>pias,” by Margaret Slattery<br />

Foreign Policy, Issue 199 (July/August 2013)<br />

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/issues/current<br />

The Failed States Issue<br />

• “The 2013 Failed States Index: Our annual ranking of the world's most fragile states,” by<br />

Foreign Policy and the Fund for Peace<br />

• “Postcards <strong>from</strong> Hell: Living on the edge in the world's worst places”<br />

• “Can Silicon Valley Save the World? Defeating global poverty is the latest start-up trend.<br />

But is there really an app for that?” by Charles Kenny and Justin Sandefur<br />

• “The Invisible State: It's time we admit the Democratic Republic of Congo does not exist,”<br />

by Jeffrey Herbst and Greg Mills<br />

• “‘You Can't Eat Sharia’: Egypt is on the brink -- not of something better than the old<br />

Mubarak dicta<strong>to</strong>rship, but of something even worse,” by Mohamed ElBaradei<br />

• “Europe's Basket Case: Has Greece's dysfunction reached the point of permanent crisis?”<br />

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by Joanna Kakissis<br />

• “‘There's No Such Thing as a Failed State’: The father of emerging markets says we<br />

shouldn't give up on the world's Somalias and Zimbabwes,” Interview by Blake<br />

Hounshell<br />

• “Does It Take a Village?” Jeffrey Sachs dazzled the development world with his plan <strong>to</strong> end<br />

poverty. But now critics say there's no way <strong>to</strong> prove whether it work,” by Paul Starobin<br />

• “The FP Survey: Africa Rising,” more than 60 experts weigh in on whether the ‘African<br />

century’ is for real<br />

• “Mad Libs: Africa Rising?” Experts fill in the blanks on the state of politics in Africa and<br />

whether its much-<strong>to</strong>uted economic rise is for real.<br />

Features<br />

• “Leaning Away: Maybe the real failed states are the ones that have the means <strong>to</strong> help other<br />

nations -- but choose <strong>to</strong> retreat inward,” by David Rothkopf<br />

• “Think Again: Working Women: Why American women are better off than the lean-inners<br />

and have-it-allers realize,” by Kay Hymowitz<br />

Inbox<br />

• “Opening Gambit: Oh, Canada,” by Andrew Nikiforuk<br />

• “Anthropology of an Idea: Gamification,” by Ty Mccormick<br />

• “Ideas: First World Climate Change Problems,” by Joshua E. Keating<br />

• “Ideas: Reach Out and Kill Someone,” by Joshua E. Keating<br />

• “Ideas: The Great Divider: Immigration?” by Joshua E. Keating<br />

• Epiphanies <strong>from</strong> Frank Gehry,” Interview by Benjamin Pauker<br />

• “The New New Normal: After Bernanke,” by Mohamed A. El-Erian<br />

• “The Things They Carried: The North Korean Defec<strong>to</strong>r,” Interview By Chico Harlan<br />

• “Dispatch: In Search of Mickey Li's,” by Paul French<br />

• “Fast-Food Nations,” by Joshua E. Keating<br />

• “The Great App Firewall,” by Isaac S<strong>to</strong>ne Fish<br />

• “Pictured: Before They Pass Away,” Pho<strong>to</strong>graphs By Jimmy Nelson<br />

In Other Words<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “The Cookbook Theory of Economics: Why Chinese and Mexican dominate the market,” by<br />

Tyler Cowen<br />

• “Recipe for Living: Add Rice. Stir,” by Anna Badkhen<br />

• “Austerity Lentils: What a country cooks when it's collapsing,” by Joanna Kakissis<br />

• “Market Revolution: How Poland learned <strong>to</strong> love its own cuisine,” by Anne Applebaum<br />

Foreign Policy Analysis, Vol.9, No.2 (April 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291743-8594<br />

• “Divine Direction: How Providential Religious Beliefs Shape Foreign Policy Attitudes,” by<br />

Rebecca A. Glazier, 127-<br />

• “Culture Clash or Democratic Peace?: Results of a Survey Experiment on the Effect of<br />

Religious Culture and Regime Type on Foreign Policy Opinion Formation,” by Bethany<br />

Lacina and Charlotte Lee, 143-<br />

• “Turkish Foreign Policy and Public Opinion in the AKP Era,” by Ryan Kennedy and Matt<br />

Dickenson, 171-<br />

• “Cool Hand Nuke: Lessons From the Quiet Diplomacy of the Cienfuegos Non-Crisis,” by<br />

Dennis A. Crall and Thomas M. Martin, 189-<br />

• “Simple vs. Complex Learning Revisited: Israeli Prime Ministers and the Question of a<br />

Palestinian State,” by Guy Ziv, 203-<br />

• “Trade Relationships and Asymmetric Crisis Perception,” by Timothy M. Peterson and<br />

Jerome F. Venteicher II, 223-<br />

Foreign Policy Bulletin, Vol. 22, Issue No.4 (December 2012)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=FPB&volumeId=22&seriesId=0&issue<br />

Id=04<br />

Note: This Journal Ceased Publication as of this issue<br />

• “U.S. Outraged by Assad's Use of Violence, Authorizes $130 Million in Humanitarian Aid,” 3<br />

• “State Department Indicates Freedom of Religion is a Diplomatic Priority for President<br />

Obama,” 16-<br />

• “Obama Pledges <strong>to</strong> Use Technology <strong>to</strong> Target Human Trafficking, Simplify Visas for<br />

Trafficking Victims,” 26-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Clin<strong>to</strong>n Praises Success of President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief on African Tour,”<br />

46-<br />

• “U.S. Supports UN Special Envoy <strong>to</strong> Address Unrest in Mali,” 62-<br />

• “U.S. Commits $600 Million <strong>to</strong> Promote Childhood Health, Transparency and Clean Energy<br />

in Indonesia,” 80-<br />

• “U.S. Ambassador <strong>to</strong> the U.N. Highlights Support for Continued Cooperation in Balkan<br />

Region,” 102-<br />

• “Obama Administration Prepared <strong>to</strong> Support Democratic Transition in Egypt with $1<br />

Billion in Debt Relief,” 114-<br />

• “Obama Designates Afghanistan as Major Non-NATO Ally,” 138-<br />

• “State Department Urges Senate <strong>to</strong> Pass Law of the Sea Convention,” 158-<br />

• “U.S. Trade Representative Champions New Presidential Policy Directive for Trade with<br />

Sub-Saharan Africa,” 168-<br />

______________________________________________________________________________<br />

French His<strong>to</strong>rical Studies, Vol.36, No.2 (Spring 2013)<br />

http://fhs.dukejournals.org/content/vol36/issue2.<strong>to</strong>c<br />

Disaster in French His<strong>to</strong>ry<br />

• “Introduction,” by Elinor Accampo and Jeffrey H. Jackson, 165-<br />

• ‘‘La Fronde et ses lendemains au<strong>to</strong>ur de Paris : Conséquences environnementales,<br />

économiques et sociales en vallée de Montmorency au XVIIe siècle,’’ by Florent Mérot,<br />

175-<br />

• ‘‘Les effondrements de carrières de Paris : La grande réforme des années 1770,’’ by<br />

Thomas Le Roux, 205-<br />

• ‘‘Concilier sécurité et exploitation ? Distance de réserve, périmètre d’interdiction et<br />

opposition des populations aux carrières à plâtre de Montmartre (1830-1840),’’ by<br />

Frédéric Graber, 239-<br />

• “Paris’s 1900 Universal Exposition and the Politics of Urban Disaster,” by Peter Soppelsa,<br />

271-<br />

• “Place Matters: Mortality, Space, and Urban Form in the 2003 Paris Heat Wave Disaster,”<br />

by Richard C. Keller, 299-<br />

French His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.27, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

http://fh.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol27/issue2<br />

• “French and Flemish urban festive networks: archery and crossbow competitions attended<br />

and hosted by Tournai in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries,” by Laura Crombie,<br />

157-<br />

• “Between monarch and monarchy: the education of the dauphin and revolutionary<br />

politics, 1790–91,” by Adrian O’Connor, 176-<br />

• “‘Only what is pure and exquisite’: girls’ reading at school in France, 1800–70,” by<br />

Christina de Bellaigue, 202-<br />

• “The impossible gouvernement représentatif: constitutional culture in res<strong>to</strong>ration France,<br />

1814–30,’’ by Fabian Rausch<br />

• “Are plebiscites constitutional? A disputed question in the plebiscite campaign of 1870,” by<br />

Neil Rogachevsky, 249-<br />

French Politics, Culture & Society, Vol. 31, No.1 (Spring 2013)<br />

http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/fpcs/2013/00000031/00<br />

000001<br />

• “Negotiating Intimacy in the Shadow of War (France, 1914-1920s): New Perspectives in<br />

the Cultural His<strong>to</strong>ry of World War I,” by Bruno Cabanes, 1-<br />

• “The Rise of the Anglo-Saxon: French Perceptions of the Anglo-American World in the<br />

Long Twentieth Century,” by Emile Chabal, 24-<br />

• “Between Venus and Mercury: The 1920s Beauty Contest in France and America,” by Holly<br />

Grout, 47-<br />

• “La Mémoire Officielle Française et la Réunification Allemande,’’ by Geneviève Giroux, 69-<br />

• “Independent Filmmakers and the Invention of the Paris Suburbs,” by Rosemary<br />

Wakeman, 84-<br />

Review Essays<br />

• “A Forgotten Murder, a Neglected French Fascism,” by Joel Blatt, 96-<br />

• “The Trials and Triumphs of ‘Egocentric Buffalo,’” by George Ross, 10<br />

German His<strong>to</strong>ry, Vol.31, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://gh.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol31/issue2/<br />

• “The Emotional Bond of Brotherliness: Protestant Masculinity and the Local and Global<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

<strong>Net</strong>works among Religious in the Nineteenth Century,” by Alexandra Przyrembel, 157-<br />

• “Johanna Haarer and Frederic Truby King: When is a Babycare Manual an Instrument of<br />

National Socialism?” by Katharina Rowold, 181-<br />

• “The Borders of the Rechtsstaat in the Arab Autumn: Deportation and Law in West<br />

Germany, 1972/73,” by Quinn Slobodian, 204-<br />

Forum<br />

• “Habsburg His<strong>to</strong>ry,” 225-<br />

Discussion<br />

• “Is There a Continuity in Modern German His<strong>to</strong>ry? If Yes, How Many?” by Siegfried<br />

Weichlein, 239-<br />

German Politics, Vol. 22, No.1-2 (June 2012)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fgrp20/22/1-2<br />

Special Issue: Mapping the Transformation: The CDU in Flux<br />

• “Introduction: Understanding the Transformation of the CDU,” by Ed Turner, Simon Green<br />

& William Paterson, 1-<br />

• “Down but Not Out: A Comparison of Germany's CDU/CSU with Christian Democratic<br />

Parties in Austria, Belgium, Italy and the <strong>Net</strong>herlands,” by Tim Bale & André Krouwel,<br />

16-<br />

• “Societal Transformation and Programmatic Change in the CDU,” by Simon Green, 46-<br />

• “Christian Democracy is Dead; Long Live the Union Parties: Explaining CDU/CSU<br />

Dominance within the German Party System,” by Charles Lees, 64-<br />

• “The Genetic Origin of the CDU and its Developmental Path <strong>to</strong> a Catch-All Party,” by Eike-<br />

Christian Hornig, 82-<br />

• “Is the CSU Still a Volkspartei?” by Udo Zolleis & Carina Wertheimer, 97-<br />

• “The CDU and Party Organisational Change,” by Ed Turner, 114-<br />

• “The Federal Character of the CDU,” by Arijana Neumann, 134-<br />

• “The Programmatic Development of CDU and CSU since Reunification: Incentives and<br />

Constraints for Changing Policy Positions in the German Multi-Level System,” by Marc<br />

Debus & Jochen Müller, 151-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Gender as a Modernising Force in the German CDU,” by Sarah Elise Wiliarty, 172-<br />

• “Beyond Christian Democracy? Welfare State Politics and Policy in a Changing CDU,” by<br />

Clay<strong>to</strong>n Marc Clemens, 191-<br />

• “Concluding Remarks: The CDU – Revisiting the Elephant,” by Josef Schmid, 212-<br />

German Politics & Society, Vol. 31, No. 1 (Spring 2013)<br />

http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/gerpol/2013/00000031/0000000<br />

1<br />

The Élysée Treaty at Fifty<br />

• “Introduction: France and Germany Fifty Years after the Élysée Treaty,” by Francesca<br />

Vassallo, iv-<br />

• “Economic and Industrial Cooperation Between France and Germany: Assessment and<br />

Future Prospects,” by Jean-Marc Trouille, 1-<br />

• “Leadership in Hard Times: Germany, France, and the Management of the Eurozone<br />

Crisis,” by Joachim Schild, 24-<br />

• “The Élysée Treaty and European Integration Theory,” by Yannis Karagiannis, 48-<br />

• “The Élysée Treaty in the Context of Franco-German Socio-cultural Relations,” by Corine<br />

Defrance, 70-<br />

• “Sarkozy and Merkel: The Undeniable Relevance of the Franco-German Bilateral<br />

Relationship in Europe,” by Francesca Vassallo, 92-<br />

• “Changing Partners at Fifty? French Security Policy after Libya in Light of the Élysée<br />

Treaty,” by Colette Mazzucelli, 116-<br />

German Studies Review, Vol.36, No.2 (May 2013)<br />

http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/german_studies_review/<br />

• “‘In diesem Sinne hat jede Zeit, hat jedes Volk die Führer, die sie verdienen’” Zum Politikund<br />

Politikerbild des republikanischen Bürgertums in der Weimarer Republik,” by<br />

Carolin Dorothée Lange, 237-<br />

• “Fritz Lang’s Radio Aesthetic: M. Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder,” by Michael P. Ryan, 259-<br />

• “Ernst Barlach and the Conservative Revolution,” by James van Dyke, 281-<br />

38 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Between ‘Unity of Action’ and ‘Lackeys of Imperialism’: The Contradic<strong>to</strong>ry Attitudes of the<br />

East German Communists Toward the West German Social Democrats, 1959–1989,” by<br />

Dietrich Orlow, 307-<br />

• “An Apology for Public Apologies?: Transitional Justice and Respect in Germany,” by Juan<br />

Espindola, 327-<br />

• “Remembering What Remained: German Studies Association 2012 Presidential Address,”<br />

by Stephen Brockmann, 347-<br />

Remembering Christa Wolf<br />

• “Introduction: Remembering Christa Wolf,” by Patricia Herminghouse, 363-<br />

• “Fremdheitserfahrungen als Konstante,” by Daniela Colombo, 365-<br />

• “To Be Recognized Again: Christa Wolf’s Paradigm of Sincerity,” by Christine Kanz, 373-<br />

Roundtable on Günter Grass’s “Was gesagt werden muss” (What Must Be Said)<br />

• “Roundtable on Günter Grass’s “Was gesagt werden muss” (What Must Be Said),” by<br />

Russell A. Berman, 381-<br />

• “Gunter Grass’s ‘What Must Be Said: Blood Libel for Our Times,” by Jeffrey Herf, 384-<br />

• “Acting Out,” by Agnes C. Mueller, 389-<br />

• “‘Was gesagt werden muss’: Concerning Grass’s Schweigen (with an Epis<strong>to</strong>lary Coda),” by<br />

Richard E. Schade, 393-<br />

• “Grass’s Poem ‘Was gesagt werden muss,’ or, the Last Hurrah of the Aging Author,” by<br />

Stuart Taberner, 399-<br />

His<strong>to</strong>ire Politique: Politique, Culture, Société, Revue électronique du Centre d’his<strong>to</strong>ire<br />

de Sciences Po., No.20 (Mai-Août 2013)<br />

http://www.his<strong>to</strong>ire-politique.fr/<br />

Le dossier<br />

• 68/86 : un grand re<strong>to</strong>urnement ? Cerisy dans la vie intellectuelle française<br />

- ‘‘1968-1986 : la ‘révolution conservatrice’ de la pensée française à l’épreuve des<br />

rencontres de Cerisy,’’ par Laurent Jeanpierre & Laurent Martin<br />

- ‘‘Les colloques littéraires à Cerisy, 1968-1986. Entre nostalgie et avant-gardes,’’ par<br />

Laurent Martin<br />

- ‘‘Théorie et politique à Cerisy (1968-1986),’’ par François Cusset<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

- ‘‘Le re<strong>to</strong>ur du sujet ? La sociologie d’Alain Touraine entre deux colloques de Cerisy,’’<br />

par Jean-François Bert<br />

- ‘‘Présences et absences de la psychanalyse à Cerisy,’’ par Maïa Fansten<br />

- ‘‘ Les colloques scientifiques à Cerisy : un labora<strong>to</strong>ire pour de nouveaux paradigmes<br />

(1970-1984),’’ par Mathieu Triclot<br />

- ‘‘Les réseaux de pensée prospective à Cerisy,’’ par Philippe Durance<br />

- ‘‘Les colloques ‘fantômes’ à Cerisy (années 1970 - fin des années 1980) : contraintes et<br />

affirmations dans le choix de programmation au sein d’une grande institution<br />

culturelle,’’ par François Chaubet<br />

- ‘‘Adieux aux structures et à la dialectique. La pensée des sciences sociales aux<br />

colloques de Cerisy après Mai 1968,’’ par Laurent Jeanpierre<br />

Vari@rticles<br />

• ‘‘Philippe Ariès sous le regard de Joseph Czapski et de Pierre Vidal-Naquet pendant la<br />

guerre d’Algérie,’’ par Guillaume Gros<br />

• ‘‘Hollywood au 21e siècle : les défis d’une industrie culturelle mondialisée,’’ par Nolwenn<br />

Mingant<br />

Pistes & débats<br />

• “Faut-il une loi contre le négationnisme du génocide des Arméniens ? Un raisonnement<br />

his<strong>to</strong>rien sur le <strong>to</strong>urnant de 2012,’’ par Vincent Duclert<br />

• Partie I : ‘‘Vie et mort de la loi Boyer’’<br />

Sources<br />

• ‘‘‘Témoignages sur la guerre d’Algérie’, his<strong>to</strong>ire d’une enquête,’’ par Dominique Parcollet &<br />

Marie Scot<br />

Portraits & témoignages<br />

• ‘‘Entretien avec Jean-Claude Paye,’’ par Anne Dulph & Christine Manigand<br />

The His<strong>to</strong>rian, Vol.75, No.2 (Summer 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291540-6563<br />

• “Revolutionary Connection: ‘The Incorruptible’ Maximilian Robespierre and the<br />

‘Schoolmaster of Chartism’ Bronterre O’Brien,” by Michael J. Turner, 237-<br />

• “On the Preparation and Conduct of the Repression of Koreans in the 1930s Soviet Union,”<br />

by Alexander Kim, 262-<br />

40 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Imagining the Midwest in Latin America: US Advisors and the Envisioning of an<br />

Agricultural Middle Class in Colombia's Cauca Valley, 1943–1946,” by Timothy W.<br />

Lorek, 283-<br />

• “Piranhas, Whales, and Guppies: Transforming the His<strong>to</strong>ry Department at the University of<br />

North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1965–1985,” by William Palmer, 306-<br />

The His<strong>to</strong>rical Journal, Vol.56, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=HIS&volumeId=56&seriesId=0&issue<br />

Id=02<br />

• “Royalism, Print, and the Clergy in Britain, 1639–1640 and 1642,” by Lloyd Bowen, 297-<br />

• “Political Arithmetic and the English Land Tax in the Reign of William III,” by Philip Loft,<br />

321-<br />

• “The Attempts <strong>to</strong> Transfer the Genevan Academy <strong>to</strong> Ireland and <strong>to</strong> America, 1782–1795,”<br />

by Jennifer Powell Mcnutt and Richard Whatmore, 345-<br />

• “Understanding a Language of ‘Aris<strong>to</strong>cracy’, 1700–1850,” by Amanda Goodrich, 369-<br />

• “The Impact of Sturges Bourne's Poor Law Reforms in Rural England,” by Samantha A.<br />

Shave, 399-<br />

• “Infrastructural Globalization: Lighting the China Coast, 1860s–1930s,” by Robert Bickers,<br />

431-<br />

• “William Jennings Bryan's 1905–1906 World Tour,” by Daniel Scroop, 459-<br />

• “British Politics and Cinema's His<strong>to</strong>rical Dramas, 1929–1938,” by Steven Fielding, 487-<br />

• “Citizens For Eisenhower and the Republican Party, 1951–1965,” by Robert Mason, 513-<br />

His<strong>to</strong>riographical Reviews<br />

• “French-Asian Connections: The Compagnies Des Indes, France's Eastern Trade, and New<br />

Directions in His<strong>to</strong>rical Scholarship,” by Felicia Gottmann, 537-<br />

• “Consigning Justice <strong>to</strong> His<strong>to</strong>ry: Transitional Trials after the Second World War,” by Kim<br />

Christian Priemel, 553-<br />

Review Articles<br />

• “Life-Writing in Early Modern England,” by Michael Hunter, 583-<br />

• “Socialists and Social Reformers in Late Vic<strong>to</strong>rian Aand Edwardian Britain,” by Anna<br />

Vaninskaya, 593-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

________________________________________________________________________________<br />

His<strong>to</strong>rical Reflections Vol.39, No.1 (Spring 2013)<br />

http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/hisref/2013/00000039/0<br />

0000001<br />

Claude Langlois's Vision of France: Regional Identity, Royal Imaginary, and Holy Women<br />

• “Introduction: Claude Langlois's Vision of France: Regional Identity, Royal Imaginary, and<br />

Holy Women,” by Donald Sutherland, 1-<br />

• “The Work of Claude Langlois: An Overview,” by Timothy Tackett, 8-<br />

• ‘‘Sociabilité méridionale et vie religieuse, pour une poursuite de l'étude des confréries du<br />

Sud-Est français,’’ by Régis Bertrand, 22-<br />

• ‘‘Claude Langlois's French Revolution,’’ by D.M.G. Sutherland, 40-<br />

• ‘‘Cruci erunt eum inter duos latrones: Passion et mort de Louis XVI,’’ by Annie Duprat, 51-<br />

• “Claude Langlois's Vision of Nineteenth-Century French Catholicism,” by Thomas Kselman,<br />

66-<br />

• “Le Catholicisme au féminin: Thirty Years of Women's His<strong>to</strong>ry,” by Rebecca Rogers, 82-<br />

• “Claude Langlois, lecteur de Thérèse de Lisieux,’’ by Guillaume Cuchet, 101-<br />

• ‘‘Quarante années de production his<strong>to</strong>riographique (1971-2012): Réflexions sur un<br />

parcours atypique,’’ by Claude Langlois, 108-<br />

His<strong>to</strong>rical Research, Vol.86, No.232 (May 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291468-2281<br />

• “Magna Carta 1253: the ambitions of the church and the divisions within the real,” by<br />

David A. Carpenter, 179-<br />

• “More light on Henry III's confirmation of Magna Carta in 1253,” by David A. Carpenter,<br />

191-<br />

• “The ‘Boroughbridge roll of arms’ reconsidered,” by Bridget Wells-Furby, 196-<br />

• “Talk, script and print: the making of island books in early modern Venice,” by Anastasia<br />

S<strong>to</strong>uraiti, 207-<br />

• “‘His neighbours land mark’: William Sykes and the campaign for ‘free trade’ in civil war<br />

England,” by Thomas L. Leng, 230-<br />

42 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Was there a British Georgian <strong>to</strong>wn? A comparison between selected Scottish burghs and<br />

English <strong>to</strong>wns,” by Charles McKean, 253-<br />

• “‘The potent spirit of the black-browed Jacko’: new light on the impact of John Robinson on<br />

high politics in the era of the American Revolution, 1770–84,” by Andrew Connell, 292-<br />

• “Quantifying the language of British politics, 1880–1910,” by Luke Blaxill, 313-<br />

• “Sculpting the nation in early republican Turkey,” by Faik Gur, 342-<br />

• “‘Tolerance means weakness’: the Dachau concentration camp S.S., militarism and<br />

masculinity,” by Chris<strong>to</strong>pher Dillon, 373-<br />

His<strong>to</strong>rical Research, Vol.86, No.233 (August 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291468-2281<br />

• “Introduction,” by Jenny Benham, 391-<br />

• “Social structures and social change in seventh-century England: the law codes and<br />

complementary sources,” by John Hines, 394-<br />

• “How did the authors of the Breviarium Alaricanum work? The example of the laws on<br />

Jews,” by Capucine Nemo-Pekelman, 408-<br />

• “Forest laws in England and Normandy in the twelfth century,” by Judith A. Green, 416-<br />

• “The creation of a Scandinavian provincial law: how was it done?” by Stefan Brink, 432-<br />

• “Carolingian kings and the leges barbarorum,” by Thomas Faulkner, 443-<br />

• “Law codes and legal norms in later Anglo-Saxon England,” by Levi Roach, 465-<br />

• “Law or treaty? Defining the edge of legal studies in the early and high medieval periods,”<br />

by Jenny Benham, 487-<br />

• “Riht in earlier Anglo-Saxon legislation: a semasiological approach,” by Daniela Fruscione,<br />

498-<br />

• “Creating a Danish legal language: legal terminology in the medieval Law of Scania,” by<br />

Ditlev Tamm and Helle Vogt, 505-<br />

• “‘Ge mid wedde ge mid aðe’: the functions of oath and pledge in Anglo-Saxon legal culture,”<br />

by Matthias Ammon, 515-<br />

• “The twelfth-century rubrication of Anglo-Saxon legal texts in Cambridge, Corpus Christi<br />

College, MS. 383 ,” by Thomas Gobbitt, 536-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

His<strong>to</strong>ry Vol.98, No.333 (July 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291468-229X<br />

• “Evidence for Dualism in Inquisi<strong>to</strong>rial Registers of the 1240s: A Contribution <strong>to</strong> a Debate,”<br />

by Claire Taylor, 319-<br />

• “Making Gibraltar British in the Eighteenth Century,” by Geoffrey Plank, 346-<br />

• “The Clin<strong>to</strong>n–Cornwallis Controversy and Responsibility for the British Surrender at<br />

York<strong>to</strong>wn,” by Richard Middle<strong>to</strong>n, 370-<br />

• “Churchill's Black Dog at the Home Office, 1910–1911: The Evidential Reliability of<br />

Psychiatric Inference,” by Wilfred Attenborough, 390-<br />

• “State Expansion and the Criminal Investigation Militia during the Russian Civil War,” by<br />

Murray Frame, 406-<br />

His<strong>to</strong>ry Compass, Vol.11, No.5 (May 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291478-0542<br />

Special Issue: Special Issue on The His<strong>to</strong>riographical Legacies of David Underdown<br />

Britain and Ireland<br />

• “Introduction: The His<strong>to</strong>riographical Legacies of David Underdown,” by Malcolm Smuts,<br />

331-<br />

• “David Underdown, Royalist Conspira<strong>to</strong>rs and the Character of English Politics,” by Lloyd<br />

Bowen, 341-<br />

• “Parties, Parliament and Pride's Purge: David Underdown as Political His<strong>to</strong>rian,” by Jason<br />

Peacey, 352-<br />

• “Politics and Religion, Community and Modernity: David Underdown in the His<strong>to</strong>riography<br />

of English Puritanism,” by Dan Beaver, 363-<br />

• “The ‘Chalk’ and the ‘Cheese’: David Underdown, Regional Cultures and Popular Allegiance<br />

in the English Revolution,” by Ann Hughes, 373-<br />

• “Politics and Gender in Crisis in David Underdown's ‘The Taming of the Scold,’” by Rachel<br />

Weil, 381-<br />

• “David Underdown and Cricket,” by Richard Cust, 389-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Turning the World Upside Down: Gender and Inversion in the work of David<br />

Underdown,” by Susan D. Amussen, 394-<br />

His<strong>to</strong>ry Compass, Vol.11, No.6 (June 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291478-0542<br />

Australasia and the Pacific<br />

• “Genocide, Extinction and Aboriginal Self-determination in Tasmanian His<strong>to</strong>riography,” by<br />

Rebe Taylor, 405-<br />

• “The New Zealand Home Front during World War One and World War Two,” by Gwen<br />

Parsons, 419-<br />

Britain and Ireland<br />

• “Confrontation and Unification: Approaches <strong>to</strong> the Political His<strong>to</strong>ry of Normandy, 911–<br />

1035,” by Dr. Mark Hagger, 429-<br />

Europe<br />

• “Shadow Kingdom: Lotharingia and the Frankish World, c.850–c.1050,” by Simon<br />

MacLean, 443-<br />

• “Beyond His<strong>to</strong>ry and Memory: New Perspectives in Memory Studies,” by Marek Tamm,<br />

458-<br />

• “The Late Medieval Countryside: England's Rural Economy and Society, 1275–1500,” by<br />

David Routt, 474-<br />

• “Epicurean and S<strong>to</strong>ic Enlightenments: The Return of Modern Paganism?” by Ben Dew, 486-<br />

His<strong>to</strong>ry Compass, Vol.11, No.7 (July 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291478-0542<br />

Special Issue: Tracks and Trails: Indian Ocean Worlds as Method<br />

• “Sea Tracks and Trails: Indian Ocean Worlds as Method,” by An<strong>to</strong>inette Bur<strong>to</strong>n, Madhavi<br />

Kale, Isabel Hofmeyr, Clare Anderson, Chris<strong>to</strong>pher J. Lee and Nile Green, 497-<br />

• “Subaltern Lives: His<strong>to</strong>ry, Identity and Memory in the Indian Ocean World,” by Clare<br />

Anderson, 503-<br />

• “South Africa's Indian Ocean – Notes <strong>from</strong> Johannesburg,” by Isabel Hofmeyr, 508-<br />

• “Maritime Worlds and Global His<strong>to</strong>ry: Comparing the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean<br />

through Barcelona and Bombay,” by Nile Green, 513-<br />

• “The Indian Ocean during the Cold War: Thinking through a Critical Geography,” by<br />

Chris<strong>to</strong>pher J. Lee, 524-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Response <strong>to</strong> the Forum,” by Madhavi Kale, 531-<br />

His<strong>to</strong>ry and Theory, Vol.52, No.2 (May 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291468-2303<br />

• “Dwelling Within: The Inhabited Ruins of His<strong>to</strong>ry,” by Dariusz Gafijczuk, 149-<br />

• “Representation as a Cognitive Instrument,” by Frank Ankersmit, 171-<br />

• “The Limits of Ot<strong>to</strong>man Pragmatism,” by Murat Dağli, 194-<br />

• “Reoccupying Secularization: Schmitt and Koselleck on Blumenberg's Challenge,” by Timo<br />

Pankakoski, 214-<br />

Review Essays<br />

• “Pinker and Progress,” by Ronald Aronson, 246-<br />

• “Possibilities in ‘A Thoroughly His<strong>to</strong>rical World’: Missing Hayden White's Missed<br />

Connections,” by David D. Roberts, 265-<br />

• “His<strong>to</strong>riography: A Field in Search of a His<strong>to</strong>rian?” by Eileen Ka-May Cheng, 278-<br />

• “The Evolution and Development of Culture,” by Yuval Laor and Eva Jablonka, 290-<br />

The His<strong>to</strong>ry of European Ideas, Vol. 39, No.3 (2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/rhei20/39/3<br />

• “La Boétie and the Neo-Roman Conception of Freedom,” by Marta García-Alonso, 317-<br />

• “The Changing Moral Justification of Empire: From the Right <strong>to</strong> Colonise <strong>to</strong> the Obligation<br />

<strong>to</strong> Civilise,” by Camilla Boisen, 335-<br />

• “Rethinking the Political Thought of James Harring<strong>to</strong>n: Royalism, Republicanism and<br />

Democracy,” by Rachel Hammersley, 354-<br />

• “Who is the Author of the Abstract of Monsieur l'Abbé de Saint-Pierre's ‘Plan for Perpetual<br />

Peace’? From Saint-Pierre <strong>to</strong> Rousseau,” by Céline Spec<strong>to</strong>r, 371-<br />

• “Godly Dispositions and Textual Conditions: The Literary Sociology of International<br />

Religious Exchanges, c. 1722–1740,” by Tessa Whitehouse, 394-<br />

• “Catharine Macaulay on the Will,” by Karen Green & Shannon Weekes, 409-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Particular Universals—Universal Particulars: Biopolitical Metaphors and the Emergence<br />

of Nationalism in Europe (1650-1815),” by Christian P. Weber, 426-<br />

• “Liberalism against Democracy: A Comparative Analysis of the Concepts of Totalitarian<br />

Democracy and Positive Liberty in Jacob Leib Talmon and Isaiah Berlin,” by Alessandro<br />

Mulieri, 449-<br />

The His<strong>to</strong>ry of European Ideas, Vol. 39, No.4 (2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/rhei20/39/4<br />

• “The Use and Abuse of the Digital Humanities in the His<strong>to</strong>ry of Ideas: How <strong>to</strong> Study the<br />

Encyclopédie,” by Marie Leca-Tsiomis, 467-<br />

• “Kant and Vattel in Context: Cosmopolitan Philosophy and Diplomatic Casuistry,” by Ian<br />

Hunter, 477-<br />

• “Wolls<strong>to</strong>necraft in Europe, 1792–1904: A Revisionist Reception His<strong>to</strong>ry,” by Eileen Hunt<br />

Botting, 503-<br />

• “Renan versus Gobineau: Semitism and Antisemitism, Ancient Races and Modern Liberal<br />

Nations,” by Paul Lawrence Rose, 528-<br />

• “The Madness of Franz Brentano: Religion, Secularisation and the His<strong>to</strong>ry of Philosophy,”<br />

by Richard Schaefer, 541-<br />

• “Arendt's Denktagebuch, 1950–1973: An Unwritten Ethics for the Human Condition?” by<br />

Rodrigo Chacón, 561-<br />

• “The World of Psychiatry and the World of War: Foucault's Use of Metaphors in Le pouvoir<br />

psychiatrique,” by Line Joranger, 583-<br />

Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Vol.27, No.1 (Spring 2013)<br />

http://hgs.oxfordjournals.org/archive/<br />

• “Who Killed Lida's Jewish Intelligentsia? A Case Study of Wehrmacht Involvement in the<br />

Holocaust's ‘First Hour,’” by David W. Wildermuth, 1-<br />

• “His<strong>to</strong>ry and Memory: The Orthodox Experience in the Bergen-Belsen Displaced Persons<br />

Camp,” by Henri Lustiger Thaler, 30-<br />

• “Raphael Lemkin, Cultural Destruction, and the Armenian Genocide,” by Peter Balakian,<br />

57-<br />

• “Calculated Indifference: The Soviet Union and Requests <strong>to</strong> Bomb Auschwitz,” by Danny<br />

Orbach and Mark Solonin, 90-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

Research Note<br />

• “Vapniarka: The Archive of the International Tracing Service and the Holocaust in the<br />

East,” by Paul A. Shapiro, 114-<br />

Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 28, No. 2 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fint20/28/2<br />

• “Intelligence Accountability and the Role of Public Interest Groups in the United States,”<br />

by Damien Van Puyvelde, 139-<br />

• “The Impact of a High-Tech Spy,” by Petter Wulff, 159-<br />

• “The First China Watchers: British Intelligence Officers in China, 1878–1900,” by Eric<br />

Setzekorn, 181-<br />

• “‘Have A Go’: British Army/MI5 Agent-running Operations in Northern Ireland, 1970–72,”<br />

by David A. Charters, 202-<br />

• “Reforming Egyptian Intelligence: Precedents and Prospects,” by Owen L. Sirrs, 230-<br />

• “Subs and PSYOPs: The 1982 Swedish Submarine Intrusions,” by Ola Tunander, 252-<br />

Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 28, No. 3 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fint20/28/3<br />

Special Issue: A Century of Intelligence (1909-2009): International Perspectives<br />

• “Introduction: A Century of Intelligence (1909–2009): International Perspectives,” by<br />

Martin S. Alexander & Huw Dylan, 297-<br />

• “Is there Something Wrong with Intelligence in France? The Birth of the Modern Secret<br />

State,” by Sébastien Laurent, 299-<br />

• “Intelligence in Occupied Belgium: The Business of Anglo-Belgian Espionage and<br />

Intelligence Cooperation during the Two World Wars (1914–1918, 1940–1944),” by<br />

Emmanuel Debruyne, 313-<br />

• “Radio-Intercepts, Reconnaissance and Raids: French Operational Intelligence and<br />

Communications in 1940,” by Martin S. Alexander, 337-<br />

• “Intelligence and the Transition <strong>to</strong> the Algerian Police State: Reassessing French Colonial<br />

Security after the Sétif Uprising, 1945,” by Martin Thomas, 377-<br />

• “Franco-German Intelligence Cooperation and the Internationalization of Algeria's War of<br />

Independence (1954–62),” by Mathilde von Bülow, 397-<br />

48 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Early Warning of Intentions or of Capabilities? Revisiting the Israeli–Egyptian Rotem<br />

Affair, 1960,” by Yigal Sheffy,, 420-<br />

International His<strong>to</strong>ry Review, Vol.35, No. 2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/rinh20/35/2<br />

• “‘The Sustenance of Salisbury’ in the era of Decolonization: The Portuguese Politics of<br />

Neutrality and the Rhodesian Oil Embargo, 1965–67,” by Chris<strong>to</strong>pher R. W. Dietrich,<br />

235-<br />

• “New <strong>to</strong> the Game: Czechs, Economic Unions, and the Diplomacy of Contested Zones,” by<br />

Donald A. Hempson III, 256-<br />

• “How far West?: Lord Curzon's Transcaucasian (Mis)Adventure and the Defence of British<br />

India, 1918–23,” by Sean Kelly, 274-<br />

• “‘The Key <strong>to</strong> India’: Troop Movements, Southern Africa, and Britain's Indian Ocean World,<br />

1795–1820,” by John McAleer, 294-<br />

• “An ‘All-Unifying Church Triumphant’ A Neglected Dimension of Kant's Theory of<br />

International Relations,” by Seán Molloy, 317-<br />

• “The Last Assignment: David Atlee Phillips and the Birth of CIA Public Relations,” by<br />

Chris<strong>to</strong>pher Richard Moran, 337-<br />

• “‘How The Mouse Got His Roar’: The Shift <strong>to</strong> an ‘Offensive–Defensive’ Military Strategy in<br />

Israel in 1953 and its Implications,” by Amiram Oren, Oren Barak & Assaf Shapira, 356-<br />

• “Neville Chamberlain and the Spanish Civil War, 1936–39,” by Glyn Arthur S<strong>to</strong>ne, 377-<br />

• “Psychoanalyzing Iran: Kennedy's Iran Task Force and the Modernization of Orientalism,<br />

1961–63,” by Andrew Warne, 396-<br />

International Interactions: Empirical and Theoretical Research in International<br />

Relations, Vol. 39, No. 2 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/gini20/39/2<br />

• “Going the Distance: The Price of Projecting Power,” by Jonathan N. Markowitz &<br />

Chris<strong>to</strong>pher J. Fariss, 119-<br />

• “Lost in Translation: The Problem of Perceptual Limitations in Civil War Peace<br />

Negotiation,” by Sung Yong Lee, 144-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Democrats, Republicans—or Both? An Empirical Analysis of the Effects of the<br />

Composition of State Governments on FDI, 1977–2004,” by Thomas Halvorsen & Jo<br />

Jakobsen, 167-<br />

• “Global Energy Governance: Trade, Infrastructure, and the Diffusion of International<br />

Organizations,” by Leonardo Baccini, Veronica Lenzi & Paul W. Thurner, 192-<br />

• “Economic Sanctions, Poverty, and International Terrorism: An Empirical Analysis,” by<br />

Seung-Whan Choi & Shali Luo, 217-<br />

Research Note<br />

• “Regime Age and Terrorism: Are New Democracies Prone <strong>to</strong> Terrorism?” by James A.<br />

Piazza, 246-<br />

International Interactions: Empirical and Theoretical Research in International<br />

Relations, Vol.<br />

39, No. 3 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/gini20/39/3<br />

• “The World Religion Dataset, 1945–2010: Logic, Estimates, and Trends,” by Zeev Maoz &<br />

Errol A. Henderson, 265-<br />

• “Conditional on Conditionality: IMF Program Design and Foreign Direct Investment,” by<br />

Byungwon Woo, 292-<br />

• “Global Credit Markets, Political Violence, and Politically Sustainable Risk Premia,” by<br />

Terrence Chapman & Eric Reinhardt, 316-<br />

• “Military Mobilization and Commitment Problems,” by Ahmer Tarar, 343-<br />

Research Note<br />

• “The Post-Coup Military Spending Question Revisited, 1960–2000,” by Hong-Cheol Kim,<br />

Hyung Min Kim & Jaechul Lee, 367-<br />

Commentary: New Views on Foreign Aid<br />

• “Introduction,” by Matthew S. Winters, 386-<br />

• “Public Opinion and Foreign Aid: A Review Essay,” by Helen V. Milner & Dustin Tingley,<br />

389-<br />

• “New Donors,” by Axel Dreher, Andreas Fuchs & Peter Nunnenkamp, 402-<br />

• “Reconsidering the Effect of Political Regime Type on Foreign Aid Effectiveness,” by David<br />

H. Bearce, 416-<br />

International Journal, Vol. 68, No.1 (Winter 2012-2013)<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

http://internationaljournal.ca<br />

The international politics of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter<br />

• “The international politics of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter,” by Srdjan Vucetic & Kim<br />

Richard Nossal<br />

• “The UK and the Joint Strike Fighter: The trials and tribulations of international<br />

collaborative procurement,” by Peter D. Antill & Pete I<strong>to</strong><br />

• “Italy and the F-35: Rationales and costs,” by Alessandro Marrone<br />

• “Noblesse oblige: The transatlantic security community dynamic and Dutch involvement in<br />

the Joint Strike Fighter,” by Giles Scott-Smith & Max Smeets<br />

• “The logic of interoperability: Australia’s acquisition of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighterm,” by<br />

Adam Lockyer<br />

• “Investing in fighters and alliances: Norway, Denmark, and the bumpy road <strong>to</strong> the Joint<br />

Strike Fighter,” by Jens Ringsmose<br />

• “Turkey’s involvement in the F-35 program: One step forward, two steps backward?” by<br />

Serhat Güvenç & Lerna K. Yanık<br />

• “The ‘only choice’: Canadian and Japanese F-35 decisions compared,” by Atsushi Tago &<br />

Srdjan Vucetic<br />

Lessons of His<strong>to</strong>ry<br />

• “Late learners: Canada, the F-35, and lessons <strong>from</strong> the New Fighter Aircraft program,” by<br />

Kim Richard Nossal<br />

Over the transom<br />

• “Becoming a regional power while pursuing material gains: The case of Turkish interest in<br />

Africa,” by Umut Korkut & Ilke Civelekoglu<br />

• “Human security and its subjects,” by Oliver P. Richmond<br />

______________________________________________________________________________<br />

International Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 10, No. 2 (July 2013)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayBackIssues?jid=ASI<br />

• “Insanity and Parricide in Late Imperial China (Eighteenth–Twentieth Centuries)” by Luca<br />

Gabbiani, 115-<br />

• “Sexual Healing: Regulating Male Sexuality In Edo-Period Books On ‘Nurturing Life,’” by<br />

Angelika Koch, 143-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Constructing Cultural Difference in Manchukuo: S<strong>to</strong>ries of Gu Ding and Ushijima Haruko,”<br />

by Junko Agnew, 171-<br />

Review Article<br />

• “Domesticating Imperialism: The Fashioning of Political identity in Southeast Asia,” by<br />

Simon Philpott, 189-<br />

The International Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 17, No. 4 (May 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/fjhr20/17/4<br />

• “The relationship between national and sub-national human rights institutions in federal<br />

states,” by Andrew Wolman, 445-<br />

• “The framework of the protection of the human rights of persons with disabilities <strong>from</strong><br />

non-state entities,” by Nicolas Carrillo, 463-<br />

• “Making human rights meaningful for people with disabilities: advocacy, access <strong>to</strong> justice<br />

and equality before the law,” by Eilionóir Flynn, 491-<br />

• “Is the ECHR ready for global ageing?” by Barbara Mikołajczyk, 511-<br />

• “The Conflict between Women's Rights and Cultural Practices in Iraq,” by Bnar Ariany,<br />

530-<br />

• “Approaches <strong>to</strong> gender conflicts on land ownership in the courts of Anglophone Cameroon:<br />

human rights implications,” by Patience Munge Sone, 567-<br />

• “Child soldiers as super-privileged combatants,” by G. Alex Sinha, 584-<br />

International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, Vol. 26, No. 3 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/ujic20/26/3<br />

• “In Pursuit of the Squared Circle: The Nosenko Theories Revisited,” by W. Alan Messer,<br />

427-<br />

• “Cyber-Threats <strong>to</strong> Critical National Infrastructure: An Intelligence Challenge,” by Martin<br />

Rudner, 453-<br />

• “To Render or Intern: Counterterrorism Methods of the FBI SIS and CIA,” by Peter C.<br />

Courtney, 482-<br />

• “True or False Warning? The United Nations and Threats <strong>to</strong> Namibia's Independence,<br />

1989,” by A. Walter Dorn, Robert Pauk & Emily Cope Bur<strong>to</strong>n, 507-<br />

52 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Is Everything Personal?: Political Leaders and Intelligence Organizations: A Typology,” by<br />

Amit Steinhart & Kiril Avramov, 530-<br />

• “Indications and Warning in an Age of Uncertainty,” by James J. Wirtz, 550-<br />

• “Positivism, Post-Positivism, and Intelligence Analysis,” by Mary Manjikian, 563-<br />

• “Crafting Operational Counterintelligence Strategy: A Guide for Managers,” by Michael D.<br />

S<strong>to</strong>uder & Scott Gallagher, 583-<br />

• “Making “Easy Questions” Easy: The Difficulty of Intelligence Requirements,” by Brian<br />

Manning & Kristan J. Whea<strong>to</strong>n, 597-<br />

International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 45, No. 2 (May 2013)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayBackIssues?jid=MES<br />

Special Issue: Queer Affects<br />

Articles<br />

• “Queer Affects: Introduction,” by Hanadi Al-Samman and Tarek El-Ariss, 205-<br />

• “Genus Of Sex Or The Sexing Of Jins,” by Afsaneh Najmabadi, 211-<br />

• “Thinking Past Pride: Queer Arab Shame in Bareed Mista3jil,” by Dina Georgis, 233-<br />

• “Queer Couplings: Formations of Religion and Sexuality on ʿalaʾ Al-Aswani's ʿimarat<br />

Yaʿqubyan,” by Michael Allan, 253-<br />

• “Homosexuality and Epistemic Closure in Modern Arabic Literature,” by Khalid Hadeed,<br />

271-<br />

• “Majnun Strikes Back: Crossings of Madness Aand Homosexuality in Contemporary Arabic<br />

Literature,” by Tarek El-Ariss, 293-<br />

• “Baudelaire in Baghdad: Modernism, the Body, and Husayn Mardan's Poetics of the Self,” y<br />

Haytham Bahoora, 313-<br />

Roundtable: Queer Theory and Middle East Studies<br />

• “Introduction: Curiosities of Middle East Studies in Queer Times,” by Paul Amar and Omnia<br />

El Shakry, 331-<br />

• “Rethinking Homonationalism,” by Jasbir Puar, 336-<br />

• “Transnational Governmentality and the Politics of Life and Death,” by Sima Shakhsari,<br />

340-<br />

53 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Psychoanalysis and the Postcolonial Genealogy of Queer Theory,” by Dina Al-Kassim, 343-<br />

• “The Middle East: Global, Postcolonial, Regional, and Queer,” by Wilson Chacko Jacob, 347-<br />

• “Queering Citizenship, Queering Middle East Studies,” by Maya Mikdashi, 350-<br />

International Organization, Vol. 67, No.2 (April 2013)<br />

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayBackIssues?jid=INO<br />

• “Emotion and Strategy in the Korean War,” by Jonathan Mercer, 221-<br />

• “‘Retribution Must Succeed Rebellion;: The Colonial Origins of Counterinsurgency Failure,”<br />

by Paul K. MacDonald, 253-<br />

• “Theorizing Agency in Hobbes's Wake: The Rational Ac<strong>to</strong>r, the Self, or the Speaking<br />

Subject?” by Charlotte Epstein, 287-<br />

• “Common-sense Constructivism and Hegemony in World Politics,” by Ted Hopf, 317-<br />

• “Delayed Ratification: The Domestic Fate of Bilateral Investment Treaties,” by Yoram Z.<br />

Haftel and Alexander Thompson, 355-<br />

• “Transborder Ethnic Kin and Civil War,” by Lars-Erik Cederman, Kristian Skrede Gleditsch,<br />

Idean Salehyan and Julian Wucherpfennig, 389-<br />

• “Sensitivity <strong>to</strong> Issue Framing on Trade Policy Preferences: Evidence <strong>from</strong> a Survey<br />

Experiment,” by Martin Ardanaz, M. Vic<strong>to</strong>ria Murillo and Pablo M. Pin<strong>to</strong>, 411-<br />

________________________________________________________________________________<br />

International Peacekeeping, Vol. 20, No. 2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/finp20/20/2<br />

Special Issue: Frictions in Peacebuilding Interventions: The Unpredictability of Local–Global<br />

Interaction<br />

• “Peacebuilding Plans and Local Reconfigurations: Frictions between Imported Processes<br />

and Indigenous Practices,” by Gearoid Millar, Jaïr van der Lijn & Willemijn Verkoren,<br />

137-<br />

• “Friction, Good Governance and the Poor: Cases <strong>from</strong> Cambodia,” by Caroline Hughes, 144-<br />

• “Civil Society in Peacebuilding: Global Discourse, Local Reality,” by Willemijn Verkoren &<br />

Mathijs van Leeuwen, 159-<br />

• “Imagi-Nation Building in Illusionstan: Afghanistan, Where Dilemmas Become Dogmas,<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

and Models are Perceived <strong>to</strong> be Reality,” by Jaïr van der Lijn, 173-<br />

• “Expectations and Experiences of Peacebuilding in Sierra Leone: Parallel Peacebuilding<br />

Processes and Compound Friction,” by Gearoid Millar, 189-<br />

• “Peacebuilding in Timor-Leste: Finding a Way between External Intervention and Local<br />

Dynamics,” by Maria Raquel Freire & Paula Duarte Lopes, 204-<br />

• “The Power of Perceptions: Localizing International Peacebuilding Approaches,” by Sara<br />

Hellmüller, 219-<br />

• “‘Where the Rubber Meets the Road’: Friction Sites and Local-level Peacebuilding in Haiti,<br />

Liberia and South Sudan,” by Niels Nagelhus Schia & John Karlsrud, 233-<br />

International Politics, Vol. 50, No. 3 (May 2013)<br />

http://www.palgrave-journals.com/ip/journal/v50/n3/index.html<br />

• “Global governance in crisis? Fragmentation, risk and world order,” by David Held and<br />

Kevin Young, 309-<br />

The West After Its Wars<br />

• “No longer special? Britain and the United States after Iraq,” by Jason Ralph, 333-<br />

• “Enduring, but irrelevant? Britain, NATO and the future of the Atlantic alliance,” by Michael<br />

John Williams, 360-<br />

Prestige in World Politics<br />

• “Prestige in world politics: His<strong>to</strong>ry, theory, expression,” by Steve Wood, 387-<br />

Liberal Power<br />

• “Player, partner and friend: Canada's Africa policy since 1945,” by Grant Dawson, 412-<br />

Turkey in Transition<br />

• “Regime change in Turkey,” by Necati Polat, 435-<br />

Survey<br />

• “China under stress: The Xinjiang question,” by Chris<strong>to</strong>pher B Primiano, 455-<br />

International Politics, Vol. 50, No. 4 (July 2013)<br />

http://www.palgrave-journals.com/ip/journal/v50/n4/index.html<br />

• “Reviving global Europe,” by Richard Youngs, 475-<br />

Terrorism and Terrorists<br />

55 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “Terrorist innovation and international politics: Lessons <strong>from</strong> an IRA case study?” by<br />

Richard English, 496-<br />

• “Terrorism, <strong>to</strong>rture and intelligence,” by Samantha Newbery, 512-<br />

The IMF: Fit For Purpose?<br />

• “The IMF and civil society,” by Rober<strong>to</strong> Belloni and Manuela Moschella, 532-<br />

• “IMF reform after the crisis,” by Dries Lesage, Peter Debaere, Sacha Dierckx and Mattias<br />

Vermeiren, 553-<br />

Towards a Theory of Trade<br />

• “Two-level games and trade cooperation: What do we now know?” by Eugénia da<br />

Conceição-Heldt, 579-<br />

Just Interventions<br />

• “The responsibility <strong>to</strong> protect – An incoherent doctrine?” by Henrik Friberg-Fernros and<br />

Douglas Brommesson, 600-<br />

International Relations, Vol. 27, No. 2 (June 2013)<br />

http://ire.sagepub.com/content/vol27/issue2/<br />

• “Recognition and the constitution of epochal change,” by Nicholas Onuf, 121-<br />

• “On theology and international relations: World politics beyond the empty sky,” by<br />

Nicholas Rengger, 141-<br />

• “Vernacular Securities and Their Study: A Qualitative Analysis and Research Agenda,” by<br />

Lee Jarvis and Michael Lister, 158-<br />

• “Fragmentation and diversification of climate change governance in international society,”<br />

by Eero Palmujoki, 180-<br />

• “Back <strong>to</strong> the Drawing Board: A Critique of Offensive Realism,” by Arash Heydarian<br />

Pashakhanlou, 202-<br />

Forum: democracy and world order<br />

• “Introduc<strong>to</strong>ry notes,” by Milja Kurki, 226-<br />

• “Promoting polyarchy: 20 years later,” by William I. Robinson, 228-<br />

• “US foreign policy and democracy promotion: in search of purpose,” by Jeff Bridoux, 235-<br />

• “African democracy – still disciplined after all these years?” by Rita Abrahamsen, 241-<br />

56 | P age


H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “From transformation <strong>to</strong> reality: the role of local context in EU democracy promotion,” by<br />

Jessica Schmidt, 246-<br />

• “Democracy and world order: reflections on critical scholarship <strong>to</strong>day,” by Milja Kurki,<br />

253-<br />

___________________________________________________________________________<br />

International Relations of the Asia Pacific, Vol.13, No. 2 (May 2013)<br />

http://irap.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol13/issue2/<br />

• “Different in Asia? Developmental states, trade, and international conflict onset and<br />

escalation,” by Benjamin E. Goldsmith, 175-<br />

• “ASEAN and human rights norms: constructivism, rational choice, and the action-identity<br />

gap,” by Mathew Davies, 207-<br />

• “Herding cats: the role of persuasion in political change and continuity in the Association<br />

of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN),” by See Seng Tan, 233-<br />

Research Note<br />

• India and South Asia in the world: on the embeddedness of regions in the international<br />

system and its consequences for regional powers,” by Miriam Prys, 267-<br />

Articles<br />

• “Power and paradox: Indonesia and the ‘English School’ concept of great powers,” by Linda<br />

Quayle, 301-<br />

International Security, Vol. 38, No. 1 (Summer 2013)<br />

http://www.mitpressjournals.org/loi/isec (forthcoming)<br />

• “In the Eye of the Beholder: How Leaders and Intelligence Communities Assess the<br />

Intentions of Adversaries,” by Keren Yarhi-Milo<br />

• “Military Primacy Doesn’t Pay (Nearly As Much As You Think),” by Daniel W. Drezner<br />

• “Why States Won’t Give Nuclear Weapons <strong>to</strong> Terrorists,” by Keir A. Lieber and Daryl G.<br />

Press<br />

Reconsidering the Libyan Intervention<br />

• “A Model Intervention? Reassessing NATO’s Libya Campaign,” by Alan J. Kuperman<br />

• “The Permanence of Inconsistency: Libya, the Security Council, and the Responsibility <strong>to</strong><br />

Protect,” by Aidan Hehir<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

Correspondence<br />

• “Just War Theory and the 2008–09 Invasion of Gaza,” by Davis Brown, Michael L. Gross,<br />

Tamar Meisels, Jerome Slater<br />

• “Nuclear Negotiations with Iran,” by Paul R. Pillar, Robert Reardon, James K. Sebenius and<br />

Michael K. Singh<br />

______________________________________________________________________________<br />

International Specta<strong>to</strong>r, Vol. 48, No. 1 (April 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/rspe20/48/1<br />

Special Issue: Europe and Islam<br />

• “Secularism and Islam: The Theological Predicament,” by Olivier Roy, 5-<br />

• “EU Foreign Policy and Political Islam: Towards a New Entente in the Post-Arab Spring<br />

Era?” by Timo Behr, 20-<br />

• “The French Debate on National Identity and the Sarkozy Presidency: A Retrospective,” by<br />

Jonathan Laurence & Gabriel Goodliffe, 34-<br />

• “Muslim Organisations and Intergenerational Change in Germany,” by Dirk Halm, 48-<br />

• “Muslims in Italy: The Need for an ‘Intesa’ with the Italian State,” by Karim Mezran, 58-<br />

• “The <strong>Net</strong>herlands and Islam: In Defence of Liberalism and Progress?” by Saskia van<br />

Genugten, 72-<br />

• “Islam and Muslim Communities in the UK: Multiculturalism, Faith and Security,” by<br />

Catherine Fieschi & Nick Johnson, 86-<br />

• “Identity, Solidarity, and Islam in Europe,” by Erik Jones, 102-<br />

International Specta<strong>to</strong>r, Vol. 48, No. 2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/rspe20/48/1<br />

• “The Three Major Earthquakes in the International System and Turkey,” by Ahmet<br />

Davu<strong>to</strong>ğlu, 1-<br />

• “The Future of US–China Relations: From Conflict <strong>to</strong> Concert,” by Daniel Twining, 12-<br />

• “What Syria has <strong>to</strong> Teach Neo-Conservatives and Liberals about US Foreign Policy,” by<br />

Tom Farer, 17-<br />

• “Russian Support for Assad’s Regime: Is There a Red Line?” by Nikolay Kozhanov, 25-<br />

Strategic Challenges in the Middle East<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

• “The Arab Uprisings and the Geopolitics of the Middle East,” by Bassel F. Salloukh, 32-<br />

• “The Arab Spring and the European Response,” by Muriel Asseburg, 47-<br />

• “The Awakened Arab World and its New Landscape,” by Augustus Richard Nor<strong>to</strong>n, 63-<br />

• “Israel and the Palestinians in a Changing Neighbourhood,” by Andrea Dessì, 77-<br />

Essays<br />

• “The Loneliness of Israel. The Jewish State’s Status in International Relations,” by Arturo<br />

Marzano, 96-<br />

• “Can the European Union be a Pole in a Multipolar World?” by Karen E. Smith, 114-<br />

International Studies Perspectives, Vol. 14, No. 2 (May 2013)<br />

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118516737/home<br />

• “Using a Blended Learning Approach <strong>to</strong> Simulate the Negotiation of a Multilateral<br />

Environmental Agreement,” by Matthew A. Schnurr, Elizabeth De San<strong>to</strong> and Rachael<br />

Craig, 109-<br />

• “Simulating in Cyberspace: Designing and Assessing Simple Role Playing Activities for<br />

Online Regional Studies Courses,” by Mary Jane C. Parmentier, 121-<br />

• “Simulations Inside and Outside the IR Classroom: A Comparative Analysis ,” by Kirsten<br />

Taylor, 134-<br />

• “Benchmarking International, Transnational, and Private Governance in the Forest Sec<strong>to</strong>r,”<br />

by Ingo Take, 150-<br />

• “Reversal of Fortune? Strategy Change and Counterinsurgency Success by Foreign Powers<br />

in the Twentieth Century,” by Andrew J. Enterline, Emily Stull and Joseph Magagnoli,<br />

176-<br />

• “Disaggregating Torture Allegations: Introducing the Ill-Treatment and Torture (ITT)<br />

Country-Year Data,” by Courtenay R. Conrad, Jillienne Haglund and Will H. Moore, 199-<br />

• “Timing is Everything: The Time, Space, and Strategies for Scholarly Analysis in the Making<br />

of Foreign Policy,” by Hiski Haukkala, 221-<br />

International Studies Quarterly, Vol. 57, No.2 (June 2013)<br />

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291468-2478<br />

• “Information Politics Versus Organizational Incentives: When Are Amnesty International's<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

‘Naming and Shaming’ Reports Biased?” by Daniel W. Hill Jr., Will H. Moore and Bumba<br />

Mukherjee, 219-<br />

• “Government Respect for Gendered Rights: The Effect of the Convention on the<br />

Elimination of Discrimination against Women on Women’s Rights Outcomes, 1981–<br />

2004,” by Wade M. Cole, 233-<br />

• “Predicting Armed Conflict, 2010–2050,” by Håvard Hegre, Joakim Karlsen, Håvard<br />

Mokleiv Nygård, Håvard Strand and Henrik Urdal, 250-<br />

• “Choosing Your Neighbors: <strong>Net</strong>works of Diffusion in International Relations,” by Yuri M.<br />

Zhukov and Brandon M. Stewart, 271-<br />

• “Reforming International Institutions: The Domestic Origins and Conditional Logic of<br />

Governmental Reform Preferences,” by Daniel Finke, 288-<br />

• “Wallets, Ballots, or Bullets: Does Wealth, Democracy, or Military Capabilities Determine<br />

War Outcomes?” by Errol A. Henderson and Reşat Bayer, 303-<br />

• “Creating Space for Emancipa<strong>to</strong>ry Human Security: Liberal Obstructions and the Potential<br />

of Agonism,” by Jenny H. Peterson, 318-<br />

• “Do Ethnic Dominoes Fall? Evaluating Domino Effects of Granting Terri<strong>to</strong>rial Concessions<br />

<strong>to</strong> Separatist Groups,” by Erika Forsberg, 329-<br />

• “States in the Cus<strong>to</strong>ms House: Institutional Reforms and Structural Change in Mexican<br />

Trade Policy,” by Anthony Pezzola, 343-<br />

• “Tertiarization, Industrial Adjustment, and the Domestic Politics of Foreign Aid,” by<br />

Johannes Kleibl, 356-<br />

• “Cooperative and Antagonistic <strong>Net</strong>works: Multidimensional Affinity and Intervention in<br />

Ongoing Conflicts, 1946–2001,” by Rena<strong>to</strong> Corbetta, 370-<br />

• “Ties that Bind? Preferential Trade Agreements and Exchange Rate Policy Choice,” by Mark<br />

S. Copelovitch and Jon C.W. Pevehouse, 385-<br />

• “Ratification Patterns and the International Criminal Court,” by Terrence L. Chapman and<br />

Stephen Chaudoin, 400-<br />

• “Market-Protecting Institutions and the World Trade Organization's Ability <strong>to</strong> Promote<br />

Trade,” by Jesse C. Johnson, Mark Souva and Dale L. Smith, 410-<br />

• “Outsourcing Security: Alliance Portfolio Size, Capability, and Reliability,” by Keith A.<br />

Grant, 418-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

International Studies Review, Vol. 15, No. 1 (March 2013)<br />

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/120118378/grouphome/home.html<br />

Special Issue: International Relationships in the Information Age<br />

• “Preface: International Relationships in the Information Age,” by Beth A. Simmons, 1-<br />

• “Information Technologies, Meta-power, and Transformations in Global Politics,” by J. P.<br />

Singh, 5-<br />

• “Six Models for the Internet + Politics,” by Archon Fung, Hollie Russon Gilman and Jennifer<br />

Shkabatur, 30-<br />

• “What Best Explains Successful Protest Cascades? ICTs and the Fuzzy Causes of the Arab<br />

Spring,” by Muzammil M. Hussain and Philip N. Howard, 48-<br />

• “Revenge of the ‘Nerds’: Collective Action against Intellectual Property Maximalism in the<br />

Global Information Age,” by Susan K. Sell, 67-<br />

• “Internet Security and <strong>Net</strong>worked Governance in International Relations,” by Mil<strong>to</strong>n<br />

Mueller, Andreas Schmidt and Brenden Kuerbis, 86-<br />

• “From Cyber-Bombs <strong>to</strong> Political Fallout: Threat Representations with an Impact in the<br />

Cyber-Security Discourse,” by Myriam Dunn Cavelty, 105-<br />

• “The Long Road <strong>to</strong> Public Diplomacy 2.0: The Internet in US Public Diplomacy,” by<br />

Nicholas J. Cull, 123-<br />

International Studies Review, Vol. 15, No. 2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/120118378/grouphome/home.html<br />

• “Between Statecraft and Humanism: Diplomacy and Its Forms of Knowledge,” by Costas M.<br />

Constantinou, 141-<br />

• “Come Together? Different Pathways <strong>to</strong> International NGO Centralization,” by Sarah S.<br />

Stroup and Wendy Wong, 163-<br />

• “Climate Change and Conflict: Avoiding Small Talk about the Weather,” by Emily<br />

Meierding, 185-<br />

• “Pacifization: Toward a Theory of the Social Construction of Peace,” by Amir Lupovici, 204-<br />

• “Why Don't You Tell Us About Them Rabbits, George? The Tragedy of Just War,” by Cian<br />

O'Driscoll, 229-<br />

• “New Imperialism: Toward a Holistic Approach,” by Steven Kettell and Alex Sut<strong>to</strong>n, 243-<br />

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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2013<br />

The Forum<br />

• “Reflections and Reassessments on the Early Work and Ideas of J. David Singer,” by Daniel<br />

S. Geller and Paul F. Diehl, 259-<br />

Book Review Essay<br />

• “Alternative Governance in Spaces and Terri<strong>to</strong>ries,” by Karen A. Mingst, 285-<br />

Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, Vol. 15, No. 2 (June 2013)<br />

http://www.tandfonline.com/<strong>to</strong>c/riij20/15/2<br />

Special Issue: Indigeneity and Performance: Interdisciplinary Perspectives<br />

• “Indigeneity and Performance,” by Helen Gilbert, 173-<br />

• “Clearing The Path: Contemporary Dance, Indigenous Methodologies and Michelle Olson's<br />

Evening in Paris,” by Jacqueline Shea Murphy, 181-<br />

• “Indigeneity, Time and the Cosmopolitics of Postcolonial Belonging in the A<strong>to</strong>mic Age,” by<br />

Helen Gilbert, 195-<br />

• “Indigenous Performance of His<strong>to</strong>ry, Loss Aand Remembrance in Whispering in Our<br />

Hearts: The S<strong>to</strong>ry of the Mowla Bluff Massacre,” by Therese Davis & Romaine More<strong>to</strong>n,<br />

211-<br />

• “Revisioning the Colonial Record: La relación de Michoacán and Contemporary Mexican<br />

Indigenous Film,” by Charlotte Gleghorn, 224-<br />

• “Sonic Images of the Sacred in Sámi Cinema: From Finno-Ugric Rituals <strong>to</strong> Fanon in an<br />

Interpretation of Ofelaš (Pathfinder),” by Tina K. Ramnarine, 239-<br />

• “Songs of Mobility and Belonging: Gender, Spatiality and the Local in Southern Africa's<br />

Transfrontier Conservation Development,” by Angela Impey, 255-<br />

• “Objects, Performance and Ethnographic Spectacle: George Catlin in Europe,” by Stephanie<br />

Pratt, 272-<br />

• “‘Speaking the Strong Words’: Notes on Performing Indigenous Community Politics in<br />

Denendeh,” by Peter Kulchyski, 286-<br />

Copyright © 2013 H-<strong>Net</strong>: Humanities and Social Sciences Online<br />

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