See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/256964427 ‘Chieftaincy, Diaspora, and Development: the Institution of Nkɔsuohene in Ghana’, African Affairs, 108 (433): 541-558. Article  in  African Affairs · September 2009 DOI: 10.1093/afraf/adp045 · Source: OAI CITATIONS READS 20 449 1 author: George M. Bob-Milliar Kwame Nkrumah University Of Science and Technology 30 PUBLICATIONS   162 CITATIONS    SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Electoral Politics in Ghana's Fourth Republic View project The political economy of electricity provision in Africa View project All content following this page was uploaded by George M. Bob-Milliar on 20 August 2014. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. [jw] h-diplo JOURNAL WATCH, A to I H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review www.h-net.org/~diplo/journals/ Third Quarter 2009 21 October 2009 Compiled by Erin Black, Wilfrid Laurier University African Affairs, Vol.108, No. 433 (October 2009) http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol108/issue433/ Articles  “Between ‘Dirty Money’ and ‘Development Capital’: Somali Money Transfer Infrastructure Under Global Scrutiny,” by Anna Lindley, 519-  “Chieftaincy, Diaspora, and Development: The Institution of Nksuohene in Ghana,” by George M. Bob-Milliar, 541-  “Science, Politics, and the Presidential Aids ‘Cure,’” by Rebecca Cassidy and Melissa Leach, 559-  “‘No Raila, No Peace!’ Big Man Politics and Election Violence at the Kibera Grassroots,” by Johan de Smedt, 581-  “Practising ‘Democracy’ in Nigerian Films,” by Akin Adesokan, 559-  “‘Change for a Better Ghana’: Party Competition, Institutionalization and Alternation in Ghana’s 2008 Elections,” by Lindsay Whitfield, 621- Briefing  “Africa and the Credit Crunch: From Crisis to Opportunity?” by Christopher Cramer, Deborah Johnston, and Carlos Oya, 643- Copyright © 2009 H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online. H-Net permits the redistribution and reprinting of this work for non-profit, educational purposes, with full and accurate attribution to the author(s), web location, date of publication, H-Diplo, and H-Net: Humanities & Social Sciences Online. For other uses, contact the H-Diplo editorial staff at h-diplo@h-net.msu.edu. H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Commentaries  “Mamdani’s ‘Settlers’, ‘Natives’, and the War on Terror,” by Douglas H. Johnson, 655-  “Global Citizens and Sudanese Subjects: Reading Mamdani’s Saviours and Survivors,” by Rita Kiki Edozie, 661-  “Save Darfur: A Movement and its Discontents,” by David Lanz , 669- Review Article  “The Curse of Oil in the Gulf of Guinea: A View From São Tomé and Príncipe,” by Gisa Weszkalnys, 679- African Historical Review, Vol. 40, No.2 (November 2008) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g910760099  “Colonial Warfare: Hehe and World War I, the Wars Besides Maji Maji in South-Western Tanzania,” by Jan-Bart Gewald, 1-  “The Challenges of Financial Responsibility in the Tribal Administration of Bechuanaland Protectorate, 1919-1966,” by Christian John Makgala and Emmanuel Botlhale, 28-  “An American Sorcerer in Colonial Gabon: Politics and the Occult in Richard Lynch Garner’s Gabonese Narratives, 1905-1908,” by Jeremy Rich, 62- American Foreign Policy Interests, Vol.31, No.4 (July 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g913658531 Articles  “The National Committee on American Foreign Policy (NCAFP) at Thirty-Five,” by George D. Schwab, 225-  “A Decade of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy,” by George D. Schwab, 229-  “Morgenthau vs. Morgenthau? The Six Principles of Political Realism in Context,” by Jonathan Cristol, 238-  “Hans J. Morgenthau, The Purpose of American Politics, and the Crisis of 1929: Some Reflections on Their Relevance Today,” by Giuseppe Ammendola, 245-  “Hans J. Morgenthau and United States Policy toward Africa,” by J. Peter Pham, 252- 2 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Interstitial Space: A New, More Realistic Lens,” by Jean-Philippe N. Peltier, 261- For the Record  “The Perennial Relevance of Morgenthau’s Political Realism,” 272-  “Remarks on Accepting the George F. Kennan Award for Distinguished Public Service from the National Committee on American Foreign Policy on May 28, 2009,” by David H. Petraeus. 275 Book Brief  “Hans J. Morgenthau and the Weimar Republic: On the Epistemological Origins of Hans J. Morgenthau’s Weltanschauung by Felix Rosch ,” by J. Peter Pham, 280- American Foreign Policy Interests, Vol.31, No.5 (September 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g915141773  “After the Elections: A New System Emerging in Iran,” by Amir Taheri, 291-  “The Black Sea: A Special Geography An Explosive Region,” by Tedo Japaridze and Bruce Lawlor, 299-  “The Fiscal Crisis: Transatlantic Misunderstandings,” by Bernard E. Brown, 313-  “Smarter Democracy Promotion,” by Howard J. Wiarda, 325-  “Demise of the Peace Pipeline Democracy versus Theocracy,” by Mansour Kashfi, 330- For the Record  “Obama and the Discovery of the Complicated Orient,” 343- Book Brief  “Mission Italy: On the Front Lines of the Cold War by Richard N. Gardner, Foreword by Zbigniew Brzezinski,” by Giuseppe Ammendola, 346- American Historical Review, Vol.114, No.3 (June 2009) http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/ahr/2009/114/3 Articles  “Tamil Diasporas across the Bay of Bengal,” by Sunil S. Amrith, 547- AHR Roundtable: Historians and Biography  “Introduction,” by David Nasaw, 573-  “Biography as History,” by Lois W. Banner, 579- 3 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Life Histories” and the History of Modern South Asia,” by Judith M. Brown, 587-  “A Place in Biography for Oneself,” by Kate Brown, 596-  “Writing Biography at the Edge of History,” by Robin Fleming, 606-  “Galaxy of Black Stars: The Power of Soviet Biography,” by Jochen Hellbeck, 615-  “Why Biography?” by Alice Kessler-Harris, 625-  “Scene-Setting: Writing Biography in Chinese History,” by Susan Mann, 631-  “Separations of Soul: Solitude, Biography, History,” by Barbara Taylor, 640-  “Rewriting the Lives of Eighteenth-Century Economists,” by Liana Vardi, 652- AHR Forum: Simon Shama’s A History of Britian  “Introduction,” 662-  “The BBC’s A History of Britain,” by Miri Rubin, 664-  “Schama’s Britannia,” by Linda Levy Peck, 672-  “Simon Schama: A History of Britain,” by Peter Stansky, 684-  “A History of Britain: A Response,” by Simon Schama, 692 Featured Reviews  “Peter Linebaugh, The Magna Carta Manifesto: Liberties and Commons for All,” by James Epstein, 701-  “Nicolás Wey Gómez, The Tropics of Empire: Why Columbus Sailed South to the Indies,” by Ricardo Padron, 703-  “Jan de Vries, The Industrious Revolution: Consumer Behavior and the Household Economy, 1650 to the Present,” by Michael Kwass, 705-  “Yuval Noah Harari, The Ultimate Experience: Battlefield Revelations and the Making of Modern War Culture, 1450–2000,” by John A. Lynn II, 708 American Quarterly, Vol.61, No.3 (September 2009) http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/american_quarterly/toc/aq.61.3.html 4 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Special Issue: In the Wake of Katrina: New Paradigms and Social Visions (Edited by Clyde Woods) Preface  “What is a disaster?” by Curtis Marez, ix- Introduction  “Katrina’s World: Blues, Bourbon, and the Return to the Source,” by Clyde Woods, 427- Histories of Race, Gender, Sex and Class  “‘More desultory and unconnected than any other’: Geography, Desire, and Freedom in Eliza Potter’s A Hairdresser’s Experience in High Life,” by Lisa Ze Winters, 455-  “‘Justice Mocked’: Violence and Accountability in New Orleans,” by LaKisha Michelle Simmons, 477- Activists and Institutions  “Beyond Disaster Exceptionalism: Social Movement Developments in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina,” by Rachel E. Luft, 499-  “Stories at the Center: Story Circles, Educational Organizing, and Fate of Neighborhood Public Schools in New Orleans,” by Catherine Michna, 529-  “Of Armed Guards and Kente Cloth: Afro-Creole Catholics and the Battle for St. Augustine Parish in Post-Katrina New Orleans,” by Trushna Parekh, 557-  “The Politics of Reproductive Violence: An Interview with Shana Griffin by Clyde Woods, March 12, 2009,” by Shana Griffin and Clyde Woods, 583- Culture, Music and Performance  “Jazz and Revival,” by Eric Porte, 593-  “Second Lining Post-Katrina: Learning Community from the Prince of Wales Social Aid and Pleasure Club,” by Joel Dinerstein, 615-  “Upholding Community Traditions: An Interview with Cherice Harrison-Nelson by Clyde Woods, March 1, 2009,” by Cherice Harrison-Nelson and Clyde Woods, 639-  “On Conjuring Mahalia: Mahalia Jackson, New Orleans, and the Sanctified Swing,” by Johari Jabir, 649-  “‘My FEMA People’: Hip-Hop as Disaster Recovery in the Katrina Diaspora,” by Zenia Kish, 671-  “‘We Know This Place: Neoliberal Racial Regimes and the Katrina Circumstance,” by Jordan T. Camp, 693- 5 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “We Know This Place,” by Sunni Patterson, 719- Tourism Industrial Complex  “Katrina Tourism and a Tale of Two Cities: Visualizing Race and Class in New Orleans,” by Anna Hartnell, 723-  “‘Roots Run Deep Here’: The Construction of Black New Orleans in Post-Katrina Tourism Narratives,” by Lynnell L. Thomas, 749- Geographies of Disaster  “Les Misérables of New Orleans: Trap Economics and the Asset Stripping Blues, Part 1,” by Clyde Woods, 769-  “Freedom Land: 2-Cent Freedomland Project featuring K. Gates, The Show, Young A, Dee 1, Mack Maine, Nutt tha Kid, and Dizzy,” by the 2-Cent Freedomland Project, 797-  “After Katrina: Racial Regimes and Human Development Barriers in the Gulf Coast Region,” by Jeffrey S. Lowe and Todd C. Shaw, 803-  “Refugee Bodily Orbits,” by Long T. Bui, 829- The Americas, Vol.66, No.1 (July 2009) http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_americas/toc/tam.66.1.html  “2009 CLAH Luncheon Address: Recuerdos/Remembrances,” by Asunción Lavrin, 1-  “‘Born Under the Cruel Rigor of Captivity, the Supplicant Left it Unexpectedly by Committing a Crime’: Categorizing and Punishing Slave Convicts in Brazil, 1830– 1897,” by Peter M. Beattie, 11-  “Sickness, Recovery, and Death Among the Enslaved and Free People of Santos, Brazil, 1860–1888,” by Ian Read, 57-  “The Political Sociology of a Concept: Corporatism and the ‘Distinct Tradition,’” by Howard J. Wiarda, 81- The Americas, Vol.66, No.2 (October 2009) http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_americas/toc/tam.66.2.html  “Statistics, Maps, and Legibility: Negotiating Nationalism in Post-Revolutionary Mexico,” by Michael A. Ervin, 155- 6 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Cold War in the Countryside: Conflict in Guerrero, Mexico,” by O’Neill Blacker, 181-  “Notarized and Baptismal Manumissions in the Parish of São José do Rio das Mortes, Minas Gerais (C. 1750–1850),” by Douglas Cole Libby and Afonso de Alencastro Graça Filho, 211-  “Broken Spears or Broken Bones: Evolution of the Most Famous Line in Nahuatl ,” by John F. Schwaller, 241-  “Response to John F. Schwaller ,” by Miguel León-Portilla, 252- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Asian Security, Vol.5, No. 3 (September 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g915035904  “Between Interest and Responsibility: Assessing China’s Foreign Policy and Burgeoning Global Role,” by Beverley Loke, 195-  “Re-collecting Empire: Victimhood and the 1962 Sino-Indian War,” by Manjari Chatterjee Miller, 216-  “Remilitarization, Really? Assessing Change in Japanese Foreign Security Policy,” by Linus Hagstrom and Jon Williamsson, 241-  “The US-India Nuclear Pact: Policy, Process, and Great Power Politics,” by Harsh V. Pant, 273-  “The Evolution of Chinese Foreign Policy: New Incentives with Slowing Growth,” by Brock F. Tessman, 269- Australian Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 63, No.3 (September 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g913704301 Special Issue: Risk, regulation and new modes of regional governance in the Asia-Pacific  “Regulatory regionalism in the Asia-Pacific: drivers, instruments and actors,” by Kanishka Jayasuriya, 335-  “The region within: RAMSI, the Pacific Plan and new modes of governance in the Southwest Pacific,” by Shahar Hameiri, 348-  “Economic surveillance as a new mode of regional governance: contested knowledge and the politics of risk management in East Asia,” by Helen E. S. Nesadurai, 362- 7 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Risk management, neo-liberalism and coercion: the Asian Development Bank’s approach to ‘fragile states’,” by Andrew Rosser, 376-  “Losing control? The privatisation of anti-piracy services in Southeast Asia,” by Carolin Liss, 390-  “Risky riparianism: cooperative water governance in Central Asiam” by Teresita Cruz- Del Rosario, 404-  “Managing risk within international society: hierarchical governance in the Asia- Pacific,” by William Clapton, 416-  “Beyond methodological nationalism, but where to for the study of regional governance?” 430 British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Vol.36, No.2 (August 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g914522836  “In a Time of Hopes and Fears,” by Fred Halliday, 171-  “The Making, Operation and Failure of the May 1950 Tripartite Declaration on Middle East Security,” by David Tal, 177-  “‘The Cedar Revolution’: Lebanese Independence and the Question of Collective Self- Determination,” by Ersun N. Kurtulus, 195-  “Lebanese Shi ites and The Marja iyya: Polemic in the Late Twentieth Century,” by Rula Jurdi Abisaab, 215-  “Al-nawfali’s Lost History: The Issue Of A Ninth-century Shi ite Source Used By Al- abari and Abu L-faraj Al-i fahani,” by Sebastian Gunther, 241-  “Genealogies of Fundamentalism: Salafi Discourse in Nineteenth-Century Baghdad,” by Itzchak Weismann, 267-  “A Purist Jihadi-Salafi: The Ideology of Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi,” by Joas Wagemakers, 281- The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, Vol.11, No.3 (August 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/117980943/toc Special Section on the Political Economy of the Sub-prime Crisis in Britain, Guest Edited by James Brassett, Lena Rethel and Matthew Watson 8 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “ Introduction to the Political Economy of the Sub-prime Crisis in Britain: Constructing and Contesting Competence,” by James Brassett, Lena Rethel, Matthew Watson, 377-  “Privatised Keynesianism: An Unacknowledged Policy Regime,” by Colin Crouch, 382-  “Financialisation, Financial Literacy and Asset-Based Welfare,” by Alan Finlayson, 401-  “Headlong into the Polanyian Dilemma: The Impact of Middle-Class Moral Panic on the British Government’s Response to the Sub-prime Crisis,” by Matthew Watson, 422-  “‘We All Live in a Robbie Fowler House’: The Geographies of the Buy to Let Market in the UK,” by Andrew Leyshon andShaun French, 438-  “Good Inflation, Bad Inflation: The Housing Boom, Economic Growth and the Disaggregation of Inflationary Preferences in the UK and Ireland,” by Colin Hay, 461- Other Articles  “The Failure of Political Argument: The Languages of Anti-Fascism and Anti- Totalitarianism in Post-September 11th Discourse,” by Richard Shorten, 479- Controversies  “The Other Side of the Coin: Reading the Politics of the 2008 Financial Tsunami,” by Peter Preston, 504-  “Methods, Theories and Evidence: A Reply to Arzheimer,” by Michael Lister, 518-  “Lakatos Reloaded: A Reply to Lister,” by Kai Arzheimer, 526-  “Bellamy on Dirty Hands and Lesser Evils: A Response,” by Stephen A. De Wijze and Tom L. Goodwin, 529-  “A Reply to My Critics,” by Alex J. Bellamy, 54-  “Assertions, Conflations and Human Nature: A Reply to Werner Bonefeld,” by Ian Bruff, 544- Bulletin of Latin American Research, Vol. 28, No.4 (October 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/117962924/home Special Issue: The Cuban Revolution at 50: Reassessing the Past  “The Lumpen and the Popular: Guillermo Cabrera Infante and Julio García Espinosa,” by Olga Rodríguez-Falcón, 465- 9 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Foreign Investment and Trade in Cuban Development: A 50-Year Reassessment with Emphasis on the Post-1990 Period,” by Maribel Aponte-GarcíA, 480-  “Cuba’s Medical Internationalism: Development and Rationale,” by John M. Kirk, 497-  “Tomás Gutiérrez Alea and the Art of Revolutionary Cinema,” by David Wood, 512-  “Cultural Policy and Cultural Politics in Revolutionary Cuba: Re-reading the Palabras a los intelectuales (Words to the Intellectuals),” by Par Kumaraswami, 527-  “Cuban Labour at 50: What About the Workers?” by Steve Ludlam, 542- Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Vol. 22, No.2 (June 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g912846652  “Empowerment boom or bust? Assessing women’s post-conflict empowerment initiatives,” by Megan MacKenzie, 199-  “Canadian women and the (re)production of women in Afghanistan,” by Melanie Butler, 217-  “Feminist international relations and women militants: case studies from Sri Lanka and Kashmir,” by Swati Parashar, 235-  “Are we all torturers now? A reconsideration of women’s violence at Abu Ghraib,” by Regina F. Titunik, 257-  “Reflections,” by Cynthia Enloe, 279-  “Duelling and the abolition of war,” by Joseph M. Parent, 281-  “The United States of Amnesia: US foreign policy and the recurrence of innocence,” by Simon Philpott and David Mutimer, 301- Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Vol. 22, No.3 (June 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g915308261  “ASEAN’s ways: still fit for purpose?” by Mark Beeson, 333-  “Regionalism’s multiple negotiations: ASEAN in East Asia,” by Alice D. Ba, 345-  “ASEAN in the twenty-first century: a sceptical review,” by Shaun Narine, 369- 10 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Democratization and foreign policy in Southeast Asia: the case of the ASEAN Inter- Parliamentary Myanmar Caucus,” by Lee Jones, 387-  “Institutionalizing ASEAN: celebrating Europe through network governance,” by Anja Jetschke, 407-  “The ASEAN Regional Forum: from dialogue to practical security cooperation?” by Jurgen Haacke, 427-  “A new model of Asian regionalism: does the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation have more potential than ASEAN?” by Stephen Aris, 451-  “The political economy of Southeast Asia’s techno-glocalism,” by Greg Felker, 469-  “Arguing about ASEAN: what do we disagree about?” by Amitav Acharya, 493-  “Ideas and interests in global financial governance: comparing German and US preference formation,” by Stefan A. Schirm, 501-  “Engaging the narrative in ontological (in)security theory: insights from feminist IR,” by Will K. Delehanty and Brent J. Steele, 523- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Canadian Journal of History, Vol.44, No. 1 (Spring/Summer 2009) http://www.usask.ca/history/cjh/e/iss/index.shtml  “Favour and Patronage: Dancers in the Court Ballets of Early Seventeenth-Century France,” by Sharon Kettering, 391-  “‘The bells, too, are fighting’: The Fate of European Church Bells in the Second World War,” by Kirrily Freeman, 417-  “The Conservative Capture of Anti-Relativist Discourse in Postwar America,” by Hyrum Lewis, 451- Research Note  “Roman Slavery: Retrospect and Prospect,” by Keith Bradley, 477 Central European History, Vol.42, No.3 (September 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=CCC&volumeId=42&seriesId=0&issueId=0 3 Articles  “The Burschenschaft and German Political Culture, 1890–1914,” by Lisa Fetheringill 11 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Zwicker, 389-  “Jewish Traveling Cultures and the Competing Visions of Modernity,” by Nils Roemer, 429-  “‘Dummes Geld’: Money, Grain, and the Occupation of Romania in WWI,” by David Hamlin, 451-  “Women’s Rights, Nationalist Anxiety, and the ‘Moral’ Agenda in the Early Weimar Republic: Revisiting the ‘Black Horror’ Campaign against France’s African Occupation Troops,” by Julai Roos, 473- Review Essay  “An All-Consuming History? Recent Works on Consumer Culture in Modern Germany,’ by Paul Lerner, 509- China Journal, Issue 61 (January 2009) http://rspas.anu.edu.au/ccc/journal.htm  “China between Region and World,” by Brantly Womack, 1-  “Crisis and Governance: SARS and the Resilience of the Chinese Body Politic,” by Patricia M. Thornton, 23-  “Forced Flexibility: A Migrant Woman’s Struggle for Settlement,” by Mun Young Cho, 51-  “Empowering the Child: Children’s Rights, Citizenship and the State in Contemporary China,” by Orna Naftali, 79-  “Infrastructure Investment in Rural China: Is Quality Being Compromised during Quantity Expansion?” by Chengfang Liu, Linxiu Zhang, Renfu Luo, and Scott Rozelle, 105- Review Essay  “Local People’s Congresses and Governing China,” by Kevin O’Brien, 131- The China Quarterly, Vol.198 (June 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?iid=5873048 Articles  “The Making of a New Working Class? A Study of Collective Actions of Migrant Workers in South China,” by Chris King-Chi Chan and Pun Ngai, 287- 12 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Understanding Variation in the Design of China’s New Co-operative Medical System,’ by Philip H. Brown, Alan de Brauw and Yang Du, 304-  “Post-Earthquake Relief and Reconstruction Efforts: The Emergence of Civil Society in China?” by Jessica C. Teets, 330-  “‘Little Quilted Vests to Warm Parents’ Hearts’: Redefining the Gendered Practice of Filial Piety in Rural North-eastern China,” by Lihong Shi, 348-  “The Good Book and the Good Life: Bestselling Biographies in China’s Economic Reform,” by Emily Chua Huiching, 364-  “Planting Rice on the Roof of the UN Building: Analysing Taiwan’s ‘Chinese’ Techniques in Africa, 1961–present,’ by Philip Liu Hsiao-pong, 381-  “‘We Want to Go Home!’ The Great Petition of the Zhiqing, Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, 1978–1979,’ by Bin Yang, 401- Research Reports  “Environmental Activism, Social Networks and the Internet,” by Jonathan Sullivan and Lei Xie, 422-  “Gaps in the Silk Road: An Analysis of Population Health Disparities in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China,” by Brenda L. Schuster, 433- Review Essay  “The Question of Identity in Recent Scholarship on the History of Taiwan,’ by Evan N. Dawley, 422- The China Quarterly, Vol.199 (September 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?iid=6166224 Articles  “Introduction: China, Africa and Internationalization,” by Julia C. Strauss and Martha Saavedra, 551-  “Harmony and Discord in China’s Africa Strategy: Some Implications for Foreign Policy,” by Chris Alden and Christopher R. Hughes, 563-  “Fuelling the Dragon: China’s Rise and Its Energy and Resources Extraction in Africa,” by Wenran Jiang, 585-  “China’s Sudan Engagement: Changing Northern and Southern Political Trajectories in Peace and War,” by Daniel Large, 610-  “In It for the Long Term? Governance and Learning among Chinese Investors in 13 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Zambia’s Copper Sector,” by Dan Haglund, 627-  “Raw Encounters: Chinese Managers, African Workers and the Politics of Casualization in Africa’s Chinese Enclaves,” by Ching Kwan Lee, 647-  “The Chinese Amigo: Implications for the Development of Equatorial Guinea,” by Mario Esteban, 667-  “China’s Engagement in African Agriculture: ‘Down to the Countryside,’” by Deborah A. Bräutigam and Tang Xiaoyang, 686-  “Chinese Shops and the Formation of a Chinese Expatriate Community in Namibia,” by Gregor Dobler, 707-  “African Perspectives on China–Africa Links,” by Barry Sautman and Yan Hairong, 728-  “Representations of Africa in a Hong Kong Soap Opera: The Limits of Enlightened Humanitarianism in The Last Breakthrough,” by Martha Saavedra, 760-  “The Past in the Present: Historical and Rhetorical Lineages in China’s Relations with Africa,” by Julia C. Strauss, 777- Chinese Historical Review, Vol.15, No.2 (Fall 2008) http://www.chss.iup.edu/chr/CHR-publishedIssues.htm Articles  “Bridging Revolution and Decolonization: The “Bandung Discourse” in China’s Early Cold War Experience,” by Chen Jian, 207-  “Politicization and De-politicization of History: The Evolution of International Studies of the Nanjing Massacre,” by C.X. George Wei, 242-  “Attempts to Transform CCP’s Ethnic Minority Policy in the Early 1980s,” by Harbar, 296- Research Notes  “Walking a Fine Line: Thoughts on Writing about the History of the People’s Republic of China,” by Weili Ye  “Chiang Kai-shek’s Diaries and Republican China: New Insights on the History of Modern China,” by Fang-shang Lu and Hsiao-ting Lin, 331- Chinese Journal of International Politics, Vol. 2, No. 4 (Winter 2009) 14 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 http://cjip.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol2/issue4/index.dtl?etoc  “Does Anti-Americanism Correlate to Pro-China Sentiments?: by Yang Zixiao and David Zweig, 457-  “Explaining Chinese Solutions to Territorial Disputes with Neighbour States,” by Nie Hongyi, 487-  “A World Without the West? Empirical Patterns and Theoretical Implications,” by Naazneen Barma, Giacomo Chiozza, Ely Ratner, and Steven Weber, 525-  “Rethinking the ‘Tribute System’: Broadening the Conceptual Horizon of Historical East Asian Politics,” by Zhang Feng, 545- Cold War History, Vol.9, No.3 (August 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g915549010  “The meaning of hostile bipolarization: Interpreting the origins of the Cold War,” by Maarten van Alstein, 310- The Cold War in the Aegean  “Strategic imperatives, Democratic rhetoric: The United States and Turkey, 1945–52,_ by Barın Kayaoğlu, 321-  “Favouritism in NATO’s Southeastern flank: The case of the Greek Colonels, 1967–74,” by Konstantina Maragkou, 347-  “Managing a conflict between allies: United States policy towards Greece and Turkey in relation to the Aegean dispute, 1974–76,” by Sotiris Rizas, 367- From Chaing Kai-Shek to Mao  “Fu Bingchang, Chiang Kai-shek and Yalta,” by Yee Wah Foo, 389-  “The origins of proletarian diplomacy: The Chinese attack on the American Embassy in the Soviet Union, 4 March 1965,” by Lorenz M. Lüthi, 411- Andropov and the Lessons of History  “Andropov’s Hungarian Complex,” by Timothy Andrews Sayle, 427- Colonial Latin American Review, Vol.18, No.2 (August 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g913474466  “Las primeras cronicas de Indias y la teoria historiografica,” by Karl Kohut, 153- 15 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Aztec Vestal Virgins and the Brides of Christ: The Mixed Heritage of New Spain’s Monjas Coronadas,” by James M. Cordova, 189-  “Saldos del criollismo: el Teatro de virtudes politicas de Carlos de Siguenza y Gongora a la luz de la historiografia de Fernando de Alva Ixtlilxochitl,” by Pablo Garcia, 219-  “Saints, Witches and Go-betweens: The Depiction of Women in Missionary Accounts from the Northern Frontier of New Spain,” by Daniel T. Reff and Courtney Kelly, 237-  “Stars of the Sky, Gems of the Earth: Place Names Related to ‘Planets’ and Metals in Columbus’s Diario,” by Evelina Guzauskyte, 261- The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs, Vol.98, No.403 (August 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g913070482 Special Issue: Building and Maintaining Trust in Commonwealth States after Conflict Introduction  “Building and Breaking Trust,” byCathy Gormley-Heenan and Roger MacGinty, 423- Articles  “‘Recipe for Disaster?’ Trust, Memory and Space in a Post-Conflict City A Case Study of the Tri-Service Homecoming Parade in Belfast 2008,” by Kris Brown, 427-  “Xenophobia in South Africa: What Does it Say about Trust?” by Christina Steenkamp, 439-  “Building Trust amidst Corruption in Bangladesh,” by Colin Knox, 449-  “Reconstructing Trust in Sierra Leone,” by Kieran Mitton, 461-  “Shall We Talk? Communications during Crises in the India-Pakistan Conflict,” by Tinaz Pavri, 473-  “Trust and the Breakdown of Civil Order in Nigeria’s Delta Region: Evidence from Historical Conflict Episodes,” by Aderoju Oyefusi, 483- The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs, Vol.98, No.404 (October 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g914741240 Editorial  “Thoughts for Commonwealth Heads of Government meetings,” by Venkat Iyer, 515- 16 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Articles  “The Commonwealth at 60,” by Peter Marshall, 535-  “The Commonwealth at 60: Thoughts from the New Generation,” by Zoe Ware, 547-  “Problems of Women’s Participation in Bangladesh Politics,” by Farah Deeba Chowdhury, 555-  “The Indus II and Siachen Peace Park: Pushing the India-Pakistan Peace Process Forward,” by Ashok Swain, 569-  “Global Transformation and Change,” by Kamalesh Sharma, 583-  “The Challenge of the 21st Century: Setting the Real Bottom Line,” byDavid Suzuki and Mark Collins, 597- Communist and Post-Communist Studies, Vol.42, No.3 (September 2009) http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0967067X  “Perceptions of foreign threats to the regime: From Lenin to Putin,” by Vladimir Shlapentokh, 305-  “A two-thirds of success. Poland’s post-communist transformation 1989–2009,” by Grzegorz W. Kolodko, 325-  “Uzbekistan among the great powers,” by Dina Rome Spechler and Martin C. Spechler, 353-  “The unbearable lightness of membership: Bulgaria and Romania after the 2007 EU accession,” by Svetlozar A. Andreev, 375-  “Return to Europe – A double-edged sword for notaries? The case of Poland and Hungary,” by Gisela Shaw, 395-  “Social(ist) engineering: Taming the devils of the Polish Bieszczad,” by Rosa Lehmann, 423- Contemporary British History, Vol.23, No.3 (September 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g914523847  “Drifting Towards War: The British Chiefs of Staff, the USSR and the Winter War, November 1939-March 1940,” by Bernard Kelly, 267- 17 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “From Fighting the War to Writing the War: From Glory to Guilt?” by David Taylor, 293-  “Downing Street’s Favourite Soap Opera: Evaluating the Impact and Influence of Yes, Minister and Yes, Prime Minister,” by Shannon Granville, 315-  “The Church of Scotland’s Special Commission on Communism, 1949-1954: Tackling ‘Christianity’s Most Serious Competitor,’” by E. W. McFarland and R. J. Johnston, 337-  “Sir William Beveridge, The British Government and Plans for Food Control in Time of War, c. 1916-1941,” by Kevin Manton, 363- Archival Review  Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament Archives at London School of Economics,” by Ruth Frendo, 387- Review Article  “After Decline?” by Jim Tomlinson, 395- Contemporary European History, Vol.18, No.3 (August 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=CEH&volumeId=18&issueId=03 Special Issue: Revisiting 1989: Causes, Course and Consequences Articles  “Introduction,” by Amir Weiner and John Connelly, 247-  “What Have We Learned since 1989?” by Charles S. Maier, 253-  “The Revolutions of 1989: Causes, Meanings, Consequences,” by Vladimir Tismaneanu, 271-  “1989 as a Lens for the Communist Past and Post-communist Future,” by Jeffrey Kopstein, 298-  “(The End of) Communism as a Generational History: Some Thoughts on Czechoslovakia and Poland,” by Marci Shore, 303-  “Nationalism and the Collapse of Soviet Communism,” by Mark R. Beissinger, 331-  “Western Communists, Mikhail Gorbachev and the 1989 Revolutions,” by Silvio Pons, 349-  “NATO Enlargement post-1989: Successful Adaptation or Decline?” by Andrew A. 18 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Michta, 363- Contemporary European History, Vol.18, No.4 (November 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=CEH&volumeId=18&issueId=04 Articles  “‘Political Religion’ and the Totalitarian Departures of Inter-war Europe: On the Uses and Disadvantages of an Analytical Category,” by David D. Roberts, 381-  “Frustrated of Islington,” by Carl Levy, 415-  “‘Work and Don’t Lose Hope’: Republican Forced Labour Camps during the Spanish Civil War,” by Julius Ruiz, 419-  “‘The Continuation of Politics by Other Means’: Britain, the Two Germanys and the Olympic Games, 1949–1972,” R. Gerald Hughes and Rachel J. Owen, 443-  “Selling Social Democracy in the Netherlands: Activism and its Sources of Inspiration during the 1930s,” by Bernard Rulof, 475- Review Articles  “A Success Story? The Foreign Policies of France’s Fourth Republic” by Talbot Imlay, 499-  “En Route to a Post-Industrial Society? Western German Contemporary History Writing on the 1970s and 1980s,” by Dietmar Suss, 521- ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Cooperation and Conflict, Vol. 44, No.3 (September 2009) http://cac.sagepub.com/content/vol44/issue3/  “Sweden and Development of the European Security and Defence Policy: A Bi- Directional Process of Europeanization,” by Fredrick Lee-Ohlsson, 123-  “The Internal—External Security Nexus: Notes on an Emerging Research Agenda,” by Johan Eriksson and Mark Rhinard, 243-  “Security Re-Divided: The Distinctiveness of Policy-Making in ESDP and JHA,” by Moritz Weiss and Simon Dalferth, 268-  “Uncovering the Diverging Institutional Logics of EU Civil Protection,” by Niklas Bremberg and Malena Britz, 288-  “There is No European Security, Only European Securities,” by J. Peter Burgess, 309-  “Welcome to the Umma: The British State and its Muslim Citizens Since 9/11,” by Toby 19 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Archer, 329- Diplomacy & Statecraft, Vol.20, No.2 (June 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g913690438  “Introduction,” by Soraya Castro and B. J. C. McKercher, 205-  “The Empire and the Independent Island,” by Fidel Castro, 212-  “The Calculus of Nation in the Cuban Revolution,” by Louis A. Perez Jr., 229-  “David and Gulliver: Fifty Years of Competing Metaphors in the Cuban-United States Relationship,” by Philip Brenner and Soraya Castro, 236-  “50 Years of a Complex but Positive Relationship: Cuba-Canada Relations 1959-2009,” by Hal Klepak, 258-  “Cuban Medical Internationalism and its Role in Cuban Foreign Policy,” by John M. Kirk, 275-  “Just How Special is Special : Britain, Cuba, and US Relations 1958-2008 an Overview,” by Stephen Wilkinson, 291-  “Culture and Revolution Transaction Strategies: A Project of the Ludwig Foundation of Cuba,” by Fernando Saez, 309-  “From Building Barriers to Bridges: Cuban Ties Across the Straits,” by Susan Eckstein and Catherine Krull, 322-  “Finally, Diplomacy with Cuba not Vitiated by Hubris?” by Saul Landau, 341- ________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Diplomatic History, Vol.33, No.4 (September 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118503844/toc Special Forum: Transforming The Cold War: The United States And China, 1969-1980  “The Sino-American Normalization: A Reassessment,” by Enrico Fardella, 545-  “‘Friends, But Not Allies’: Cyrus Vance and the Normalization of Relations with China,” by Breck Walker, 579-  “‘Maximum Flexibility for Peaceful Change’: Jimmy Carter, Taiwan, and the Recognition of the People’s Republic of China,” by Brian Hilton, 595-  “Communication Breakdown? Romania andthe Sino-American Rapprochement,” by 20 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Mircea Munteanu, 615- Special Forum: U.S.-Soviet Relations In The Era Of Détente  “The Legitimation of the Nixon-Kissinger Grand Design and Grand Strategy,” by Dan Caldwell, 633-  “Détente and Domestic Politics,” by Julian E. Zelizer, 653-  “Transforming the Soviet Sphere of Influence? U.S.-Soviet Détente and Eastern Europe, 1969-1976,” by Douglas E. Selvage, 671-  “Operation Hullabaloo: Henry Kissinger, British Diplomacy, and the Agreement on the Prevention of Nuclear War,” by Stephen R. Twigge, 689-  “Détente, Entente, or Linkage? The Helsinki Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe in U.S. Relations with the Soviet Union,” by Angela Romano, 703-  “The Politics of Détente-Era Cultural Texts: 1969-1976,” by Kathleen Parthé, 723-  “‘A Sea of Confusion’: The Mediterranean and Détente, 1969-1974, by Effie G. H. Pedaliu, 735- Review Essays  “The Victor’s Lament,” by Karim M. Tiro, 751-  “The Panama Canal Fight and New Right Politics in the 1970s,” by Natasha Zaretsky, 755-  “The Gendered Reconstruction of Postwar Japan,” by Masako Notoji, 759-  “Globalism Grounded: the South in/and/versus the World,” by Peter Coclanis, 763-  “Kissinger, Dallek, and Suri in the Gangster Den,” by Tom Blanton, 769- Diplomatic History, Vol.33, No.5 (November 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118503844/toc Bernath lecture  “Is the World Our Campus: International Students and U.S. Global Power in the Long Twentieth Century,” by Paul A. Kramer, 775- Articles  “‘The Devil’s Apostle’: Jonas King’s Trial against the Greek Hierarchy in 1852 and the Pressure to Extend U.S. Protection for American Missionaries Overseas,” by Angelo Repousis, 807- 21 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Reassessing Roosevelt’s View of Chamberlain after Munich: Ideological Affinity in the Geoffrey Thompson-Claude Bowers Correspondence,” by Kevin Smith, 839-  “Breaching the Paper Walls: Paul V. MacNutt and Jewish Refugees to the Philippines, 1939-1939,” by Dean J. Kotlowski, 865-  “A Wind of Change? White Redoubt and the Potscolonial Movement, 1960-1963,” by Ryan M. Irwin, 897-  “‘Winners’ and ‘Losers’: France, the United States and the End of the Cold War,” by Frédéric Bozo, 927- Special Forum: George Herring as Teacher and Scholar  “The Master Narrative of U.S. Foreign Relations,” by Robert D. Schulzinger, 959-  “George Herring: A Virginia Gentleman and a Scholar,” by Cary W. Blankenship, 963-  “A Mentor’s Mentor,” by Robert K. Brigham, 965-  “An Exemplary Historian,” by Michael K. Hall, 967-  “The Mentor,” by James K. Libbey, 969-  “Tribute to George Herring,” by Kyle Longley, 971- Review Essays  “‘The Absolute Weapon’? Absolutely Not!” by Michael B. Stoff, 973-  “Nasty Like US,” by David Monod, 979-  “War Without End: Memory and the Wars for Vietnam,” by Mark Philip Bradley, 985- English Historical Review, Vol. CXXIV, No. 509 (August 2009) http://ehr.oxfordjournals.org/content/volCXXIV/issue509/index.dtl Articles  “The Chancery and Charters of the Kings of Sicily (1130–1212),” by G.A. Loud, 779-  “Hearne’s ‘Fragment’ and the Long Prehistory of English Memoirs,” by D. A. L. Morgan, 811-  “Christians, Catholics, Protestants: The Religious Links of Britain and Ireland with Continental Europe, c.1689–1800,” by Stephen Conway, 833- 22 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Balanced Accounts? Constructing the Balance of Payments Problem in Post-war Britain,” by Jim Tomlinson, 863- Notes and Documents  “Sumptuous Apparel for a Royal Prisoner: Archbishop Melton’s Letter, 14 January 1330,” by Roy Martin Haines, 885- Review Articles  “Rebels, Radicals and (Lukewarm) Republicans in Early Modern England,” by Edward Vallance, 895- English Historical Review, Vol.CXXIV, No. 510 (October 2009) http://ehr.oxfordjournals.org/content/volCXXIV/issue510/index.dtl  “‘As the Lawbook Teaches’: Reeves, Lawbooks and Urban Life in the Anonymous Old English Legend of the Seven Sleepers,” by Catherine Cubitt, 1021-  “Freeborn (Puritan) Englishmen and Slavish Subjection: Popish Tyranny and Puritan Constitutionalism, c.1570–1606,” by Michael P. Winship, 1050-  “The Social Sources of Late Eighteenth-Century English Radicalism: Bristol in the 1770s and 1780s,” by Elizabeth Baigent and James E. Bradley, 1075- Review Article  “‘The Sea is Swinging Into View’: Modern British Maritime History in a Globalised World,” by Glen O’hara, 1109- European History Quarterly, Vol.39, No.3 (July 2009) http://ehq.sagepub.com/content/vol39/issue3/ Special Issue: Hero Cults And The Politics Of The Past: Comparative European Perspectives  “Introduction,” by Robert Gerwarth, 381-  “Fathers of the Nation? Bismarck, Garibaldi and the Cult of Memory in Germany and Italy,” by Robert Gerwarth and Lucy Riall, 388-  “Men for All Seasons? Carson, Parnell, and the Limits of Heroism in Modern Ireland,” by Roy Foster and Alvin Jackson, 414-  “Flawed Saviours: the Myths of Hindenburg and Pétain,” by Anna von der Goltz and Robert Gildea, 439- 23 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Gender and the Construction of Wartime Heroism in Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union,” by Lisa A. Kirschenbaum and Nancy M. Wingfield, 465-  “On the Role of Myths and History in the Construction of National Identity in Modern Europe,” by Stefan Berger, 490- European History Quarterly, Vol.39, No.4 (October 2009) http://ehq.sagepub.com/content/vol39/issue4/  “Painting Regional Identities: Nationalism in the Arts, France, Germany and Spain, 1890—1914,” by Eric Storm, 557-  “A ‘New’ Woman for a ‘New’ Spain: The Sección Femenina de la Falange and the Image of the National Syndicalist Woman,” by Inbal Ofer, 583-  “Building to Death: Prisoner Forced Labour in the German War Economy: The Neuengamme Subcamps, 1942—1945,” by Marc Buggeln, 606-  “An ‘anti-Catholicism of free trade?’ Religion and the Anglo-Italian negotiations of 1863,” by Danilo Raponi, 633- Review Articles  “Constructing and Maintaining Socialism in the German Democratic Republic,” by Anna Saunders, 653-  “Beyond the Wire: Allied POWs in the Second World War, the POW ‘Myth’ and Future Realities,” by James Crossland, 662 European Journal of East Asian Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1 (June 2009) http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/brill/eeas/2009/00000008/00000001  “The Changing Nature of Chinese Socialism: Comparative Perspectives,” by Dingping Guo, 1-  “Indonesia’s Employment Challenges: Growth, Structural Change and Labour Market Rigiditym” by Anis Chowdury, Iyanatul Islam, Mohammed Zulfan Tadjoeddin, 31-  “Transformative State Capacity in Post-Collective China: The Introduction of the New Rural Cooperative Medical System in Two Counties of Western China, 2006-2008m” by Sascha Klotzbücher and Peter Lässig, 61-  “Inter-Firm Relations and Regional Development: Experiences from the Central Visayas, Philippines,” by B.J. Helvoirt and A.C.M. van Westen, 91- 24 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Partnerships for Sustainable Development in China: Adaptation of a Global Governance Instrument,” by Sander Chan, 121-  “Extramarital Court and Flirt of Guizhou Miao,” by Mei-ling Chien, 135- European Journal of International Relations, Vol.15, No.1 (March 2009) http://ejt.sagepub.com/content/vol15/issue3/  Miserable Comforters: International Relations as New Natural Law,” by Martti Koskenniemi, 395-  “Contested State Spaces: African National Parks and the State,” by Kevin C. Dunn, 423-  “A Pragmatic Approach to the Tobin Tax Campaign: The Politics of Sentimental Education,” by James Brasset, 447-  “Morgenthau as a Weberian Methodologist,” by Stephen Turner and George Mazur, 477-  “Are ‘New Wars’ More Atrocious? Battle Severity, Civilians Killed and Forced Migration Before and After the End of the Cold War,” by Erik Melander, Magnus Öberg, and Jonathan Hall, 505-  “A Distinct FPA for Europe? Towards a Comprehensive Framework for Analysing the Foreign Policy of EU Member States,” by Henrik Larsen, 537- The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms, Vol.14, No.5 (August 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g914049653 Special Issue: Philosophy as Literature Articles  “Introduction: Unorthodox Remarks on Philosophy as Literature,” by Costica Bradatan, 513-  “Of Poets and Thinkers: A Conversation on Philosophy, Literature and the Rebuilding of the World,” by Costica Bradatan, Simon Critchley, Giuseppe Mazzotta, Alexander Nehamas, 519-  “Hunting Plato’s Agalmata,” by Matthew Sharpe, 535-  “The Nexus of Unity of an Emerson Sentence,” by Kelly Dean Jolley, 549-  “The Concept of Writing, with Continual Reference to Kierkegaard,” by Mark Cortes 25 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Favis, 569-  “An Inhumanly Wise Shame,” by Brendan Moran, 573-  “Stanley Cavell and Two Pictures of the Voice,” by Adam Gonya, 587-  “Philosophy, Poetry, Parataxis,” by Jonathan Monroe, 599- Reviews  “After the Abyss: Theory Lives On,” by Constance Eichenlaub, 613-  “Funny Masters,” by Sonia Arribas, 617-  “Ritual or Playful? On the Foundations of European Drama,” by Victor Castellani, 621- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ European Review of History: Revue Europeenne d’Histoire, Vol.16, No.4 (August 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g914721249  “Running the big city: the Dutch prewar mayoralty under construction,” by Harm Kaal, 437-  “Creativity and its contexts: the emergence, institutionalisation and professionalisation of science and culture in Luxembourg,” by Morgan Meyer, 453-  “L’elargissement de 2004 au regard des precedents espagnol et portugais: un jeu de miroirs?” by Bertrand Vayssiere, 477- Special Forum on Citizenship  “Introduction: neither East nor West - new approaches to citizenship in modern European history,” by Dieter Gosewinkel, 499-  “An unholy alliance: Swiss citizenship between local legal tradition, federal laissez-faire, and ethno-national rejection of foreigners 1848-1933,” by Regula Argast, 503-  “Subjects, citizens and others: the handling of ethnic differences in the British and the Habsburg Empires (late nineteenth and early twentieth century),” by Benno Gammerl, 523-  “From imperial inclusion to national exclusion: citizenship in the Habsburg monarchy and in Austria 1867-1923,” by Ulrike von Hirschhausen, 551-  “Citizenship, property rights and dispossession in postwar Poland (1918 and 1945),” by Dieter Gosewinkel and Stefan Meyer, 575- 26 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Europe-Asia Studies, Vol.61, No.6 (August 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g913404637 Special Issue: Perceptions of the European Union in the New Member States: A Comparative Perspective Articles  “Introduction: A Europe Integrated and United But Still Diverse?” by Gabriella Ilonszki, 913-  “History Matters: Dimensions and Determinants of National Identities among European Populations and Elites,” by Heinrich Best, 921-  “Identity and Representation in the Perceptions of Political Elites and Public Opinion: A Comparison between Southern and Post-Communist Central-Eastern Europe,” by Miguel Jerez-Mir, Jose Real-Dato, and Rafael Vazquez-Garcia, 943-  “Threat Perception and European Identity Building: The Case of Elites in Belgium, Germany, Lithuania and Poland,” by Irmina Matonyte and Vaidas Morkevicius, 967-  “The Nation State and the EU in the Perceptions of Political and Economic Elites: The Case of Serbia in Comparative Perspective,” by Mladen Lazic and Vladimir Vuletic, 987-  “Explaining the Attitudes of Parliamentarians towards European Integration in Bulgaria, Greece and Serbia: Party Affiliation, ‘Left-Right’ Self-placement or Country Origin?” by Spyridoula Nezi, Dimitri A. Sotiropoulos, and Panayiota Toka, 1003-  “Identity Formation of Elites in Old and New Member States (with a Special Focus on the Czech Elite),” by Zdenka Mansfeldova and Barbora Spicarova Staskova, 1021-  “National Discontent and EU Support in Central and Eastern Europe,” by Gabriella Ilonszki, 1041-  “Elites’ Pragmatic and Symbolic Views about European Integration,” by Gyorgy Lengyel and Borbala Goncz, 1059- Europe-Asia Studies, Vol.61, No.7 (September 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g914593399 Special Issue: Politics of the Spectacular: Symbolism and Power in Central Asia Articles 27 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Inscapes, Landscapes and Greyscapes: The Politics of Signification in Central Asia,” by Sally N. Cummings, 1083-  “Legitimising Central Asian Authoritarianism: Political Manipulation and Symbolic Power,” by Anna Matveeva, 1095-  “Nation Branding in Central Asia: A New Campaign to Present Ideas about the State and the Nation,” by Erica Marat, 1123-  “Searching for Kamalot: Political Patronage and Youth Politics in Uzbekistan,” by Eric M. McGlinchey, 1137-  “Michael Romm’s Ascent of Mount Stalin: A Soviet Landscape?” by Stuart Horsman, 1151-  “The Art of the Impossible: Political Symbolism, and the Creation of National Identity and Collective Memory in Post-Soviet Turkmenistan,” by Michael Denison, 1167-  “Promising Futures? Education as a Symbolic Resource of Hope in Kyrgyzstan,” by Sarah S. Amsler, 1189-  “Identity, Symbolism, and the Politics of Language in Central Asia,” by William Fierman, 1027-  “The Invention of Legitimacy: Struggles in Kyrgyzstan to Craft an Effective Nation-State Ideology,” by Asel Murzakulova and John Schoeberlein, 1229-  “Mass Spectacle and Styles of Governmentality in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan,” by Laura L. Adams and Assel Rustemova, 1249-  “Materialising State Space: ‘Creeping Migration’ and Territorial Integrity in Southern Kyrgyzstan,” by Madeleine Reeves, 1277-  “Tajikistan’s Virtual Politics of Peace,” by John Heathershaw, 1315- Europe-Asia Studies, Vol.61, No.8 (October 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g915139167 Articles  “Ethnic Identification in the Former Soviet Union: Hypotheses and Analyses,” by Enzo Loner and Pierangelo Peri, 1341-  “For Business, for Pleasure or for Necessity? The Czech Republic’s Choices for Europe,” by Tim Haughton, 1371-  “Subsoil Law Reform in Russia under the Putin Administration,” by Yuko Adachi, 1393- 28 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Anti-Russian and Anti-Soviet Subversion: The Caucasian-Japanese Nexus, 1904-1945,” by Hiroaki Kuromiya and Georges Mamoulia, 1415-  “Some Scenarios for Russian Oil Exports up to 2020,” by Rafael Fernandez, 1441- Discussion Article  “Citizenship, Identity and Foreign Policy: The Contradictions and Consequences of Russia’s Passport Distribution in the Separatist Regions of Georgia,” by Scott Littlefield, 1461- Foreign Affairs, Vol. 88, No.4 (July/August 2009) http://www.foreignaffairs.com/issues/2009/88/4 Essays  “Globalization in Retreat,” by Robert C. Altman  “Tames Tigers, Distressed Dragon,” by Brian P. Klein and Kenneth Neil Cukier  “The Pentagon’s Wasting Assets,” by Andrew F. Krepinevich Jr.  “Flipping the Taliban,” by Fotini Christia and Michael Semple  “The Real War in Mexico,” by Shannon O’Neil  “The Russia File,” by Robert Legvold  “Pirates Then and Now,” by Max Boot  “the Battle For Thailand,” by Bertil Lintner  “Africa’s Capitalist Revolution,” by Ethan B. Kapstein Reviews and Responses  “Can the Right War be Won?” by Steven Simon  “A Hegemon’s Coming of Age,” by Walter Russell Mead  “India’s Fortune,” by Edward Luce  “Which Way is History Marching,” by Azar Gat, Daniel Deudney and G. John Ikenberry, and Ronald Inglehart and Christian Welzel  “Get Smart,” by Joseph S. Nye, Jr. Foreign Affairs, Vol. 88, No.5 (September/October 2009) http://www.foreignaffairs.com/issues/2009/88/5 Essays  “An Agenda for NATO,” by Zbigniew Brzezinski 29 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  The Default Power,” by Josef Joffe  “Low and Behold,” by Edward L. Morse  “The Dollar Dilemma,” by Barry Eichengreen  “The Death of Dayton,” by Patrice C. McMahon and Jon Western  “Without Conditions,” by Deepak Malhotra  “Copenhagen’s Inconvenient Truth,” by Michael Levi  “The Other Climate Changers,” by Jessica Seddon Wallack and Veerabhadra Ramanathan  “The Low Carbon Diet,” by Joel Kurtzman Reviews and Responses  “All (Muslim) Politics is Local” by Charles Tripp  “The Unbalances Triangle,” by Stephen Kotkin  “Born Again in the USA” by Timothy Samuel Shah Foreign Policy, Issue 173 (July/August 2009) http://www.foreignpolicy.com/issues/173/contents Features  “Think Again: Asia’s Rise” by Minxin Pei  “1979: The Great Backlash,” by Christian Caryl  “The Death of Macho,” by Reihan Salam  “Good Riddance: Why Macho had to Go,” by Valerie Hudson  “The Baltic Bust,” by Edward Lucas Failed States Index  “Portraits of Instability” by Foreign Policy and The Fund For Peace  “The Whiplash Effect,” by Homi Kharas  “Trouble in Tehran,” by Djavad Salehi-Isfahani  “Blame Game,” by Elizabeth Dickinson  “Disorder in the Ranks,” by Robert I. Rotberg 30 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “The Last Straw,” by Stephan Faris Missing Links  “Minilateralism” by Moisés Naím Prime Numbers  “Sex Matters” by Malcolm Potts and Martha Campbell Foreign Policy, Issue 174 (September/October 2009) http://www.foreignpolicy.com/issues/174/contents Feature: Oil: the Long Good-Bye  “It’s Still the One,” by Daniel Yergin  “Subpriming the Pump,” by Mahmoud A. El-Gamal and Amy Myers Jaffe - “A Hole in the Bucket,” by Veljko Fotak and Bill Megginson  “Don’t be Crude: Why Barack Obama’s energy-independence talk is just demagoguery,” by Prince Turki al-Faisal - “Gas Guzzlers: the Middle East Consumes too much oil,” by Michael A. Levi - “States of Play: National oil companies control 80 percent of the world’s oil. But they’re not all the same,” by Valerie Marcel - “The Coming Supply Crunch,” by Fatih Birol - “The Strait Dope on Hormuz,” by Eugene Gholz  “Scenes from the Violent Twilight of Oil,” by Peter Maass  “The Great Pipeline Opera,” by Daniel Freifeld  “Seven Myths about Alternative Energy,” by Michael Grunwald  “Is a Green World a Safer World?” by David J. Rothkopf Think Again  “Realism,” by Paul Wolfowitz Missing Links  “The Devil’s Excrement: Can Oil-Rich Countries Avoid the Resource Curse,” by Moisés Naím Foreign Policy Analysis, Vol.5, No.4 (October 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118509067/home 31 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Duelling Honors: Power, Identity and the Russia–Georgia Divide,” by Andrei P. Tsygankov and Matthew Tarver-Wahlquist, 307-  “‘Stuff Happens’: Donald Rumsfeld and the Iraq War,” by Stephen Benedict Dyson, 327-  “Foreign Policy Making Under Koizumi: Norms and Japan’s Role in the 2003 Iraq War ,” by Yukiko Miyagi, 349-  “Can America Finance Freedom? Assessing U.S. Democracy Promotion via Economic Statecraft,” by Stephen D. Collins French Historical Studies, Vol.32, No.4 (Fall 2009) http://fhs.umn.edu/ Special Issue: ‘89: Then and Now  “Introduction: Is it Really Over? The French Revolution Twenty Years after the Bicentennial,” by J.B. Shank, 527-  “Paths to Revolution: The Old Regime Correspondence of Five Revolutionaries,” by Timothy Tackett, 531-  “Mountain, Become A Volcano: The Image of the Volcano in the Rhetoric of the French Revolution,” by Mary Ashburn Miller, 555-  “Napoleon Bonaparte and the Emancipation Issue in Saint-Domingue, 1799-1803,” by Philippe R. Gerard, 587-  “‘Ma volenté est celle du people”: Voting in the Plebiscite and Parliamentary Elections during Napoleon’s Hundred Days,” by Malcolm Crook, 619- Forum  “The Shifting Landscape of Revolutionary Interpretations: A Death of the Past and a Rebirth of History?” by David Andress, 647-  “An Atlantic Revolution,” by Laurent Dubois, 655-  “The New Jacobins,” by Carla Hesse, 663-  “The Experience of Revolution,” by Lynn Hunt, 671-  “Twenty Years After,” by Colin Jones, 679-  “Réflexions sure les evolutions historiographiques depuis le bicentenaire de la Révolution Francaise,” by Jean-Clément Martin, 689- 32 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Thinking About Feeling, 1789-1799,” by Sophia Rosenfeld, 697- French History, Vol.23, No.3 (September 2009) http://fh.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol23/issue3/  “The decline of religious holidays in old regime France (1642–1789),” by Noah Shusterman, 289  “Fleurs-de-lis in the forest: ‘absolute’ monarchy and attempts at resource management in eighteenth-century,” by France Hamish Graham, 311-  “The politics of escalation in French Revolutionary protest: political demonstrations, non-violence and violence in the grandes journées of 1789,” by Micah Alpaugh, 336-  “Wine, friends and royalist popular politics: legitimist associations in mid-nineteenth- century France,” by Bernard Rulof, 360-  “The Paul Doumer assassination and the Russian diaspora in interwar France,” by Katherine Foshko, 383- French Politics, Culture & Society, Vol. 27, No.2 (Summer 2009) http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/fpcs/2009/00000027/ 00000002 Articles  “Andre Siegfried and the Complexities of French Anti-Americanism,” by Sean Kennedy, 1-  “Black in France: The Language and Politics of Race in the Late Third Republic,” by Jennifer Anne Boittin, 23-  “Rene, Ginette, Louise et les autres : nostalgie et authenticite dans la chanson neo- realiste,” by Barbara Lebrun, 47-  “Panique Celtique: Manau’s Celtic Rap, Breton Cultural Expression, and Contestatory Performance in Contemporary France,” by Charles R. Baston, 63- Dossier: Revisiting Eugene Weber’s Peasants into Frenchman  “Peasants Into Frenchmen Thirty Years After,” by Caroline Ford, 84-  “‘A World of Their Own’: Searching for Popular Culture in the French Countryside,” by Stephane Gerson, 94- 33 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Rethinking the Nation at the Periphery,” by Laird Boswell, 111-  “L’Etat educateur politique dans les campagnes du dix-neuvieme siecle : Lectures franco-mediterraneennes d’Eugen Weber,” by Gilles Pecout, 127- Events and Debates  “Bleu, Blanc…Green? France and Climate Change,” by Eloi Laurent, 142- German History, Vol.27, No.3 (July 2009) http://gh.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol27/issue3/index.dtl Introduction  “The History and Historiography of Sport in Germany: Social, Cultural and Political Perspectives,” by Kay Schiller and Christopher Young, 313- Articles  “Arena and Pall Mall: Sport in the Early Modern Period,” by Wolfgang Behringer, 331-  “Beautiful Bodies, Exercising Warriors and Original Peoples: Sports, Greek Antiquity and National Identity from Winckelmann to ‘Turnvater Jahn,’” by Felix Saure, 358-  “The Game of Political Change: Sports in Göttingen during the Weimar and Nazi Eras,” by David Imhoof, 374-  “The Body as a Political Space: Comparing Physical Education under Nazism and Stalinism,” by Barbara Keys, 395-  “The People’s Sport? Popular Sport and Fans in the Later Years of the German Democratic Republic,” by Jutta Braun, 414- Workshop Report  “Seventh Workshop on Early Modern German History: German Historical Institute, London, 24 October 2008,” by Paul Brand, 429- Discussion  “Metaphors of Continuity: The Promise and Perils of Taking the Long View,” by Celia Applegate, 433- German Politics, Vol. 18, No. 3 (September 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g914693740 Special Issue: Estimating the Policy Preferences of Political Actors in Germany and Europe: 34 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Methodological Advances and Empirical Applications  “Analysing Party Politics in Germany with New Approaches for Estimating Policy Preferences of Political Actors,” by Marc Debus, 281-  “Ideological Signals of German Parties in a Multi-Dimensional Space: An Estimation of Party Preferences Using the CMP Data,” by Eric Linhart and Susumu Shikano, 301-  “How to Avoid Pitfalls in Statistical Analysis of Political Texts: The Case of Germany,” by Sven-Oliver Proksch and Jonathan B. Slapin, 323-  “German ‘LexIconSpace’: Policy Positions and their Legislative Context,” by Thomas Konig and Bernd Luig, 345-  “The Impact of the Socio-Economic Context on the Lander Parties’ Policy Positions,” by Jochen Muller, 365-  “Intra-Party Preference Heterogeneity and Faction Membership in the 15th German Bundestag: A Computational Text Analysis of Parliamentary Speeches,” by Julian Bernauer and Thomas Brauninger, 385-  “Party Election Programmes, Signalling Policies and Salience of Specific Policy Domains: The German Parties from 1990 to 2005,” by Franz Urban Pappi and Nicole Michaela Seher, 403-  “Parties in European Parliament Elections: Issues, Framing, the EU, and the Question of Supply and Demand,” by Andreas M. Wust, 426-  “Challenges for Estimating Policy Preferences: Announcing an Open Access Archive of Political Documents,” by Kenneth Benoit, Thomas Brauninger and Marc Debus, 441- German Politics & Society, Vol. 27, No. 2 (Summer 2009) http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/gerpol/2009/00000027/0000 0002  “Introduction: Have They Learnt to Swim?” by Ingolfur Bluhdorn, 1-  “No Escape from the Long-term Crisis? The Social Democrats’ Failure to Devise a Promising Political Strategy,” by Christoph Egle, 9-  “Indeterminacy in the Political Center Ground: Perspectives for the Christian Democratic Party in 2009,” by Udo Zolleis, 28-  “Option Grun: Alliance 90/The Greens at the Dawn of New Opportunities?” by Ingolfur Bluhdorn, 45- 35 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “On the Way Back into Government? The Free Democratic Party Gearing Up for the 2009 Elections,” by Rolf Steltemeier, 63-  “Populism Personified or Reinvigorated Reformers? The German Left Party in 2009 and Beyond,” by Dan Hough and Michael Kosharp, 79-  “From a Five to a Six-Party System? Prospects of the Right-wing Extremist NPD,” by Frank Decker and Lazaros Miliopoulos, 92- German Politics & Society, Vol. 27, No. 3 (Autumn 2009) http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/gerpol/2009/00000027/0000 0003  “Retrieving a Redemptive Past: Protecting Heritage and Heimat in East German Cities,” by Jason James, 1-  “The Masculinized Female Athlete in Weimar Germany,” by Katie Sutton, 28-  “Making (Normative) Sense of the Headscarf Debate in Europe,” by Peter O’Brien, 50- Review Essay  “Nathan Stoltzfus and Henry Friedlander, eds., Nazi Crimes and the Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008),” by Jonathan A. Bush, 77- German Studies Review, Vol.32, No.3 (Oct 2009) http://www.people.carleton.edu/~dprowe/Back%20Issues/GSR.2009.html  “Schiller’s ‘An die Freude’ and the Question of Freedom,” by Gail K. Hart, 479-  “From Grids to Vanishing Points: W. G. Sebald’s Critique of Visual-Representational Orders in Die Ringe des Saturn,” by Richard T. Gray, 495-  “Mourning Comrades: Communist Funerary Rituals in Cologne during the Weimar Republic,” by Sara Ann Sewell, 527-  “Gustav Freytag’s Bilder aus der deutschen Vergangenheit and the Meaning of German History,” by Larry L. Ping, 549-  “Normativität und Transgression: Kleists Prinz Friedrich von Homburg und die obszöne Unterseite des Gesetzes,” by Dominik Finkelde, 569-  “Vom alternativen Laden zum Dienstleistungsbetrieb: the Berliner Geschichtswerkstatt. A Case Study in Activist Memory Politics,” by Jenny Wüstenberg, 590- 36 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Leopold von Schroeder’s Imagined India: Buddhist Spirituality and Christian Politics During the Wilhelmine Era,” by Perry Myers, 619-  “‘Originalnatur’ in Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre,” by Michael E. Auer, 637- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Histoire Politique: Politique, Culture, Société, Revue électronique du Centre d’histoire de Sciences Po., No 08 (Mai-Août 2009) http://www.histoire-politique.fr/index.php?numero=08 Le dossier  “Les entourages des chefs de l’Etat de Mac-Mahon à Valéry Giscard d’Estaing,” Gilles Le Béguec et Christine Manigand (coordinators) - “Avant-propos,” by Gilles Le Béguec - “Les entourages du chef de l’Etat sous la IIIe et la IVe Républiques,” by Gilles Le Béguec - “L’entourage de Raymond Poincaré, président de la République (février 1913 février1920),” by Rosemonde Sanson - “Les entourages de Philippe Pétain, chef de l’Etat français, 1940-1942,” by Jérôme Cotillon - “L’entourage de Charles de Gaulle président du GPRF à Paris (25 Août 1944-21 Janvier 1946),” by Bernard Lachaise - “L’entourage de Vincent Auriol : au service d’une stratégie présidentialiste,” by Noëlline Castagnez - “L’entourage du général de Gaulle à l’Élysée (8 Janvier 1959-28 Avril 1969),” by Eric Chiaradia - “Jacques Foccart et le sécrétariat général pour les Affaires africaines et malgaches,” by Frédéric Turpin - “Les cabinets de Georges Pompidou à Matignon et à l’Elysée (1962-1974),” by Sabrina Tricaud, Emilie Willaert - “Un instrument politique mal assumé ? L’entourage de Valéry Giscard d’Estaing à l’Elysée de 1974 à 1981,” by Frédéric Tristram - “Le Secrétariat général du Comité interministériel pour les questions de cooperation économique européenne,” by Anne Dulphy et Christine Manigand 37 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 - “Bibliographie des entourages des chefs de l’Etat,” by Christian Birebent Vari@rticles  “Le Parlement européen est-il un ODHNI (objet démocratique et historique non identifié)” by Sylvain Kahn  “Quand la France surveillait les écrans belges : la réception en Belgique des Sentiers de la gloire de Stanley Kubrick,” by Catherine Lanneau Pistes & débats  “La nouvelle loi d’archives face aux réalités de la profession d’archiviste Agnès Dejob,” by Claire Bernard-Deust  “Archives ‘interdites’, archives ‘spéciales’ ? Quelques réflexions à propos des archives policières,” by Jean-Marc Berlière Sources  “La British Library of Political and Economic Science, la bibliothèque-laboratoire d’une université de recherche en sciences économiques et socials,” by Marie Scot ______________________________________________________________________________ The Historian, Vol.71, No.3 (Fall 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/117959161/home?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0  “Staying the Royal Sword: Alcuin and the Conversion Dilemma in Early Medieval Europe,” by Steven Stofferahn, 461-  “Southeast Asian Slavery and Slave-Gathering Warfare as a Vector for Cultural Transmission: The Case of Burma and Thailand,” by Bryce Beemer, 481-  “The Indian Saltpeter Trade, the Military Revolution, and the Rise of Britain as a Global Superpower,” by James W. Frey, 507-  “Demonstrations and Lamentations: Urban and Rural Responses to War in Russia in 1914,” by Colleen M. Moore, 555- Review Article  “Radical Currents in the Enlightenment,” by Siep Stuurman, 578- The Historical Journal, Vol.52, No.3 (September 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=HIS&volumeId=52&issueId=03 Articles 38 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Bigamous Marriage In Early Modern England,” by Bernard Capp, 537-  “The Monarchical Republic Of Mary I,” by Alice Hunt, 557-  “English Funding Of The Scottish Armies In England And Ireland, 1640–1648,” by Laura A. M. Stewart, 573-  “Defoe, Dissent, And Early Whig Ideology,” by K. R. P. Clark, 595-  “Presbyterian Religion, Historiography, And Ulster Scots Identity, c. 1800 To 1914,” Andrew R. Holmes, 615-  “Volunteerism And Early Recruitment Efforts In Devonshire, August 1914–December 1915,” by Bonnie J. White, 641-  “Labour’s Britain, Fight For It Now!” by Laura Beers, 667-  “The Ford Administration And Security Policy In The Asia-Pacific After The Fall Of Saigon,” by Andrew J. Gawthorpe, 697- Historiographic Reviews  “A New Intellectual History? Jonathan Israel’s Enlightenment,” by Anthony J. La Vopa, 717-  “Historical Perspectives On Industrial Development, Mining, And Prostitution,” by Julia Ann Laite, 739-  “The Recent Historiography Of Sexuality In Twentieth-Century Germany,” by Mark Fenemore, 763- Review Articles  “Re-Evaluating Socinianism And Arminianism In Seventeenth-Century Europe,” by Sarah Mortimer, 781-  “Sovietization And Nationalism In Hungary,” by Stefano Bottoni, 789-  “East Germanym,” by Gary Bruce, 799-  “Scholarly Battles Over The Vietnam War,” by Simon Hall, 813- Historical Reflections Vol.35, No.2 (Summer 2009) http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/hisref  “The Politics of French and German Cinema, 1930-1945,” by Brett Bowles, 1- 39 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “The Good, the Bad, and the Childless: The Politics of Female Identity in Maternité (1929) and La Maternelle (1933),” by Cheryl A. Koos, 3-  “‘Everyday Heroines’: Nazi Visions of Motherhood in Mutterliebe (1939) and Annelie (1941),” by Jo Fox, 21-  “Kuhle Wampe, Leftist Cinema, and the Politics of Film Censorship in Weimar Germany,” by Franz A. Birgel, 40-  “Jean Vigo, L’Atalante, and the Promise of Social Cinema,” by Steven Ungar, 63-  “Accommodating Vichy: The Politics of Marcel Pagnol’s La Fille du puisatier,” by Brett Bowles, 84-  “Ohm Krüger’s Travels: A Case Study in the Export of Third-Reich Film Propaganda,” by Roel Vande Winkel, 108-  “Kolberg: Goebbels’ Wunderwaffe as Counterfactual History,” by David Culbert, 125-  “Political and Narrative Ambiguities in La Bataille du Rail,” by Sylvie Lindeperg, 142- Historical Research, Vol.82, No.217 (August 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/117979004/home  “Introduction,” by Mark R. Horowitz, 375-  “Politic history, New Monarchy and state formation: Henry VII in European perspective,” by Steven Gunn, 380-  “Household, politics and political morality in the reign of Henry VII,” by David Grummitt, 393-  “Policy and prosecution in the reign of Henry VII,” by Mark R. Horowitz, 412-  “Loyalty and the usurper: recognizances, the council and allegiance under Henry VII,” by Sean Cunningham, 459-  “The enforcement of the penal statutes in the 1490s: some new evidence,” by P. R. Cavill, 482-  “Urban policy and urban political culture: Henry VII and his towns,” by James Lee, 493-  “Reaction to Henry VII’s style of kingship and its contribution to the emergence of 40 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 constitutional monarchy in England,” by Penny Tucker, 511-  “Henry VII, France and the Holy League of Venice: the diplomacy of balance,” by John M. Currin, 526-  “‘Of good name and fame in the countrey’: standards of conduct for Henry VII’s chamber officials,” by Margaret McGlynn, 547-  “Henry Tudor’s treasure,” by Mark R. Horowit, 560- History Vol.94 No.315 (July 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118518321/home  “Cardinal Pole’s Special Agent: Michael Throckmorton, c.1503-1558,” by Anne Overall, 265-  “Taming Madness: Moral Discourse and Allegory in Counter-Reformation Spain,” by Maria Tausiet, 279-  “‘By These Means the Sacred Discourses Sink More Deeply into the Minds of Men’: Music and Education in Elizabethan England,” by Jonathan Willis, 295-  “The Reformation of the Ministry in Fife, 1560-1640,” by John McCallum, 310-  “Kinship and Religious Politics among Catholic Families in England, 1570-1640,” by James E. Kelly, 328-  “Jesuits, Propaganda and Faith Healing in the Dutch Republic,” by Hans De Waardt, 344-  “Politics and the ‘Heauenly Sonnets’: George Wither’s Religious Verse, 1619-1625,” by Kimberly J. Hackett, 360- History Vol.94 No.316 (October 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118518321/home  “Interest in Medieval Accounts: Examples from England, 1272–1340,” by Adrian R. Bell, Chris Brooks and Tony K. Moore, 411-  “George III, Tyrant: The Crisis as Critic of Empire, 1775–1776,” by Neil York, 434-  “A Dirty, Indolent, Priest-Ridden City: British Soldiers in Lisbon during the Peninsular War, 1808–1813,” by Gavin Daly, 461-  “The Johnson Administration and the Recruitment of Allies in Vietnam, 1964–1968,” b 41 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Jonathan Colman and J.J. Widen, 483- History Compass, Vol.7, No.4 (July 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118491832/issueyear?year=2009 Australasia and Pacific  “Mapping Australasia,” by Philippa Mein Smith, 1099- Britain and Ireland  “The Empire’s War Recalled: Recent Writing on the Western Front Experience of Britain, Ireland, Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand, South Africa and the West Indies,” by John Connor, 1123-  “History and Historiography of the English East India Company: Past, Present, and Future!” by Philip J. Stern, 1146- Caribbean & Latin America  “Women and War in Latin America, 1950-2000,” by Lorraine Bayard de Volo, 1181- Europe  “The Influence of Lynn White, jr.’s Medieval Technology and Social Change,” by Shana Worthen, 1201-  “Integrative Medicine: Incorporating Medicine and Health into the Canon of Medieval European History,” by Monica H. Green, 1218-  “Travel Writing and Encounters with National ‘Others’ in the Napoleonic Wars,” by Leighton James, 1246- History Compass, Vol.7, No.5 (September 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118491832/issueyear?year=2009 Africa  “Revisiting the Soviet Moment in Sub-Saharan Africa,” by Maxim Matusevich, 1259-  “Corruption in Africa – Part 1,” by John Makum Mbaku, 1269- Australasia & Pacific  “Assembling Histories: J. G. A. Pocock, Aotearoa/New Zealand and the British World,” by Terry Austrin and John Farnsworth, 1286- Europe  “Making Sense of the History of Sex and Gender in Early Modern Spain,” by Esward Behrend-Martinez, 1303- 42 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “‘Eyewitnessing’? History and Visual Sources,” by Jessica Horsley, 1317-  “Space, Place and Identities,” by Thomas Rohkrämer and Felix Robin Schulz, 1338-  “‘European Cities: Containers or Groups of Inhabitants? A Review of some Recent Developments in Early Modern Urban Studies,” by Joseph F. Patrouch, 1350-  “New Directions in the Study of Religious Responses to the Black Death,” by Justin Stearns Middle & Near East  “Source-Critical Methodologies in Recent Scholarship on the Khārijites,” by Adam Gaiser, 1376- North America  “Rape Law in 19th-Century America: Some Thoughts and Reflections on the State of the Field,” by Mary R. Block, 1391-  “Loved Labor’s Losses: The Congress of Industrial Organizations and the Effects of McCarthyism,” by Susan Roth Breitzer, 1400 History and Theory, Vol.48, No.2 (May 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118501930/home  “Truth and Authenticity in Contemporary Historical Culture: An Introduction to Historical Representation and Historical Truth,” by Christoph Classen and Wulf Kansteiner, 1-  “All This Happened, More Or Less: What A Novelist Made of The Bombing of Dresden,” by Ann Rigney, 5-  “Success, Truth, and Modernism In Holocaust Historiography: Reading Saul Friedländer Thirty-Five Years after the Publication of Metahistory,” by Wulf Kansteiner, 25-  “Photographs, Symbolic Images, And The Holocaust: On The (Im)Possibility ff Depicting Historical Truth,” by Judith Keilbach, 54-  “Balanced Truth: Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List Among History, Memory, and Popular Culture,” by Christoph Classen, 77-  “Digitalizing Historical Consciousness,” by Claudio Fogu, 103-  “The Syntax of Objects and The Representation of History: Speaking of Slavery in New 43 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 York,” by Bettina M. Carbonell, 122- The History of European Ideas, Vol. 35, No.3 (September 2009) http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01916599  “Slaves, servants and wage earners: Free and unfree labour, from Grotius to Blackstone,” by Maria Luisa Pesante, 289-  “A closed country in the open seas: Engelbert Kaempfer’s Japanese solution for European modernity’s predicament,’” by David Mervart, 321-  “Montesquieu’s Shadow: Debating reform in the Austrian Netherlands,” by Peter Illing, 330-  “The relation of right to morality in Fichte’s Jena theory of the state and society,” by David James, 337-  “‘Max Weber’s Desk is now my Altar’: Marianne Weber and the intellectual heritage of her husband,” by Edith Hanke, 349-  “Bringing republican ideas back home. The Dewey–Laski connection,” by Filipe Carreira da Silva, 360-  “On political theology: A controversy between Hans Kelsen and Carl Schmitt,” by Sandrine Baume, 369- Review Essays  “National identity in eighteenth-century Denmark,” by Lars Magnusson, 382-  “French liberalism and the aristocratic sources of liberty,” by Aurelian Craiutu, 385-  “Bentham and Benthamism,” by Emmanuelle de Champs, 391- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Vol.23, No.3 (Fall 2009) http://hgs.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol23/issue2/index.dtl?etoc  “Negotiating Murder: A Panzer Signal Company and the Destruction of the Jews of Peregruznoe, 1942,” by Waitman Beorn, 185-  “Arguing about Cambodia: Genocide and Political Interest,” by Donald W. Beachler, 214-  “The Chameleon of Trawniki: Jack Reimer, Soviet Volksdeutsche, and the Holocaust,” by Eric C. Steinhart, 239- 44 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Mapping Out the ‘Wasteland’: Testimonies from the Serbian Commissariat for Refugees in the Service of Tudjman’s Revisionism,” by Tomislav Dulic, 263- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 24, No. 3 (June 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g913180690 Articles  “Mirroring Risk: The Cuban Missile Estimation,” by Jonathan Renshon, 315-  “Information Sharing for Infrastructure Risk Management: Barriers and Solutions,” by Henry H. Willis, Genevieve Lester and Gregory F. Treverton, 339-  “A Symposium on Intelligence Ethics,” 366 – 386 Documentary Analysis: The Schlesinger Report of 1971  “Reading the Riot Act: The Schlesinger Report, 1971,” by Michael Warner, 387- Comment on Michael Warner’s article  “How Many Schlesingers Would it Take to Change a Light-Bulb?” by David Omand, 418-  “The Schlesinger Report: Its Place in Past, Present and Future Studies of Improving Intelligence Analysis,” by Glenn Hastedt, 422- Review Article  “Torture and Intelligence in the Global War on Terror,” by Gary Ker, 429- Review Essays  “Documenting the History of Intelligence History,” by Michael Warner, 458-  “The Napoleonic Wars and the Birth of Modern Warfare,” by Christopher Vere, 464- Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 24, No. 4 (August 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g913906015 Articles  “Organizational Culture and US Intelligence Affairs,” by Hamilton Bean, 479-  “The Role of MI5 in the Internment of British Fascists during the Second World War,” by Jennifer Grant, 499-  “The Singapore Mutiny (1915) and the Genesis of Political Intelligence in Singapore,” by Leon Comber, 529-  “Dismantling the ‘Lesser Men’ and ‘Supermen’ Myths: US Intelligence on the Imperial 45 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Japanese Army after the Fall of the Philippines, Winter 1942 to Spring 1943,” by Douglas Ford, 542- Research Note  “The Challenges of Intelligence Sharing in Romania,” by Florina Cristiana Matei, 574-  “A Diplomatics Analysis of a Document Purported to Prove Prior Knowledge of the Attack on Pearl Harbor,” by R. Mohan Srivastava, Phillip L. Kushner and Thomas K. Kimmel, 586- Review Article  “Decolonization and the Challenges of Independence in Modern Algeria,” by J. N. C. Hill, 612- Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 24, No. 5 (October 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g915530132 Articles  “Interrogation, Intelligence and the Issue of Human Rights,” by Samantha Newbery, Bob Brecher, Philippe Sands and Brian Stewart, 631-  “National Assessment by the National Security Council Staff 1968–80: An American Experiment in a British Style of Analysis?” by Stephen Marrin and Philip H. J. Davies, 644-  “Colin Davidson’s British Indian Intelligence Operations in Japan 1915–23 and the Demise of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance,” by Max Everest-Phillips, 674-  “Connecting Intelligence and Theory: Intelligence Liaison and International Relations,” by Adam D. M. Svendsen, 700- Review Article  “All Eyes on Iran: The Nuclear Ambitions of a People and a President,” by Rasmus Christian Elling, 730- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Interactions: Empirical and Theoretical Research in International Relations, Vol. 35, No. 3 (July 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g914459598 Symposium: Disaggregating the Incentives of Conflict Management  “Disaggregating the Incentives of Conflict Management: An Introduction,” by Kyle Beardsley and J. Michael Greig, 243-  “Incentives for Talking: Accepting Mediation in International and Civil Wars,” by Molly M. Melin and Isak Svensson, 249- 46 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Intervention Without Leverage: Explaining the Prevalence of Weak Mediators,” by Kyle Beardsley, 272-  “International Mediation and Social Networks: The Importance of Indirect Ties,” by Tobias Böhmelt, 289- Commentary: International Relations Theory and the Study of Civil War  “Introduction,” by Paul F. Diehl, 320-  “Civil War and Territory? Drawing Linkages Between Interstate and Intrastate War,” by Patrick M. Regan, 321-  “Asymmetry, Parity, and (Civil) War: Can International Theories of Power Help Us Understand Civil War?” by Christopher Butler and Scott Gates, 330-  “International Relations Theory and How Civil Wars End,” by T. David Mason, 341- Research Note  “Evaluating Claims of Social Connection to International Conflict Casualties,” by Scott Sigmund Gartner, 352- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 6, No. 2 (July 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=ASI&volumeId=6&seriesId=0&issueId=02 Research Articles  “The Lesser Learning For Women And Other Texts For Vietnamese Women: A Bibliographical And Comparative Study,” by Peter Kornicki and Nguyễn Thị Oanh, 147-  “Cultural Discourse On Xue Susu, A Courtesan In Late Ming China,” by Daria Berg, 171- State of Field  “The Pendulum Swings Again: Recent Debates On China’s Prewar Economy,” by Niv Horesh, 201- Review Article  “Great Wall?: Overcoming The Boundary Between Euro-American And Sino-Japanese Sinologies,” by Atsushi Kotera, 219- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ The International Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 13, No. 2-3 (April 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g912655321 Protection of Sexual Minorities Since Stonewall: Progress And Stalemate In Developed And 47 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Developing Countries  “Protection of sexual minorities since Stonewall: their lives, struggles, sufferings, love, and hope,” by Phil C. W. Chan, 129-  “Psychosocial implications of homophobic bullying in schools: a review and directions for legal research and the legal process,” by Phil C. W. Chan, 143-  “Fighting to fit in: gay–straight alliances in schools under United States jurisprudence,” by Matthew T. Mercier, 177-  “Cumulative jurisprudence and human rights: the example of sexual minorities and hate speech,” by Eric Heinze, 192-  “Challenging hate speech: incitement to hatred on grounds of sexual orientation in England, Wales and Northern Ireland,” by Kay Goodall, 211-  “Gay male rape victims: law enforcement, social attitudes and barriers to recognition,” by Philip N. S. Rumney, 233-  “Criminal law, public health, and governance of HIV exposure and transmission,” by Alana Klein, 251-  “Shared values of Singapore: sexual minority rights as Singaporean value,” by Phil C. W. Chan, 279-  “Keeping up with (which) Joneses: a critique of constitutional comparativism in Hong Kong and its implications for rights development,” by Phil C. W. Chan, 307-  “Sexual minorities and human rights in Japan: an historical perspective,” by Mark McLelland and Katsuhiko Suganuma, 329-  “Blackmail in Zimbabwe: troubling narratives of sexuality and human rights,” by Oliver Phillips, 345-  “Lost in transition: transpeople, transprejudice and pathology in Asia,” by Sam Winter, 365-  “From discretion to disbelief: recent trends in refugee determinations on the basis of sexual orientation in Australia and the United Kingdom,” by Jenni Millbank, 391-  “Bisexuals need not apply: a comparative appraisal of refugee law and policy in Canada, the United States, and Australia,” by Sean Rehaag, 415-  “Independent human rights documentation and sexual minorities: an ongoing challenge for the Canadian refugee determination process,” by Nicole LaViolette, 437- 48 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Same-sex marriage and the Irish Constitution,” by Aisling O’Sullivan, 477- ________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, Vol. 22, No. 3 (June 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g912721608  “The Intelligence Time Event Horizon,” by Mark M. Lowenthal, 369-  “Improving Futures Intelligence,” by David G. Muller Jr., 382-  “Missing From U.S. Intelligence Analysis: The Concept of ‘Total U.S.,’” by Carole A. Foryst, 369-  “Taming a “Dysfunctional Beast”—Reform in Colombia’s Departamento Administrativo de Securidad,” by Douglas Porch, 421-  “Cuban Intelligence Activities Directed at the United States, 1959–2007,” by Stéphane Lefebvre, 452-  “Balkan Intrigue: German Intelligence and Kosovo,” by Ben Lombardi, 470-  “Facing Iran’s Ongoing Nuclearization: A Retrospective on Project Daniel,” by Louis René Beres, 491- Reminiscence  “Three Careers, Three Names: Hildegard Beetz, Talented Spy,” by Richard W. Cutler, 515- International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence, Vol. 22, No. 4 (December 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g914457431  “Home Time: A New Paradigm for Domestic Intelligence,” by Arthur S. Hulnick, 569-  “Contractors and Intelligence: The Private Sector in the Intelligence Community,” by Glenn J. Voelz, 586-  “Evaluating Intelligence: Answering Questions Asked and Not,” by Kristan J. Wheaton, 614-  “The Devil is in the Details: The Legal Profession as a Model for Authentic Dissent,” by Robin V. Spivey, 632-  “The PRC’s Compromise of U.S. Government Information and Technologies,” by Stéphane Lefebvre, 652- 49 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “The Legal Framework for Intelligence in Post-Communist Romania,” by Florina Cristiana Matei, 667-  “Secrecy, Security, and Sex: The NSA, Congress, and the Martin–Mitchell Defections,” by David M. Barrett, 699-  “Escaping the New Wilderness of Mirrors,” by G. Murphy Donovan, 730- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 41, No. 3 (August 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=MES&volumeId=41&seriesId=0&issueId=0 3 Quick Studies  “On Race, Sports, and Identity: Picking Up the Ball in Middle East Studies,” by Shaun T. Lope, 359-  “Middle Eastern Americana: Beyond Orientalism,” by Jonathan Friedlander, 362-  “Identity in the Ottoman Prison Surveys of 1912 and 1914,” by Kent F. Schull, 365-  “Is ‘Youth’ Being Addressed in Important and Distinctive Ways in Middle East Studies? (posed by Fida Adely),” by Linda Herrera, 368-  “Pensée 2: Everyday Youth Places: Youth in Educational Spaces,” by Fida Adely, 372- Articles  “A Nation Of Bureaucrats: Political Participation And Economic Diversification In Kuwait And The United Arab Emirates,” by Michael Herb, 375-  “The Dubai Model: An Outline Of Key Development-Process Elements In Dubai,” by Martin Hvidt, 397-  “The First Translations Of The Qur’an In Modern Turkey (1924–38),” by M. Brett Wilson, 419-  “Provincial Newspapers As A Historical Source: Büyük Cihad And The Great Struggle For The Muslim Turkish Nation (1951–53),” by Gavin D. Brockett, 437-  “Toward Kurdish Distinctiveness In Electoral Politics: The 1977 Local Elections In Diyarbakir,” by Gilles Dorronsoro and Nicole F. Watts, 457- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Journal of Naval History, Vol. 8, No. 1 (April 2009) http://www.ijnhonline.org/ 50 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Arming the Beiyang Navy. Sino-German Naval Cooperation 1879-1895,” by Cord Eberspaecher  “HMS Suva, Captain W. H. D. Boyle and the Red Sea Patrol 1916-1918: The Strategic Effects of an Auxiliary Cruiser upon the Arab Revolt,” by Gregory P. Gilbert  “An Australian Perspective on the English Invasion of the Rio de la Plata in 1806 and 1807,” by Robert J. King  “Fishermen, Fish Merchants, and the Origins of the American Navy,” by Christopher P. Magra _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Organization, Vol. 63, No. 2 (April 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=INO&volumeId=63&seriesId=0&issueId=0 2  “Legitimacy and Institutional Replacement: The Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons and the Emergence of the Mine Ban Treaty,” by M. Patrick Cottrell, 217-  “Hobbes and the Congo: Frames, Local Violence, and International Intervention,” by Séverine Autesserre, 249-  “National Institutions and Global Public Goods: Are Democracies More Cooperative in Climate Change Policy?” by Michèle B. Bättig and Thomas Bernauer, 281-  “A Political Economy of Aid,” by Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Alastair Smith, 309-  “When Preferences and Commitments Collide: The Effect of Relative Partisan Shifts on International Treaty Compliance,” by Joseph M. Grieco, Christopher F. Gelpi and T. Camber Warren, 341- Research Note  “Who Are These Belligerent Democratizers? Reassessing the Impact of Democratization on War,” by Vipin Narang and Rebecca M. Nelson, 357- Comment  “Pathways to War in Democratic Transitions,” by Edward D. Mansfield and Jack Snyder, 381- International Organization, Vol. 63, No. 3 (July 2009) http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=INO&volumeId=63&seriesId=0&issueId=0 3  “The Diffusion of Revolution: ‘1848’ in Europe & Latin America,” by Kurt Weyland, 391- 51 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Support for Free Trade: Self-Interest, Sociotropic Politics, and Out-Group Anxiety,” by Edward D. Mansfield and Diana C. Mutz, 425-  “Courts Without Borders: Domestic Sources of U.S. Extraterritoriality in the Regulatory Sphere,” by Tonya L. Putnam, 459-  “What Governments Maximize and Why: The View from Trade,” by Kishore Gawande, Pravin Krishna and Marcelo Olarreaga, 491-  “Determining Trade Policy: Do Voters Hold Politicians Accountable?” by Alexandra Guisinger, 533-  “Network Analysis for International Relations,” by Emilie M. Hafner-Burton, Miles Kahler and Alexander H. Montgomery, 559- ______________________________________________________________________________ International Peacekeeping, Vol. 16, No. 3 (June 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g912901971  “The Politics of Global Governance in UN Peacekeeping,” by Philip Cunliffe, 323-  “Capacity-building or Capacity-taking? Legitimizing Concepts in Peace and Development Operations,” by Nina Wilén, 337-  “HIV among Peacekeepers and its Likely Impact on Prevalence on Host Countries’ HIV Epidemics,” by Massimo Lowicki-Zucca, Sarah Karmin and Karl-Lorenz Dehne, 352-  “Different Paths and Divergent Policies in the UN Security System: Brazil and Mexico in Comparative Perspective,” by Arturo C. Sotomayor Velázquez, 364-  “‘Who is My Friend, Who is My Enemy’? Youth and Statebuilding in Timor-Leste,” by Matthew B. Arnold, 379-  “UNPOL and Police Reform in Timor-Leste: Accomplishments and Setbacks,” by Nicolas Lemay-Hébert, 393-  “Building peace: an inventory of UN Peace Missions since the end of the Cold War,” by Volker C. Franke; Andrea Warnecke, 407- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Politics, Vol. 46, No. 5 (September 2009) http://www.palgrave-journals.com/ip/journal/v46/n5/index.html Special Issue: The Islamic World Between Europe and the United States (Guest Editors: Luca Anceschi, Joseph Camilleri and Fabio Petito 52 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Introduction: Europe, the United States and the Islamic World: Conceptualising a triangular relationship,” by Luca Anceschi, Joseph Camilleri and Fabio Petito, 505-  “The European challenge to Bismarckian diplomacy,” by Bertrand Badie, 517-  “Global exception and Islamic exceptionalism,” by Mustapha Kamal Pasha, 527-  “NATO in Afghanistan: perilous mission, dire ramifications,” by Najibullah Lafraie, 550-  “Peace or Pax Americana? US Middle East policy and the threat to global security,” by Stephen Zunes, 573-  “Between ‘soft power’ and a hard place: European Union Foreign and Security Policy between the Islamic world and the United States,” by Michael Smith, 596-  “Europe and the Arab World: The dilemma of recognising counterparts,” by François Burgat, 616-  “Turkey’s unique role in nipping in the bud the ‘clash of civilizations,’” by Dennis J. D. Sandole, 636- International Politics, Vol. 46, No. 6 (September 2009) http://www.palgrave-journals.com/ip/journal/v46/n6/index.html Special Issue: Beyond Hypocrisy: Sovereignty Revisited  “Beyond hypocrisy? Debating the ‘fact’ and ‘value’ of sovereignty in contemporary world politics,” by George Lawson and Robbie Shilliam, 657-  “Provincializing Westphalia: The Eastern origins of sovereignty,” by John M. Hobson, 671-  “Divided sovereignty: Empire and nation in the making of modern Britain,” by Andrew Baker, 691-  “Demobilising the nation: The decline of sovereignty in Western Europe,” by James Heartfield, 712-  “From Brezhnev to Brussels: Transformations of sovereignty in Eastern Europe,” by Chris J. Bickerton, 732- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Relations, Vol. 23, No. 2 (June 2009) http://ire.sagepub.com/content/vol23/issue2 The King of Thought: Theory, the Subject, and Waltz. Part I: Perspectives on Structural 53 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Realism  “Introduction,” by Ken Booth, 179-  “Structure? What Structure?” by Nicholas Onuf, 183-  “Waltz’s Theory of Theory,” by Ole Wæver, 201-  “‘Big and Important Things’ in IR: Structural Realism and the Neglect of Changes in Statehood,” by Georg Sørensen, 223-  “Reckless States and Realism,” by John J. Mearsheimer, 241-  “Structural Realism, Classical Realism and Human Nature,” by Chris Brown, 257-  “Human Nature and World Politics: Rethinking ‘Man,’” by Neta C. Crawford, 271-  “Woman, the State, and War,” by Jean Bethke Elshtain, 289- ______________________________________________________________________________ International Relations of the Asia Pacific, Vol.9, No. 3 (September 2009) http://irap.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol9/issue3/index.dtl  “Deepening ASEAN cooperation through democratization? The Indonesian legislature and foreign policymaking,” by Jürgen Rüland, 373-  “China’s diplomacy toward Africa: drivers and constraints,” by Linda Jakobson, 403-  “Commerce between rivals: realism, liberalism, and credible communication across the Taiwan Strait,” by Steve Chan, 435-  “China, Japan, and East Asian regional cooperation: the views of ‘self’ and ‘other’ from Beijing and Tokyo,” by Christian Wirth, 469- Research Note  “A not so dangerous dyad: China’s rise and Sino–Japanese rivalry,” by Kentaro Sakuwa, 497- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Security, Vol. 34, No. 2 (Fall 2009) http://www.mitpressjournals.org/toc/isec/current  “Bad Debts: Assessing China’s Financial Influence in Great Power Politics,” by Daniel W. Drezner, 7-  “China’s Naval Nationalism: Sources, Prospects, and the U.S. Response,” by Robert S. 54 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Ross, 46-  “What’s in a Line? Is Partition a Solution to Civil War?” by Nicholas Sambanis and Jonah Schulhofer-Wohl, 82-  “Transformative Choices: Leaders and the Origins of Intervention Strategy,” by Elizabeth N. Saunders, 119-  “Long Time Going: Religion and the Duration of Crusading,” by Michael C. Horowitz, 162- Correspondence  “Another Skirmish in the Battle over Democracies and War,” by Dan Reiter, Allan C. Stam and Alexander B. Downes, 194- ______________________________________________________________________________ International Spectator, Vol. 44, No. 2 (June 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g912807120 Special Issue: Evolving Dynamics in the Asia-Pacific Opinions  “China-US Relations, Tending Towards Maturity,” by Huang Ping, Tao Wenzhao, Wang Rongjun, Yuan Zheng and Zhao Xingshu, 9-  “A Rejoinder: Building ‘Positive, Cooperative and Comprehensive’ China-US Relations,” by Ralph A. Cossa, 17- Articles  “China Central? Australia’s Asia Strategy,” by Robert Ayson, 25-  “To Be or Not To Be: South Korea’s East Asia Security Strategy and the Unification Quandary,” by Seongho Sheen, 41-  “New Trends in Taiwan’s China Policy,” by Christopher R. Hughes, 59-  “Dilemmas of the ‘Middle Continent’: Russian Strategy for Eastern Eurasia,” by David Kerr, 75-  “China’s Growing Military Capability in Search of a Strategy,” by Arthur S. Ding, 95-  “A New Arms Race in the Asia-Pacific?” by Richard A. Bitzinger, 111- Italy in World Affairs  “China, the Italian Prejudice,” by Francesco Sisci, 119- 55 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 International Spectator, Vol. 44, No. 3 (September 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g915157358 Opinions  “Where is Israel Heading?” by Mark A. Heller, 5-  “Fatah-Hamas Rivalries after Gaza: Is Unity Impossible?” by Benoit Challand, 11-  “Is the EU Up to the Requirements of Peace in the Middle East?” by Muriel Asseburg and Volker Perthes, 19- The Caucases at the Crossroads  “After the 2008 Russia-Georgia War: Implications for the Wider Caucasus,” by Nona Mikhelidze, 27-  “EU Policies and Sub-Regional Multilateralism in the Caspian Region,” by Leila Alieva, 43-  “The Myth of a Sino-Russian Challenge to the West,” by Hiski Haukkala and Linda Jakobson, 59-  “Can Further Nationalisation Facilitate a Common EU Approach to Migration?” by Steffen Angenendt and Roderick Parkes, 77- Italy in World Affairs  “Italy in the European Union, between Prodi and Berlusconi,” by Maurizio Carbone, 97- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Studies, Vol. 45, No. 3 (July/September 2008) http://isq.sagepub.com/content/vol45/issue3/  “More Revisions in Realism: Hobbesian Anarchy, the Tale of the Fool and International Relations Theory,” by Giulio M. Gallarotti, 167-  “Liberal Institutionalism and International Cooperation after 11 September 2001,” by Mohammed Nuruzzaman, 193-  “India’s Forays into Space: Evolution of Its Space Programme,” by S. Vijayasekhara Reddy, 215-  “The European Union and Central Asia,” by Enayatollah Yazdani, 247- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 56 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 International Studies Perspectives, Vol. 10, No. 3 (August 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118516737/home?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0 Policy  “Words of War: The Iraqi Tower of Babel,” by Richard Oliver Collin, 245-  “The Decline of America’s Soft Power in the United Nations,” byMonti Narayan Datta, 265-  “Soft Power and State–Firm Diplomacy: Congress and IT Corporate Activity in China,” by Jade Miller, 285-  “Climate Change and Environmental Security: For Whom the Discourse Shifts,” by Nicole Detraz and Michele M. Betsill, 303-  “Gestalt Ontology in International Relations: The Case of European Integration,” by Armağan Emre Çakır, 321- Pedagogy and the Discipline  “Culture and Negotiation: The Pedagogical Dispute Regarding Cross-Cultural Simulations,” by Michael R. Fowler, 341- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Studies Quarterly, Vol. 53, No. 3 (September 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/117984904/home  “Two Logics of Labor Organizing in the Global Apparel Industry,” by Mark Anner, 545-  “Not in Anyone’s Backyard: The Emergence and Identity of a Transnational Anti-Base Network,” by Andrew Yeo, 571-  “Watchdog or Lapdog? Media Freedom, Regime Type, and Government Respect for Human Rights,” by Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, 595-  “Realism, Rationalism, Race: On the Early International Relations Discipline in Australia,” by James Cotton, 627-  “Social Identity Theory and EU Expansion,” by Tyler M. Curley, 649-  “Making an Administrative Trustee Agent Accountable: Reason-Based Decision Making within the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism,” by Thomas Gehring and Isabel Plocher, 669-  “Survival and Accountability: An Analysis of the Empirical Support for “Selectorate Theory,” by Ryan Kennedy, 695- 57 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “Inequality and Human Rights: Who Controls What, When, and How,” by Todd Landman and Marco Larizza, 715-  “Fostering Peace After Civil War: Commitment Problems and Agreement Design,” by Michaela Mattes and Burcu Savun, 737-  “Why is There No Race to the Bottom in Capital Taxation?” by Thomas Plümper, Vera E. Troeger and Hannes Winner, 761-  “Public Goods or Political Pandering: Evidence from IMF Programs in Latin America and Eastern Europe,” by Grigore Pop-Eleches, 787-  “Public Commitment in Crisis Bargaining,” by Ahmer Tarar and Bahar Leventoğlu, 817-  “Openness, Uncertainty, and Social Spending: Implications for the Globalization— Welfare State Debate,” by Irfan Nooruddin and Joel W. Simmons, 841- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ International Studies Review, Vol. 11, No. 3 (September 2009) http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/120118378/grouphome/home.html  “Transnational Public-Private Partnerships in International Relations: Making Sense of Concepts, Research Frameworks, and Results,” byMarco Schäferhoff, Sabine Campe and Christopher Kaan, 451-  “Policy Wars for Peace: Network Model of NGO Behavior,” by Anna Ohanyan, 475-  “Analyzing Spatial Drivers in Quantitative Conflict Studies: The Potential and Challenges of Geographic Information Systems,” byNathalie Stephenne, Clementine Burnley and Daniele Ehrlich, 502-  “Realism versus Strategic Culture: Competition and Collaboration?” by John Glenn, 523-  “The Role of Self-Fulfilling and Self-Negating Prophecies in International Relations,” by David Patrick Houghton, 552- Review Essays  “Up Close and From the Tower: Two Views of Refugee and Internally Displaced Populations,” by Roberta Cohen, 585-  “New Directions in Transnational Activism: Non-Governmental Organizations and Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights,” by Thomas Richard Davies, 592-  “Studying Peacekeeping: Goldilocks’ Problem,” by Laura Neack, 594- 58 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009  “A Cold Eye Assessment of US Foreign Policy: It’s the Policies, Stupid,” by Christopher R. Cook, 601-  “Contentious Perspectives on Water Resources,” by Helen Ingram, 609- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, Vol. 11, No. 2 (July 2009) http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g913109369 Introduction  “Encounters And Engagements With Things Fall Apart,” by Lahoucine Ouzgane and Onookome Okome, 135- Articles  “Achebe And His Influence In Some Contemporary African Writing,” by Elleke Boehmer, 141-  “In Tribute To Things Fall Apart,” by Kenneth W. Harrow, 154-  “Literacies Of Violence After Things Fall Apart,” by Taiwo Adetunji Osinubi, 157-  “The Significance Of Things Fall Apart To African Historiography,” by Harry Nii Koney Odamtten, 161-  “Things Fall Apart In History,” by Neil ten Kortenaar, 166-  “Things Fall Apart: A Resource for Cultural Theory,” by Mpalive-Hangson Msiska, 171-  “The Many Voices Of Things Fall Apart,” by Hilary Dannenberg, 176-  “Reading, Taste And Postcolonial Studies” Professional and Lay Readers of Things Fall Apart,” by James Procter, 180-  “Things Fall Apart And Achebe’s Search For Manhood,” by Roselyne M. Jua, 199-  “Conjuncture, Hypermasculinity And Disavowal In Things Fall Apart,” by Íde Corley, 203- Situations  “Colonial To Postcolonial Ethics” Indian Ocean ‘Belongers’, 1668–2008,” by Stephanie Jones, 212-  “Decolonizing Global Theories Today: Hardt and Negri, Agamben, Butler,” by Malini Johar Schueller, 235- _________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 59 | P a g e H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, Third Quarter 2009 Issues & Studies, an International Quarterly on China, Taiwan, and East Asian Affairs, Vol. 45, No. 2 (June 2009) http://iir.nccu.edu.tw/index.php?include=journal&kind=4&id=365&ajax=1 Focus  “The Origins and Consequences of Electoral Reform in Taiwan,” by John Fuh-Sheng Hsieh  “Rational Choices and Irrational Results: The DPP’s Institutional Choice in Taiwan’s Electoral Reform,” by Alex Chuan-Hsien Chang and Yu-Tzung Chang  “The Spatial Organization of Elections and the Cube Law,” by Tse-Min Lin and Feng-Yu Lee  “Change and Continuity in the Personal Vote after Electoral Reform in Taiwan,” by Nathan F. Batto Articles  “Factors Affecting Viewers’ Perceptions of Sensationalism in Television News: A Survey Study in Taiwan,” by Tai-Li Wang and Akiba A. Cohen  “Informal Tax Competition among Local Governments in China since the 1994 Tax Reforms,” by Eun Kyong Choi  “Illicit Flows in the Hong Kong-China-Taiwan Triangle,” by Justin V. Hastings  “The Emerging Middle Class in Post-Colonial Macao: Structure, Profile, and Mobility,” by Timothy Ka-Ying Wong and Po-San Wan Copyright © 2009 H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online H-Net permits the redistribution and reprinting of this work for non-profit, educational purposes, with full and accurate attribution to the author(s), web location, date of publication, H-Diplo, and H-Net: Humanities & Social Sciences Online. For other uses, contact the H-Diplo editorial staff at h-diplo@h-net.msu.edu. 60 | P a g e View publication stats