H-Diplo - H-Net

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H-Diplo - H-Net
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H-Diplo
JOURNAL WATCH, A to I
H-Diplo Journal and Periodical Review
h-diplo.org/journals/
First Quarter 2015
20 January 2015
Compiled by Erin Black, University of Toronto
African Affairs, Vol.113, No. 453 (October 2014)
http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol113/issue453/
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“Smuggling ideologies: From criminalization to hybrid governance in African clandestine
economies,” by Kate Meagher, 497“Patronage from below: Political unrest in an informal settlement in South Africa,” by
Hannah J. Dawson, 518-
“Model students: Policy emulation, modernization, and Kenya's Vision 2030,” by Elsje
Fourie, 540-
“Policing in intimate crowds: Moving beyond ‘the mob’ in South Africa,” by Sarah-Jane
Cooper-Knock, 563“Students, arson, and protest politics in Kenya: School fires as political action,” by
Elizabeth Cooper, 583-
Briefing
 “Crisis in the Central African Republic and the international response,” by Martin Welz,
601African Affairs, Vol.114, No. 454 (January 2015)
http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol114/issue454/
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United
States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/3.0/us/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View,
California, 94041, USA.
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Kenya at war: Al-Shabaab and its enemies in Eastern Africa,” by David M. Anderson and
Jacob McKnight, 1“Muslim politics and shari’a in Kano State, Northern Nigeria,” by Alex Thurston, 28-
“Violence, popular punishment, and war in the Central African Republic,” by Louisa
Lombard and Sylvain Batianga-Kinzi, 52-
“Power, peace, and space in Africa: Revisiting territorial power sharing,” by Franzisca
Zanker, Claudia Simons, and Andreas Mehler, 72-
“An LRA for everyone: How different actors frame the Lord's Resistance Army,” by Kristof
Titeca and Theophile Costeur, 92“The Eritrean diaspora and its impact on regime stability: Responses to UN sanctions,” by
Nicole Hirt, 115-
Briefing
 “Ebola–myths, realities, and structural violence,” by Annie Wilkinson and Melissa Leach,
136African Historical Review, Vol. 46, No.2 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rahr20/46/2
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“The Independence of Rhodesia in Salazar's Strategy for Southern Africa,” by Luís
Fernando Machado Barroso, 1-
“‘The Rebellion From Below’ and the Origins of Early Zionist Christianity,” by Barry
Morton, 25-
“The Stag of the Eastern Cape: Power, Status and Kudu Hunting in the Albany and Fort
Beaufort Districts, 1890 to 1905,” by David Gess & Sandra Swart, 48-
“The 2012 acid mine drainage (AMD) crisis in Carolina's municipal water supply,” by
J.W.N. Tempelhoff, M. Ginster, S Motloung, C.M. Gouws & J.S. Strauss, 77-
American Foreign Policy Interests, Vol.36, No.5 (November 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/uafp20/36/5
Special Issue: Cybersecurity, Sovereignty, and U.S. Foreign Policy
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“Introduction to Special Issue: Cybersecurity, Sovereignty, and U.S. Foreign Policy,” by
Camino Kavanagh, 283-
“Geopolitics and Cyber Power: Why Geography Still Matters,” by John B. Sheldon, 286-
2|Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Heartbleed and the State of Cybersecurity,” by James A. Lewis 294-
“Connected Choices: How the Internet Is Challenging Sovereign Decisions,” by Melissa E.
Hathaway, 300“The Rocky Road to Consensus: The Work of UN Groups of Governmental Experts in the
Field of ICTs and in the Context of International Security, 1998–2013,” by Angela Kane,
314“The Play of States: Norms and Security in Cyberspace,” by Roger Hurwitz, 322-
For the Record
 “Core Considerations Regarding Cybersecurity, Sovereignty, and U.S. Foreign Policy, 322American Historical Review, Vol.119, No.4 (October 2014)
http://ahr.oxfordjournals.org/content/119/4.toc
Articles
 “Isolation and Economic Life in Eighteenth-Century France,” by Emma Rothschild, 1055
“‘Join with Heart and Soul and Voice’: Music, Harmony, and Politics in the Early American
Republic,” by Kirsten E. Wood, 1083-
AHR Forum: Early-Twentieth-Century Japan in a Global Context
 “Introduction: Japan's New International History,” by Louise Young, 1117
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“The Emergence of an International Humanitarian Organization in Japan: The Tokugawa
Origins of the Japanese Red Cross,” by Sho Konishi, 1129-
“Toward a Global Perspective of the Great War: Japan and the Foundations of a TwentiethCentury World,” by Frederick R. Dickinson, 1154-
“The Perils of Co-Prosperity: Takeda Rintarō, Occupied Southeast Asia, and the Seductions
of Postcolonial Empire,” by Ethan Mark, 1184-
Featured Reviews
 “Derek J. Penslar, Jews and the Military: A History,” by Catherine D. Chatterley, 1207
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“Matthew W. Mosca. From Frontier Policy to Foreign Policy: The Question of India and the
Transformation of Geopolitics in Qing China,” by James Millward, 1209“Alan Taylor, The Internal Enemy: Slavery and War in Virginia, 1772–1832,” by James
Sidbury, 1211-
3|Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Estelle B. Freedman. Redefining Rape: Sexual Violence in the Era of Suffrage and
Segregation,” by Merril D. Smith, 1213-
“Karl Schlögel, Moscow, 1937” by Paul M. Hagenloh, 1215-
“Vivek Chibber, Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital,” by Sanjay Seth, 1218-
American Historical Review, Vol.119, No.5 (December 2014)
http://ahr.oxfordjournals.org/content/119/5.toc
Articles
 “Indian Indentured Labor and the History of International Rights Regimes,” by Rachel
Sturman, 1439
“Seeing Things: Science, the Fourth Dimension, and Modern Enchantment,” by Christopher
White, 1466-
AHR Roundtable: History Meets Biology
 “Introduction,” 1492
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“The Nurture of Nature: Genetics, Epigenetics, and Environment in Human Biohistory, by
John L. Brooke and Clark Spencer Larsen, 1500-
“Coevolutionary History,” by Edmund Russell, 1514-
“Emotions, Facultative Adaptation, and the History of Homicide,” by Randolph Roth, 1529“The Sentimental Family: A Biohistorical Perspective,” by Kyle Harper, 1547Evolutionary Psychology and the Historian,” by Walter Scheidel, 1563“The Self and Its History,” by Lynn Hunt, 1567-
“History and Biology in the Anthropocene: Problems of Scale, Problems of Value,” by Julia
Adeney Thomas, 1587“Historical Inquiry as a Distributed, Nomothetic, Evolutionary Discipline,” by Norman
Macleod, 1608“Evidence and the Instability of Biology,” by Michael D. Gordin, 1621-
Featured Reviews
 “Lee I. Levine, Visual Judaism in Late Antiquity: Historical Contexts of Jewish Art,” by Marc
Michael Epstein, 16304|Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Daniel Strum, The Sugar Trade: Brazil, Portugal and the Netherlands (1595–1630),” by
Thomas D. Rogers, 1631-
“Jacqueline Jones, A Dreadful Deceit: The Myth of Race from the Colonial Era to Obama's
America,” by Matthew Pratt Guterl, 1634-
“Alon Confino, A World without Jews: The Nazi Imagination from Persecution to Genocide,”
by Geoff Eley, 1636“Piero Gleijeses, Visions of Freedom: Havana, Washington, Pretoria, and the Struggle for
Southern Africa, 1976–1991,” by Christopher J. Lee, 1638-
American Political Science Review, Vol. 108, No. 4 (November 2014)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=PSR&volumeId=108&seriesId=0&issu
eId=04
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“Shape-Shifting Representation,” by Michael Saward, 723-
“Beyond Keeping Peace: United Nations Effectiveness in the Midst of Fighting,” by Lisa
Hultman, Jacob Kathman and Megan Shannon, 737“Is There a Culture War? Conflicting Value Structures in American Public Opinion,” by
William G. Jacoby, 754-
“Tocqueville on the Modern Moral Situation: Democracy and the Decline of Devotion,” by
Dana Jalbert Stauffer, 772“Selling Out?: The Politics of Navigating Conflicts between Racial Group Interest and Self
interest,” by Ismail K. White, Chryl N. Laird and Troy D. Allenm 783“The Political Mobilization of Ethnic and Religious Identities in Africa,” by John F.
Mccauley, 801-
“Foreign Military Presence and the Changing Practice of Sovereignty: A Pragmatist
Explanation of Norm Change,” by Sebastian Schmidt, 817-
“Can Humankind Deliberate on a Global Scale? Alfarabi and the Politics of the Inhabited
World,” by Alexander I. Orwin, 830-
“The Question(s) of Political Knowledge,” by Jason Barabas, Jennifer Jerit, William Pollock
and Carlisle Rainey, 840-
“‘Fit to Enter the World’: Hannah Arendt on Politics, Economics, and the Welfare State,” by
Steven Klein, 8565|Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Issue Yield: A Model of Party Strategy in Multidimensional Space,” by Lorenzo De Sio and
Till Weber, 870-
American Quarterly, Vol.66, No.4 (December 2014)
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/american_quarterly/
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“Graphic Consciousness: The Visual Cultures of Integrated Industrial Unions at
Midcentury,” by John Ott, 883“Indigenous Circuits: Navajo Women and the Racialization of Early Electronic
Manufacture,” by Lisa Nakamura, 919-
“Erasing Anarchism: Sacco and Vanzetti and the Logic of Representation,” by Dan Colson,
943“‘Colored Men of the East’: African Americans and the Instability of Race in US–Japan
Relations,” by Ikuko Asaka, 971-
“‘The Bomb Was like the Indians’: Trickster Mimetics and Native Sovereignty in Martin
Cruz Smith’s The Indians Won,” by Sara Spurgeon, 999-
“The Pan Am Quipper as Site of Anxiety: Managing Emotion in an Era of Neoliberalism and
Corporate Decline,” by Theodore Louis Trost, 1021“Rethinking Settler Colonialism” by Rosaura Sánchez and Beatrice Pita, 1093-
Currents
 “Learning and Unlearning from Ethnic Studies,” by Catherine S. Ramírez, 1057-
Forum
 “Introduction: Whiteness Redux or Redefined?” by Cynthia A. Young, Min Hyoung Song,
1071
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“Possessive Investment: Indian Removals and the Affective Entitlements of Whiteness,” by
Alyosha Goldstein, 1077“The Presumption of White Innocence,” by Lisa Marie Cacho, 1085“The Whiteness of Police,” by Nikhil Pal Singh, 1091-
“The Distributions of Whiteness,” by Roderick A. Ferguson, 1101-
“Imperial Whiteness and the Diasporas of Empire,” by Nadine Suleiman Naber, 1107
American Review of Canadian Studies, Vol. 44, No.4 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rarc20/44/4
6|Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“‘Intellectually Promiscuous’: An Interview with Linda Hutcheon (Konstanz, September 19,
2013),” by Emily Petermann, 375“A Paradoxical Relationship? Regionalization and Canadian National Identity,” by Boris
Vormann & Christian Lammert 385“Party Policy Positions in Newfoundland and Labrador: Expert Survey Results in the
Buildup to the 2011 Provincial Election,” by Matthew Kerby & Kelly Blidook, 400-
“Five Decades of Canadian and Québec Content in French Textbooks in the United States,”
by Carol A. Chapelle, 415-
“Carlylean Sentiment and the Platonic Triad in Anne of Green Gables,” by André Narbonne,
433“Being Canadian: Dual Citizenship in Historical Perspective,” by Ben Herzog, 448-
“The Discourse of Fear: Effects of the War on Terror on Canadian University Students,” by
Farhat Shahzad, 467“Defining Success: Canada in Afghanistan 2006–2011,” by H. Christian Breede, 483-
The Americas, Vol.71, No.2 (October 2014)
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/the_americas/
Tibesar Lecture
 “The Life and Times of Fr. Junípero Serra: A Pan-Borderlands Perspective,” by David Hurst
Thomas, 185Articles
 “Mediation Through Militarization: Indigenous Soldiers and Transcultural Middlemen of
the Rio Doce Divisions, Minas Gerais, Brazil, 1808–1850,” by Judy Bieber 227
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“Reforming Catholicism: Papal Power in Guatemala during the 1920s and 1930s,” by
Bonar L. Hernández, 255-
“The Traje de Tehuana as National Icon: Gender, Ethnicity, and Fashion in Mexico,” by
Francie Chassen-López, 281-
Research Note
 “Determining the Authorship of the Crónica Mexicayotl: Two Hypotheses,” by Sylvie
Peperstraete and Gabriel Kenrick Kruell, 315Archivaria, Number 78 (Fall 2014)
http://journals.sfu.ca/archivar/index.php/archivaria/issue/current
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“A Genre-Based Investigation of Workplace Communities,” by Fiorella Foscarini
“The Admissibility of Business Records as Legal Evidence: A Review of the Business
Records Exception to the Hearsay Rule in Canada,” by Donald C. Force
“Toward a “Third Order” Archival Interface: Research Notes on Some Theoretical and
Practical Implications of Visual Explorations in the Canadian Context of Financial
Electronic Records ,” by Victoria L. Lemieux
“Kicking Off the Women’s ‘Archives Party’: The World Center for Women’s Archives and
the Foundations of Feminist Historiography and Women’s Archives,” by Sarah Lubelski
“Disorder: Vocabularies of Hoarding in Personal Digital Archiving Practices,” by Anna
Chen
Asian Security, Vol.10, No. 3 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fasi20/10/3
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“China and the Regional Counter-Terrorism Structure: An Organizational Analysis,” by
Thomas Wallace, 199“Coming Together over Trade? A Study of the Resumed Dialogue between India and
Pakistan,” by Josefine Pernes & Ulrika Möller, 221-
“Problems with Power-Transition Theory: Beyond the Vanishing Disparities Thesis,” by
Peter Harris, 241-
Australian Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 69, No.1 (January 2015)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/caji20/69/1
Commentary and Provocation
 “Malcolm Fraser's Asia Delusion,” by Rory Medcalf, 2
“Menzies' road map for Asia still guides us today,” by Josh Frydenberg, 8-
Articles
 “The informal diplomacy of the Australian American Leadership Dialogue,” by Elena
Douglas & Diane Stone, 18
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“The forgiveness dilemma: emotions and justice at the Khmer Rouge tribunal,” by Renée
Jeffery, 35-
“Between Jakarta and Geneva: why Abbott needs to view Africa as a great opportunity,” by
Samuel Makinda, 538|Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Welcome to Australia? A reappraisal of the Fraser government's approach to refugees,
1975–83,” by Katrina Stats, 69“Iran and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization: Ideology and Realpolitik in Iranian
Foreign Policy,” by Shahram Akbarzadeh, 88-
Review Essay
 “Projections of China's normative soft power,” by Mark Chou 104-
British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Vol.41, No.4 (October 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cbjm20/41/4
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“Explaining Political Islam: The Transformation of Palestinian Islamic Movements,” by
As'ad Ghanem & Mohanad Mustafa, 335“The Omani Pursuit of a Large Peninsula Shield Force: A Case Study of a Small State's
Search for Security,” by Robert Mason, 355-
“The Martyrs' Revolutions: The Role of Martyrs in the Arab Spring,” by Elizabeth Buckner
& Lina Khatib, 368“Measuring Assimilation: ‘Mother Tongue’ Question in Turkish Censuses and Nationalist
Policy,” by Fuat Dundar, 385-
“Remarks on Al-Niffarī's Neglect in Early Sufi Literature,” by Arin Salamah-Qudsi, 406-
“Syria's Forgotten First President Mohammad Ali al-Abed,” by Sami Moubayed, 419-
“Iran's Nuclear Program and the Israeli-Iranian Rivalry in the Post Revolutionary Era,” by
Farhad Rezaei & Ronen A. Cohenm, 442-
“The Impact of the Palestinian Refugee Crisis on the Development of Amman, 1947–1958,”
by Marwan D. Hanania, 461-
“The Iranian Revolution, 1977–79: Interaction and Transformation,” by Peter Seeberg,
483-
“The Scum of Tabriz: Ahmad Kasravi and the Impulse to Reform Islam,” by Chad Kia, 489-
The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, Vol.16, No.4 (November 2014)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1467-856X
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“Patterns of Junior Partner Influence on the Foreign Policy of Coalition Governments,” by
Kai Oppermann and Klaus Brummer, 555-
9|Page
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Sports Mega-Events as Part of a Nation's Soft Power Strategy: The Cases of Germany
(2006) and the UK (2012),” by Jonathan Grix and Barrie Houlihan, 572-
“Globalisation and the Resilience of Social Democracy: Reassessing New Labour's Political
Economy,” by Martin Smith, 597“Understanding NHS Policy Making in England: The Formulation of the NHS Plan, 2000,”
by Arturo Alvarez-Rosete and Nicholas Mays, 624“British Brinkmanship and Gaelic Games: EU Treaty Ratification in the UK and Ireland
from a Two Level Game Perspective,” by Dermot Hodson and Imelda Maher, 645-
“Foreign Policy Convergence in Pacific Asia: The Evidence from Voting in the UN General
Assembly,” by Peter Ferdinand, 662-
Response Articles
 “The Unsolved Puzzle: Pacific Asia's Voting Cohesion in the United Nations General
Assembly—A Response to Peter Ferdinand,” by Nicolas Burmester and Michael Jankowski,
680
“Response to a Response,” by Peter Ferdinand, 690-
Bulletin of Latin American Research, Vol. 34, No.1 (January 2015)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1470-9856
Special Issue: Urbanisation and Resource Management in Riverine
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“Urbanisation and Resource Management in Riverine Amazônia,” by Ludivine Eloy, 1“New Perspectives on Mobility, Urbanisation and Resource Management in Riverine
Amazônia,” by Ludivine Eloy, Eduardo S. Brondizio and Rogerio Do Pateo, 3-
“Towards a Revival of Indigenous Mobility in French Guiana? Contemporary
Transformations of the Wayãpi and Teko Territories,” by Isabelle Tritsch, Cyril Marmoex,
Damien Davy, Bernard Thibaut and Valery Gond, 19-
“Can Rural–Urban Household Mobility Indicate Differences in Resource Management
within Amazonian Communities?” by Stephanie Nasuti, Ludivine Eloy, Celine Raimbert and
François-Michel Le Tourneau, 32-
“Urban-Rural Livelihoods, Fishing Conflicts and Indigenous Movements in the Middle Rio
Negro Region of the Brazilian Amazon,” by Thaissa Sobreiro, 54-
“Amerindian Agriculture in an Urbanising Amazonia (Rio Negro, Brazil),” by Laure
Emperaire and Ludivine Eloy, 70-
10 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“‘Porque Las Raizes No Se Olvidan’: Continuity and Change among Mexican Migrants in
New Jersey,” by Frances A. Rothstein, 85-
Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Vol. 27, No.4 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ccam20/27/4
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“Simulating terrorism and insurgency: video games in the war of ideas,” by Marcus
Schulzke, 627“Outside looking in: non-accession to the WTO,” by Samuel Brazys, 644-
Human Rights and Climate Change: Mapping Institutional Inter-Linkages
 “Introduction: Human rights and climate change: mapping institutional inter-linkages,” by
Andrea Schapper & Markus Lederer, 666
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“Women's human rights in a changing climate: highlighting the distributive effects of
climate policies,” by Lena Bendlin, 680-
“Hand in hand against climate change: cultural human rights and the protection of cultural
heritage,” by Sylvia Maus, 699-
“Human rights and the Clean Development Mechanism,” by Jeanette Schade & Wolfgang
Obergassel, 717-
“Keeping discourses separate: explaining the non-alignment of climate politics and human
rights norms by small island states in United Nations climate negotiations,” by Linda
Wallbott, 763-
Canadian Journal of History, Vol.49, No. 3 (Winter 2014)
http://utpjournalsreview.com/index.php/CJOH/issue/archive
Introduction
 “History of Medicine, Introduction to Special Issue,” by Erika Dyck & Katherine Zwicker
Articles
 “The Queen’s Jews: Religion, Race, and Change in Twentieth-Century Canada,” by Jacalyn
Duffin
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“Sexual Crimes, Medical Cures: The Development of a Therapeutic Approach toward
Sexual Offenders in English Prisons, c.1900–1950,” by Janet Weston
“Humanitarian Action: The Joint Church Aid and Health Care Intervention in the NigeriaBiafra War, 1967–1970,” by Arua Oko Omaka
Canadian Journal of Political Science, Vol. 47, No.3 (September 2014)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayBackIssues?jid=CJP
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Cultural Scenes and Voting Patterns in Canada,” by Daniel Silver and Diana Miller, 425-
“Anxiety and Vote Decision Making in Winner-Take-All Elections,” by Delia Dumitrescu
and André Blais, 451-
“Quand les mouvements sociaux changent le politique. Le cas du mouvement étudiant de
2012 au Québec,’’ by Pascale Dufour and Louis-Philippe Savoie, 475-
‘‘Canadian Public Opinion about the Military: Assessing the Influences on Attitudes toward
Defence Spending and Participation in Overseas Combat Operations,’’ by Scott
Fitzsimmons, Allan Craigie and Marc André Bodet, 503“The Federalization of Immigration and Integration in Canada,” by Mireille Paquet, 519“Resolving the Difference between Evolutionary Antecedents of Political Attitudes and
Sources of Human Variation,” by Adam Lockyer and Peter K. Hatemi, 549-
“The True North Strong and Free Healthcare? Nationalism and Attitudes Towards Private
Healthcare Options in Canada,” by Yannick Dufresne, Sanjay Jeram and Alexandre Pelletier,
569“Faire la guerre pour un Mali démocratique : l'intervention militaire française et la gestion
des possibilités politiques contestées,’’ by Bruno Charbonneau and Jonathan Sears, 587-
Central European History, Vol.47, No.3 (September 2014)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=CCC&volumeId=47&seriesId=0&issue
Id=03
From the Grünen Wiesen to Urban Space: Berlin, Expansion, and the Longue Durée
 “Introduction,” by Eli Rubin, 221
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“Shantytowns and Pioneers beyond the City Wall: Berlin's Urban Frontier in the
Nineteenth Century,” by Kristin Poling, 245-
“Urban Sewage and Green Meadows: Berlin's Expansion to the South 1870–1920,” by
Marion W. Gray, 275-
“The Nature of Berlin: Green Space and Visions of a New German Capital, 1900–45,” by
Barry A. Jackisch, 307-
“Amnesiopolis: From Mietskaserne to Wohnungsbauserie 70 in East Berlin's Northeast,”
by Eli Rubin, 334-
Other Articles
12 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“‘Censorship is Official Critique’: Contesting the Limits of Scholarship in the Censorship of
the Hallische Jahrbücher,” by Matthew Bunn, 375“The Search for the ‘Other Germany’: Refugee Historians from Nazi Germany and the
Contested Historical Legacy of the Resistance to Hitler,” by Marjorie Lamberti, 402
The China Quarterly, Vol.219 (September 2014)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=CQY
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“Controlling Corruption in the Party: China's Central Discipline Inspection Commission,”
by Xuezhi Guo, 597“Empowering the Police: How the Chinese Communist Party Manages Its Coercive
Leaders,” by Yuhua Wang, 625“China's Rural Land Politics: Bureaucratic Absorption and the Muting of Rightful
Resistance,” by Julia Chuang, 649-
“Blue, Green or Aquamarine? Taiwan and the Status Quo Preference in Cross-Strait
Relations,” by Chin-Hao Huang and Patrick James 670-
“Capitalism without Capital: Capital Conversion and Market Making in Rural China,” by
Xueguang Zhou and Yun Ai, 693-
“How Has the Abolition of Agricultural Taxes Transformed Village Governance in China?
Evidence from Agricultural Regions,” by An Chen, 715-
“The Contention between Han ‘Civilizers’ and Yi ‘Civilizee’ over Environmental
Governance: A Case Study of Liangshan Prefecture in Sichuan,” by Thomas Heberer, 736“Hydropolitics and Inter-Jurisdictional Relationships in China: The Pursuit of Localized
Preferences in a Centralized System,” by Scott Moore, 760“Sex Ratio Imbalances and China's Care for Girls Programme: A Case Study of a Social
Problem,” by Rachel Murphy, 781-
“Biopolitics, Occupational Health and State Power: The Marginalization of Sick Workers in
China,” by Wing-Chung Ho, 808“Governing Art Districts: State Control and Cultural Production in Contemporary China,”
by Yue Zhang, 827-
Review Essay
 “The Chinese Revolution and ‘Liberation’: Whose Tragedy?” by Felix Wemheuer, 849The China Quarterly, Vol.220 (December 2014)
13 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=CQY
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“China's Economic Engagement in North Korea,” by James Reilly, 915-
“Isomorphic Pressures, Epistemic Communities and State–NGO Collaboration in China,” by
Reza Hasmath and Jennifer Y.J. Hsu, 936-
“Local Village Workers, Foreign Factories and Village Politics in Coastal China: A Clientelist
Approach,” by Wooyeal Paik, 955“Why Is There No Income Gap between the Hui Muslim Minority and the Han Majority in
Rural Ningxia, China?” by Björn Gustafsson and Ding Sai, 968“How Dynamics of Urbanization Affect Physical and Mental Health in Urban China,” by
Juan Chen, Shuo Chen, Pierre F. Landry and Deborah S. Davis, 988-
“Reunification through Water and Food: The Other Battle for Lives and Bodies in China's
Hong Kong Policy,” by Siu-Keung Cheung, 1012“Growing Fat on Reform: Obesity and Nutritional Disparities among China's Children,
1979–2005 – Corrigendum,” by Stephen L. Morgan, 1069-
“Creating ‘Masters of the Country’ in Shanghai and Beijing: Discourse and the 1953–54
Local People's Congress Elections,” by Jishun Zhang, 1071“Foreshocks: Local Origins of Nanjing's Qingming Demonstrations of 1976,” by Dong
Guoqiang and Andrew G. Walder, 1092-
Research Report
 “China Scholars and the Media: Improving an Awkward, Important Relationship,” by
Jonathan Sullivan, 1111-
Commentary
 “Reassessing Disparity in Access to Higher Education in Contemporary China,” by Anning
Hu, 1123-
Reply
 “Response to the Commentary: ‘Reassessing Disparity in Access to Higher Education in
Contemporary China,’” to Xiaobing Wang, Chengfang Liu, Linxiu Zhang, Yaojiang Shi, Scott
Rozelle and Prashant Loyalka, 1131Chinese Historical Review, Vol.21, No.2 (November 2014)
http://www.maneyonline.com/loi/tcr

“Repertoires of Power: Early Qing-Chosŏn Relations (1636–1644),” by Sun-Hee Yoon, 9714 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015


“The Chinese Civil War and the Ethno-Genesis of the Korean Minority in Northeast China,”
by Donggil Kim, 121“China–North Korea Relations in the Post-Cold War Era and New Changes in 2009,” by
Jong-Seok Lee, 143-
Conversation
 “Standing Up For Liberty: A Conversation With Perry Link,” by Perry Link & Hanchao Lu,
162Chinese Journal of International Politics, Vol. 7, No. 4 (Winter 2014)
http://cjip.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol7/issue3/index.dtl?etoc
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
“Editor's Choice: The Logic and Contradictions of ‘Peaceful Rise/Development’ as China’s
Grand Strategy,” by Barry Buzan, 381-
“Soft Power and Global Governance with Chinese Characteristics,” by Timo Kivimäki, 421-
“Taming Hegemony: Informal Institutions and the Challenge to Western Liberal Order,” by
Jochen Prantl, 449“International System, not International Structure: Against the Agent–Structure
Problématique in IR,” by Tang Shiping, 483-
Cold War History, Vol.14, No.4 (October 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fcwh20/14/4
Special Issue: The Cold War in retrospect: 25 years after its end

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


“Introduction: Looking back: a quarter of a century after the Cold War,” by Beatrice
Heuser, 455-
“Learning from history? From Soviet collapse to the ‘new’ Cold War,” by Michael Cox, 461-
“The Cold War in retrospect: too early to tell?” by Vojtech Mastny, 487“The Cold War: the golden age of arms control,” by Paul Lever, 501-
“Of ghosts and other spectres: the Cold War's ending and the question of the next
‘hegemonic’ conflict,’ by Michel Fortmann & David G. Haglund, 515-
“The NATO-Warsaw Pact competition in the 1970s and 1980s: a revolution in military
affairs in the making or the end of a strategic age?” by Diego A. Ruiz Palmer, 533“Intelligence in the Cold War,” by John N.L. Morrison, 575-
15 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Hollywood's insidious charms: the impact of American cinema and television on the
Soviet Union during the Cold War,” by Sergei Zhuk, 593-
“With his back against the Wall: Gorbachev, Soviet demise, and German reunification,” by
Vladislav Zubok, 619“Has the Cold War returned to East Asia?” by James T.H. Tang, 647-
“Stephen Pinker and the long peace: alliance, deterrence and decline,” by Lawrence
Freedman, 657-
“The (really) good war? Cold War nostalgia and American foreign policy,” by Jussi M.
Hanhimäki, 673“Cold War historiography at the crossroads,” by Federico Romero. 685-
Cold War International History Project Working Paper No. 71
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/publication-series/cwihp-working-paper-series

“Fraternal Support: The East German ‘Stasi’ and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam
during the Vietnam War" by Martin Grossheim
Colonial Latin American Review, Vol.23, No.3 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ccla20/23/3
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
“Reviewing Representation: The Subject-object in Pre-Hispanic and Colonial Inka Visual
Culture,” by Carolyn Dean, 289“Holy Organ or Unholy Idol? Forming a History of the Sacred Heart in New Spain,” by
Lauren G. Kilroy-Ewbank, 320-
“Los Memoriales de don Juan Ortiz de Cervantes y la cuestión de la perpetuidad de las
encomiendas en el Perú (siglo XVII),’’ by Alexandre Coello de la Rosa, 360-
‘‘Restoring Spanish Hispaniola, the First of the Indies: Local Advocacy and Transatlantic
Arbitrismo in the Late Seventeenth Century,” by Marc Eagle, 384“Correspondencia privada e historia pública: las relaciones intelectuales de Pedro de
Castro, Antonio de Herrera y el Inca Garcilaso,” by José Cárdenas Bunsen, 413-
“El comercio de libros entre Europa y América en la Sevilla del siglo XVI: Impresores,
libreros y mercaderes,’’ by Carlos Alberto González Sánchez 439-
(The Round Table) The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs, Vol.103, No.5
(October 2014) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctrt20/103/5
16 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Editorial: Glasgow, the Referendum and the Commonwealth Games,” by Stuart Mole, 453“Commonwealth Update,” by Oren Gruenbaum, 457-
“Petty Corruption, Development and Information Technology as an Antidote,” by Indira
Carr & Robert Jago, 465-
“Rethinking Human Trafficking in India: Nature, Extent and Identification of Survivors,” by
Siddhartha Sarkar, 483“‘Ungoverned Space’ and the Oil Find in Turkana, Kenya,” by Kennedy Mkutu Agade, 497-
Opinion
 “Commonwealth in Crisis: Canada’s Call for the Commonwealth to Respect its Core Values
and Principles,” by Gordon Campbell, 517The Round Table) The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs, Vol.103, No.6
(December 2014) http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ctrt20/103/5

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
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
“Commonwealth Update,” by Oren Gruenbaum, 539-
“Reflections on the Scottish Referendum and the Prospects of EU Reform,” by Sir Peter
Marshall, 457“Is the Coalition Era Over in Indian Politics?” by Adnan Farooqui & E. Sridharan, 557-
“Hong Kong’s Umbrella Movement,” by Johannes Chan, 571-
“Ties that Bind: The Evolution and Links of Al-Shabab,” by Daniel E. Agbiboa, 581-
Opinions
 “Gough Whitlam: A Man Who Changed Australia,” by Mike Rann, 599
“The Commonwealth: Post Box or Powerhouse?” by Carl Wright, 601-
Review Article
 “We Move Tonight: The Making of the Grenada Revolution,” by Tennyson S. D. Joseph, 605Communist and Post-Communist Studies, Vol.47, No.3-4 (September-December 2014)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0967067X
Special Issue: Status and Emotions in Russian Foreign Policy

“Status and emotions in Russian foreign policy,” by Tuomas Forsberg, Regina Heller,
Reinhard Wolf, 26117 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“Russia says no: Power, status, and emotions in foreign policy,” by Deborah Welch Larson,
Alexei Shevchenko, 269“Historical aspirations and the domestic politics of Russia's pursuit of international
status,” by Anne L. Clunan, 281-
“Obsession with status and ressentiment: Historical backgrounds of the Russian discursive
identity construction,” by Olga Malinova, 293“‘Greatpowerness’ as the key element of Russian self-consciousness under erosion,” by
Mark Urnov, 305“Status conflicts between Russia and the West: Perceptions and emotional biases,” by
Tuomas Forsberg, 323-
“Russia's quest for respect in the international conflict management in Kosovo,” by Regina
Heller, 333“The frustrating partnership: Honor, status, and emotions in Russia's discourses of the
West,” by Andrei P. Tsygankov, 345“Russia as a great power: Status inconsistency and the two Chechen wars,” by Hanna
Smith, 355-
Regular papers
 “Determinants of foreign direct investment and entry modes of Polish multinational
enterprises: A new perspective on internationalization,” by Oskar Kowalewski, MariuszJan Radło, 365-

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“Russia's perceptions and misperceptions of the EU Eastern Partnership,” by Igor Gretskiy,
Evgeny Treshchenkov, Konstantin Golubev, 375“Voices of discontent: Student protest participation in Romania,” by Toma Burean, Gabriel
Badescu, 385“Post-communist transformation in progress: Poles' attitudes toward democracy,” by
Urszula Jakubowska, Krzysztof Kaniasty, 399-
“Power and Public Chambers in the development of civil society in Russia,” by Kirsti
Stuvøy, 409________________________________________________________________________________

Contemporary British History, Vol.28, No.4 (September 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fcbh20/28/4
18 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
Special Issue: ‘Causes That Were Lost’? Fifty Years of E. P. Thompson's The Making of the
English Working Class as Contemporary History
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“Introduction: ‘Causes That Were Lost’? Fifty Years of E. P. Thompson's The Making of the
English Working Class as Contemporary History,” by Madeleine Davis & Kevin Morgan,
374“Paradox and Polemic; Argument and Awkwardness: Reflections on E. P. Thompson,” by
Bryan D. Palmer, 382“E. P. Thompson's Concept of Class Formation and its Political Implications: Echoes of
Popular Front Radicalism in The Making of the English Working Class,” by Christos
Efstathiou, 404-
“E. P. Thompson and the Cultural Politics of Literary Modernism,” by Stuart Middleton,
422“Edward Thompson's Ethics and Activism 1956–1963: Reflections on the Political
Formation of The Making of the English Working Class,” by Madeleine Davis, 438-
“As Everlasting Yea, a No: Agency, Necessity and The Making of the English Working Class,”
by Kevin Morgan, 457“The Making of the Global Working Class in Contemporary History,” by Karen Buckley,
477“‘A Traditional English (Not British) Country Gentleman of the Radical Left’:
Understanding the Making and Unmaking of Edward Thompson's English Idiom,” by
Michael Kenny, 494-
“Creativities in Contexts: E. P. Thompson's The Making of the English Working Class,” by
David Howell, 517-
Contemporary European History, Vol.23, No.4 (November 2014)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=CEH
Special Issue: Emotions in Protest Movements in Europe since 1917



“Introduction,” by Joachim C. Häberlen and Russell A. Spinney, 489-
“Affective Neuroscience and the Causes of the Mutiny of the French 82nd Infantry
Brigade,” by Adam Derek Zientek, 505“Opposing Scientific Cruelty: The Emotions and Sensitivities of Protestors against
Experiments on Animals,” by Christophe Traïni, 523-
19 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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
“Emotions, Moral Batteries and High-Risk Activism: Understanding the Emotional
Practices of the Spanish Anarchists under Franco's Dictatorship,” by Eduardo Romanos,
545-
“Love, Peace and Rock ’n’ Roll on Gorky Street: The ‘Emotional Style’ of the Soviet Hippie
Community,” by Juliane Fürst, 565-
“A (Trans)National Emotional Community? Greek Political Songs and the Politicisation of
Greek Migrants in West Germany in the 1960s and early 1970s,” by Nikolaos
Papadogiannis, 589“Struggling for Feelings: The Politics of Emotions in the Radical New Left in West
Germany,c.1968–84,” by Joachim C. Häberlen and Jake P. Smith, 615“Concluding Thoughts,” by Deborah Gould, 639-
Review Article
 “‘Foreshadows and Repercussions’: Histories of Air War and the Recasting of Cities and
Citizens,” by Adam Page, 645Cooperation and Conflict, Vol. 49, No.4 (December 2014)
http://cac.sagepub.com/content/vol49/issue4.toc
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
“Normative Power Europe and the importance of discursive context: The European Union
and the politics of religion,’’ by Henrik Larsen, 419“Producing European armaments: Policymaking preferences and processes,’’ by Marc R.
DeVore, 438-
“State feminism going global: Norway on the United Nations Peacebuilding Commission,’’
by Torunn L. Tryggestad, 464“Identifying parameters of foreign policy change: An eclectic approach,” by Spyros
Blavoukos and Dimitris Bourantonis, 483-
“Unifying conceptualizations of interstate rivalry: A min–max approach,” by David R.
Dreyer, 501-
“Regional order and peaceful change: Security communities as a via media in international
relations theory,” by Simon Koschut 519-
“American engagement and the pathways to Arab–Israeli peace,” by Jeremy Pressman,
536-
“Disaster politics or disaster of politics? Post-tsunami conflict transformation in Sri Lanka
and Aceh, Indonesia,” by Nicole Klitzsch, 554-
20 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
Diplomacy & Statecraft, Vol.25, No.4 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fdps20/25/4
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
“J.M. Keynes and the Personal Politics of Reparations: Part 2,” by Stephen A. Schuker, 579-
“The Italo–Yugoslav Conflict over Albania: A View from Belgrade, 1919–1939,” by Dragan
Bakić, 592-
“Puppet Dictator in the Banana Republic? Re-examining Honduran–American Relations in
the Era of Tiburcio Carías Andino, 1933–1938,” by Adam Fenner, 613“UNRWA’s First Years, 1949–1951: The Anatomy of Failed Expectations,” by Simon A.
Waldman, 630-
“The Relevance of Détente to American Foreign Policy: The Case of Greece, 1967–1979,” by
Konstantina Maragkou, 646“Leopards Can Change Their Spots: When Leaders Take Out of Character Actions,” by
Matthew Fehrs, 669-
“Partners but not Allies: West European Co-operation with China, 1978–1982,” by Martin
Albers, 688“How Many Lives Do the Taliban Have?” by Juergen Kleiner, 708-
Diplomatic History, Vol.38, No.5 (November 2014)
http://dh.oxfordjournals.org/content/by/year
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
“Birthing Empire: Economies of Childrearing and the Formation of American Colonialism
in Hawai‘i, 1820–1848,” by Joy Schulz, 859-
“The Open Door and U.S. Policy in Iraq between the World Wars,” by Annie Tracy Samuel,
926-
“Fractured Alliance: Anti-Base Protests and Postwar U.S.–Japanese Relations,” by Jennifer
M. Miller, 953-
“‘The Virgin Mary is Going South’: Refugee Resettlement in South Vietnam, 1954–1956,” by
Jessica Elkind, 987“Becoming ‘Mr. Latin America’: Thomas C. Mann Reconsidered,” by Thomas Tunstall
Allcock, 1017-
“Quiet Americans in India”: The CIA and the Politics of Intelligence in Cold War South
Asia,” by Paul Michael McGarr, 1046-
21 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015



China’s Last Ally: Beijing’s Policy toward North Korea during the U.S.–China
Rapprochement, 1970–1975,” by Yafeng Xia and Zhihua Shen, 1083-
“The Nuclearization of Iran in the Seventies,” by Jacob Darwin Hamblin, 1114-
“The ‘Pictures in Our Heads’: Journalists, Human Rights, and U.S.–South Korean Relations,
1970–1976,” by Patrick Chung, 1136-
East European Politics (Formally the Journal of Communist Studies and Transition
Politics), Vol. 30, No. 4 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjcs21/30/4
Symposium: The political economy of regulation in post-war Kosovo
 “Introduction: The political economy of regulation in post-war Kosovo: intended and
unintended consequences of external actors' involvement,” by Luca J. Uberti, Nicolas
Lemay-Hébert & Venera Demukaj, 429



“The new institutionalism in the context of Kosovo's transition: regulatory institutions in
contested states,” by Anneliese Dodds, Jelena Obradovic-Wochnik & Ahmed Badran, 436-
“Bounded altruism: INGOs’ opportunities and constraints during humanitarian crises and
the US intervention in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo,” by Andrew L. Halterman & Jill A.
Irvine, 458-
“Neoliberalism and industrial policy in Kosovo: the mining and metals industry in the postwar transition,” by Luca J. Uberti, 482“Effects of the European financial and economic crisis in Kosovo and the Balkans: modes of
integration and transmission belts of crisis in the “super-periphery,’” by Besnik Pula, 507-
Articles
 “Securitising Islam, securitising ethnicity: the discourse of Uzbek radicalism in
Kyrgyzstan,” by Rebekah Tromble, 527


“‘Normal nationalism’: Alexei Navalny, LiveJournal and ‘the Other,’” by Natalia MoenLarsen, 458“The Bulgarian ‘Nuclear Referendum’ of 2013 and the independence of the Bulgarian
media,” by Tanya Bagashka, 568-
“Presidential dynamics and legislative velocity in Russia, 1994–2007,” by Paul Chaisty,
588-
English Historical Review, Vol. 129, No. 540 (October 2014)
http://ehr.oxfordjournals.org/content/by/year
22 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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

“King John and Royal Control in Ireland: Why William de Briouze had to be Destroyed,” by
Colin Veach, 1051-
“John Peyton’s A Relation of the State of Polonia and the Accession of King James I, 1598–
1603,” by Sebastian Sobecki, 1079“William Cecil Slingsby, Norway, and British Mountaineering, 1872–1914,” by Paul
Readman, 1098-
“Summer in the City: Banking Failures of 1974 and the Development of International
Banking Supervision,” by Catherine R. Schenk, 1129______________________________________________________________________________

European History Quarterly, Vol.45, No.1 (January 2015)
http://ehq.sagepub.com/content/vol45/issue1/
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


“Martín de Roa, S.J. (1559–1637) and the Consolidation of Catholic Literary Culture in
Spain,” by Rady Roldán-Figueroa, 5-
“Louis XIV, Duke Leopold I and the Neutrality of Lorraine, 1702–1714,” by Phil McCluskey,
34-
“Sartorial Orientalism: Cross-cultural Dressing in Colonial Algeria and Metropolitan France
in the Nineteenth Century,” by Marie-Cecile Thoral, 57-
“Beyond Victimization: Contentious Food Politics in Belgium during World War I,” by
Antoon Vrints, 83-
“Ungodly Subjects: Protestants in National-Catholic Spain, 1939–53,” by Mary Vincent,
108-
European Journal of International Relations, Vol.20, No.4 (December 2014)
http://ejt.sagepub.com/content/vol20/issue4/




“The closing of the American mind: ‘American School’ International Relations and the state
of grand theory,” by Daniel J. Levine and Alexander D. Barder, 863“Power in practice: Negotiating the international intervention in Libya,” by Rebecca AdlerNissen and Vincent Pouliot, 889-
“Rising powers, global capitalism and liberal global governance: A historical materialist
account of the BRICs challenge,” by Matthew D. Stephen, 912-
“Popular narratives versus Chinese history: Implications for understanding an emergent
China,” by Ja Ian Chong, 939-
23 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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
“Why was there no religious war in premodern East Asia?” by David C. Kang, 965-
“Clash of the treaties: Responding to institutional interplay in European Community–Chile
swordfish negotiations,” by Mark Axelrod, 987-
Procedures matter: Justice and effectiveness in international trade negotiations,” by Cecilia
Albin and Daniel Druckman, 1014“Why do conflict-generated diasporas pursue sovereignty-based claims through statebased or transnational channels? Armenian, Albanian and Palestinian diasporas in the UK
compared,” by Maria Koinova, 1043“When does America drop dictators?” by John M. Owen IV and Michael Poznansky, 1072-
“The power of human rights tribunals: Compliance with the European Court of Human
Rights and domestic policy change,” by Courtney Hillebrecht, 1100“Global democracy and the democratic minimum: Why a procedural account alone is
insufficient,” by Klaus Dingwerth, 1124-
The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms, Vol.19, No.7 (October 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cele20/19/7





“‘Can It Be that a Sole Authority Remains?’ Epistemological Conundrums in PostReformation Polemic,” by Daniel Cheely, 819-
“Spinoza’s Democratic Imagination,” by Eugene Garver, 833-
“The Meaning and Value of Freedom: Berlin contra Arendt,” by Kei Hiruta, 854-
“Arendt’s Promise to Civil Society: Bridging the Social and the Political,” by Senem Yildirim,
869“Narrative Identity and Trauma: Sebald’s Memory Landscape,” by Simona Mitroiu, 883-
Reviews
 “Judging the Trial: Hannah Arendt as a Moral Philosopher of Nation-State Building,” by
Alek D. Epsteinm 901

“Self-Referentiality and Philosophy,” by Brayton Polka, 906“Semantic Expansions of Ekphrasis,” by Eli Rozik, 910-
The European Legacy: Toward New Paradigms, Vol.20, No.1 (January 2015)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cele20/20/1
24 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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
“Images of Europe around the Crisis,” by Daniel Innerarity, 1-
“The Will to Exist: Reflections on Desire and the Good in Western Culture,” by Brayton
Polka, 12-
“La Société des Nations suppose la Société des Esprits: The Debate on Modern Humanism,’’
by Annemarie van Heerikhuizen, 25-
“Tocqueville’s Dual Theory of Revolution,” by Michal Kuz, 41-
“Girard and Heidegger: Mimesis, Mitsein, Addiction,” by Joachim Duyndam, 56-
Review
 “Uncovering Azmanova’s The Scandal of Reason,” by Michael Berman, 65
“From Birth to Being: Enlightenment Philosophers, Romantic Poets, and the Growth of
Language,” by Michael J. Neth, 68-
European Review of History: Revue Europeenne d'Histoire, Vol.21, No.5 (October 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cerh20/21/5





“Le génocide des Arméniens et l'opinion publique française durant la Première Guerre
Mondiale,’’ by Bernard Wilkin, 635“An obligation of conscience: gossip as social control in an eighteenth-century Flemish
town,” by Elwin Hofman, 635“Artisan dynamics in the age of colonialism: the social history of Moroccan Jewish
goldsmiths in the inter-war period,” by Shai Srougo, 671-
“Letter-writing and literary culture in Merovingian Gaul,” by Hope Deejune Williard, 681“The monetary reform of 1854 in the Duchy of Schleswig: a case of attempted statebuilding,” by Thomas Clausen, 711-
Historiography—Historiographie
 “Maltese ‘gallarija’: a gender and space perspective,” by Cyrus Vakili-Zad, 729-
European Review of History: Revue Europeenne d'Histoire, Vol.21, No.6 (November 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cerh20/21/6
Special Issue: Between Emblem and Labyrinth: the Many Images of Europe in Art, Literature,
and Scholarship, 1500–1800
25 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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

“Introduction: Between emblem and labyrinth: the many images of Europe in art,
literature, and scholarship, 1500–1800,” by Jacqueline Hylkema & Han Lamers, 789-
“Europe's confused transmutation: the realignment of moral cartography in Juan de la
Cosa's Mappa Mundi (1500),” by James L. Smith, 799“De-personifying Collaert's Four Continents: European descriptions of continental
diversity, 1585–1625,” by Edmond Smith, 817-
“Princely longing for Europe: Constantine II Brâncoveanu's Mogoşoaia Palace (1702) and
the creation of a European identity,” by Bogdan Cornea, 837-
“Maritime countries in the Far West: Western Europe in Xie Qinggao's Records of the Sea
(c.1783–93),” by Ronald Chung-yam Po, 857“A civilisation at peril: Goethe's representation of Europe during the Sattelzeit,” by
Dominic Eggel, 871-
“One continent, one language? Europa Celtica and its language in Philippus Cluverius'
Germania antiqua (1616) and beyond,” by Toon Van Hal, 889-
European Review of History: Revue Europeenne d'Histoire, Vol.22, No.1 (January 2015)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cerh20/22/1
Special Issue: ‘The personal is political’: sexuality, gender and the Left in Europe during the
1970s
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




“‘The personal is political’: sexuality, gender and the Left in Europe during the 1970s,” by
Nikolaos Papadogiannis & Sebastian Gehrig, 1-
“Red and Purple? Feminism and young Greek Eurocommunists in the 1970s,” by Nikolaos
Papadogiannis, 16-
“Taking the Pill after the ‘sexual revolution’: female contraceptive decisions in England and
West Germany in the 1970s,” by Eva-Maria Silies, 41“Gay activism in Modell Deutschland,” by Craig Griffiths, 60-
“Male feminism: men's participation in women's emancipation movements and debates.
Case studies from Belgium and France (1967–1984),” by Philippe De Wolf, 77-
“The bride in red: morality and private relationships in the Italian revolutionary Left – the
case of the Maoist group Servire il popolo,” by Eros Francescangeli, 101“‘A politically non-dangerous revolution is not a revolution’: critical readings of the
concept of sexual revolution by Yugoslav feminists in the 1970s,” by Zsófia Lóránd, 120-
26 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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

“The spectacle of the hunger-stricken body: a German–Italian terrorist, Swiss prisons and
the (ir)rational body politic,” by Dominique Martine Grisard, 138-
“Disciplining gender and (homo)sexuality in state-socialist Hungary in the 1970s,” by Judit
Takács, 161“‘Let's get laid because it's the end of the world!’: sexuality, gender and the Spanish Left in
late Francoism and the Transición,” by Kostis Kornetis, 176-
Europe-Asia Studies, Vol.66, No.9 (October 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ceas20/66/9
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
“The Political Resurrection of Russian Governors,” by Joel C. Moses, 1395-
“Lottizzazione Russian Style: Russia's Two-tier Media System,” by John A. Dunn, 1425-
“Reconstructing the History of Early Communism and Armed Resistance in Romania,” by
Monica Ciobanu, 1452-
“The Limits of Transparency Promotion in Azerbaijan: External Remedies to ‘Reverse the
Curse,’” by Kerem Öge, 1482“The Place of Memory in Understanding Urban Change in Central Asia: The Cities of
Bishkek and Ferghana,” by Moya Flynn, Natalya Kosmarskaya & Guzel Sabirova, 1501“Soviet Partisan Violence against Soviet Civilians: Targeting Their Own,” by Alexander
Statiev, 1525-
“Knowledge-Sharing Subsidiaries in Central and Eastern Europe,” by Sergey Filippov,
1553-
Europe-Asia Studies, Vol.66, No.10 (November 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ceas20/66/10

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

“Is Russia the Emerging Global ‘Breadbasket’? Re-cultivation, Agroholdings and Grain
Production,” by Oane Visser, Max Spoor & Natalia Mamonova, 1589“Authoritarian Electoral Engineering and its Limits: A Curious Case of the Imperiali
Highest Averages Method in Russia,” by Grigorii V. Golosov, 1611-
“Much Contest, Little Censure: Motions in the Romanian Parliament (1989–2012),” by
Lavinia Stan & Diane Vancea, 1629-
“From an Estate to a Cossack Nation: Kuban' Samostiinost’, 1917,” by Ja-Jeong Koo, 164927 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015


“Common Foreign and Security Policy Alignment in the Southern Caucasus: Convergence,
‘Pick and Choose’ or Indifference?” by Sebastian Mayer, 1679“Political Economy of Modern Belarus: Going Against Mainstream?” by Viachaslau
Yarashevich, 1703-
Foreign Affairs, Vol. 93, No.6 (November/December 2014)
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/issues/2014/93/6
Comments
 “A Hard Education,” by Gideon Rose and Jonathan Tepperman





“More Small Wars,” by Max Boot
“Pick Your Battles,” by Richard K. Betts
“Withdrawal Symptoms,” by Rick Brennan
“Homeward Bound?” by Daniel Byman and Jeremy Shapiro
“The Good War?” Peter Tomsen
Essays
 “The Unraveling,” by Richard N. Haass







“China's Imperial President,” by Elizabeth C. Economy
“Normal Countries,” by Andrei Shleifer and Daniel Treisman
“The End of the Military-Industrial Complex,” by William J. Lynn III
“The Strategic Logic of Trade,” by Michael B. Froman
“Culture War,” by James Cuno
“Promises to Keep,” by Bjorn Lomborg
“Misrule of the Few,” by Pavlos Eleftheriadis
Interview
 “Opening Indonesia,” by Joko Widodo

“The Mission for Manila,” by Benigno Aquino III
Reviews & Responses
 “The War That Didn't End All Wars,” by Lawrence D. Freedman
28 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015




“Why They Fought,” by Michael Mandelbaum
“What Heidegger Was Hiding,” by Gregory Fried
“Response: Faulty Powers,” by Michael McFaul; Stephen Sestanovich; John J. Mearsheimer
“Response: A Reunified Theory,” by John Delury and Chung-in Moon; Sue Mi Terry
Foreign Affairs, Vol. 94, No.1 (January/February 2015)
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/issues/2015/94/1
Comments
 “Schumpeter's Heirs,” by Gideon Rose




“Start-Up Slowdown,” by Robert Litan
“The Anti-Innovators,” by James Bessen
“The Innovative State,” by Mariana Mazzucato
“The Power of Market Creation,” by Bryan C. Mezue, Clayton M. Christensen, and Derek
van Bever
Essays
 “The Calm Before the Storm,” by Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Gregory F. Treverton





“Europe Reborn,” by Matthias Matthijs and R. Daniel Kelemen
“Leaving the West Behind,” by Hans Kundnani
“Under the Sea,” by Robert Martinage
“Darkness Invisible,” by Thomas R. Insel, Pamela Y. Collins, and Steven E. Hyman
“The G-Word,” by Thomas de Waal
Interview
 “The Man Who Sells Everything,” by Jeff Bezos



“The Art of the Cell,” by Marcelo Claure
“She, Robot,” by Helen Greiner
“Africa Calling,” by Mo Ibrahim
29 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015


“Much Ventured, Much Gained,” by Michael Moritz
“The Nordic Model,” by Niklas Zennstrom
Reviews & Responses
 “Thinkers and Tinkerers,” by James Surowiecki







“Generation Putin,” by Sarah E. Mendelson
“How to Think Like Edmund Burke,” by Iain Hampsher-Monk
“Response: Exit Music,” by Lawrence J. Korb; Rick Brennan
“Response: Friends Without Benefits,” by Robert Boggs; Nicholas Burns
“Response: Who Lost Congo?” by Herman J. Cohen; Charles G. Cogan; Stephen R. Weissman
“Response: Haters Gonna Hate,” by Christian Madsbjerg; Gregory Fried
“Response: Nuclear Waste,” by James Blackwell; Barry Blechman
Foreign Policy, Issue 209 (November 2014)
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/magazine#2014
Column
 “Dis Town,” by David Rothkopf
Feature
 “The Forgotten Streets,” by Scott C. Johnson
Inbox
 “Biomimetics: A Short History,” by Jake Scobey-Thal

“Epiphanies from Christine Lagarde,” by FP Staff
In Other Words
 “Can You Write a Novel on Twitter?” by Ruth Franklin
Photo Essay
 “L Is for Looting: Teaching Brazilians to read, one socially-charged flashcard at a time,” by
Jonathas De AndradeJ
Foreign Policy Analysis, Vol.11, No.1 (January 2015)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291743-8594
30 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015






“Eisenhower's Scientists: Policy Entrepreneurs and the Test-Ban Debate 1954–1958,” by
Julia M. Macdonald, 1-
“The New Barbary Wars: Forecasting Maritime Piracy,” by Ursula E. Daxecker and
Brandon C. Prins, 23-
“Consequences of Reversing the European Union Integration,” by Jacek Kugler, Ali
Fisunoğlu and Birol Yeşilada, 45-
“Scaling CAMEO: Psychophysical Magnitude Scaling of Conflict and Cooperation,” by G.
Dale Thomas, 69“Democracy, Territory, and Armed Conflict, 1919–1995,” by Johann Park and Patrick
James, 85-
“Easier Done Than Said: Transnational Bribery, Norm Resonance, and the Origins of the US
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act,” by Ellen Gutterman, 109-
French Historical Studies, Vol.37, No.4 (Fall 2014)
http://fhs.dukejournals.org/content/vol37/issue4.toc


“Conflit civil et relations interétatiques dans la France d’Ancien Régime : La révolte de
Gaston d’Orléans, 1631-1632,’’ by Michel De Waele , 565-
“‘Venus of the Capitol’: Madame Tallien and the Politics of Beauty under the Directory,” by
Christine Adams, 599-
“Tokyo Rosalie? A Franco-Japanese Envoy and Entrepreneur in the South Pacific, 18901959,” by Chad B. Denton, 631Review Article
 “French Feminisms, 1848-1949,” by Jean Elisabeth Pedersen, 663
French History, Vol.28, No.4 (December 2014)
http://fh.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol28/issue4




“Financial crisis and statecraft under Louis XIV: the Jacobite Jean Glover and Europe’s first
popular lotteries,” by Marie-Laure Legay, 453“Did Cicero swear the Tennis Court Oath?” by Robert Blackman, 471-
“The peasants of Paris: Limousin migrant masons in the nineteenth century,” by Kiva
Silver, 498-
“Networks and refugees: Salomon Grumbach’s activism in late Third Republic France,” by
Meredith L. Scott-Weaver, 52031 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015

“Romanians of the French Resistance,” by Gavin Bowd, 541-
French Politics, Culture & Society, Vol. 32, No.3 (Winter 2014)
http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/fpcs/2014/00000032/00
000003
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
“Underwater Optics as Symbolic Form,” by Margaret Cohen, 1-
“Dimanche à Orly: The Jet-Age Airport and the Spectacle of Technology between Sky and
Earth,” by Vanessa R. Schwartz, 24“‘Plunging the Soul into Contemplation’: On MoMA's Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern
Landscapes,” by Nicole C. Rudolph, 45“The Carnot Commission and the Teacher Insurgency of Second Republic France,” by
Nicholas Toloudis, 57-
“Continental Collaboration: The Transition from Ultranationalism to Pan-Europeanism by
the Interwar French Fascist Right,” by Sarah Shurts, 79“The Mendès France Milk Regime: Alcoholism as a Problem of Agricultural Subsidies,
1954–1955,” by Joseph Bohling, 97-
“A Capitalism That Kills: Workplace Suicides at France Télécom,” by Sarah Waters, 121-
German History, Vol.32, No.4 (December 2014)
http://gh.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol32/issue4/
 “Two Worlds Become One: A ‘Counter-Intuitive’ View of the Roman Empire and
‘Germanic’ Migration,” by Guy Halsall, 515

“Between Waterberg and Sandveld: An Environmental Perspective on the German–Herero
War of 1904,” by Philipp N. Lehmann, 533“Journalistic Statesmanship: Protecting the Press in Weimar Germany and Abroad,” by
Heidi J.S. Tworek, 559-
Forum
 “Religious History beyond Confessionalization,” 579-
Reflections
 “On Forced Migrations: Transnational Realities and National Narratives in Post-1945
(West) Germany,” by Pertti Ahonen, 599-
Review Article
 “Memories of the Bombing of German Cities in World War II,” by Jeffry Diefendorf, 61532 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
German Politics, Vol. 23, No.3 (October 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fgrp20/23/3




“Post-Cabinet Careers of Regional Ministers in Germany, 1990–2011,” by Klaus Stolz &
Jörn Fischer, 157-
“Political Sophistication and Vote Intention Switching: The Timing of Electoral Volatility in
the 2009 German Election Campaign,” by Ruth Dassonneville, 174“Right-Wing Violence in Germany: Assessing the Objectives, Personalities and Terror Trail
of the National Socialist Underground and the State's Response to It,” by Lee McGowan,
196“Non-State Actors, Political Opportunity Structures and Foreign Relations: The Case of
Germany's Federation of Expellees and the ‘Foundation Flight, Expulsion and
Reconciliation,’” by Alexander Wochnik, 213-
German Politics, Vol. 23, No.3 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fgrp20/23/3
Special Issue: The Merkel Government and the German Election of 2013


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
“From ‘Dream Team’ to ‘Marriage of Convenience’? An Introduction,” by Thomas Saalfeld
& Reimut Zohlnhöfer, 237“A Third Term for a Popular Chancellor: An Analysis of Voting Behaviour in the 2013
German Federal Election,” by Harald Schoen & Robert Greszki, 251-
“The New Electoral Law – or: Good Things Don't Always Come to Those Who Wait,” by
Joachim Behnke, 268-
“Courting the Voters? Policy Implications of Party Competition for the Reform Output of
the Second Merkel Government,” by Reimut Zohlnhöfer & Fabian Engler, 284“Ambitious Goals, Deficient Output: Tax and Fiscal Policies of the Conservative–Liberal
Government, 2009–13,” by Thomas Rixen, 304“A Grand Coalition for the Euro: The Second Merkel Cabinet, the Euro Crisis and the
Elections of 2013,” by Hubert Zimmermann, 322-
“Administering the Inherited ‘Employment Miracle’: The Labour Market Policy of the
Second Merkel Government,” by Frank Bandau & Kathrin Dümig, 337-
“The Policy of Strategic Demobilisation: The Social Policy of the Christian Democratic–
Liberal Coalition, 2009–13,” by Manfred G. Schmidt, 535-
33 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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

“Health Policy Prior to the German Federal Election of 2013: The Party Political
Marginalisation of a Previously Central Topic in Election Campaigns,” by Nils C. Bandelow
& Anja Hartmann, 371-
“Grand Coalition and Multi-Party Competition: Explaining Slowing Reforms in Gender
Policy in Germany (2009–13),” by Annette Henninger & Angelika von Wahl, 386“Education, Federalism and the 2013 Bundestag Elections,” by Helga A. Welsh, 400-
“The Ambiguity of Veto Power in Coalitions: German Liberals' Role as a Watchdog in
Justice and Home Affairs and their Failure to Sell Stalemate as Success in the Federal
Elections of 2013,” by Astrid Lorenz & Dorothee Riese, 415-
“Energy Transition by Conviction or by Surprise? Environmental Policy from 2009 to
2013,” by Christian Huß, 430-
“End of Consensus? The European Leadership Discourse of the Second Merkel Government
during the Eurozone Crisis and Its Contestation in Debates of the Bundestag (2009−13),”
by Frank Wendler, 446“German Defence Policy under the Second Merkel Chancellorship,” by Tom Dyson, 460-
German Politics & Society, Vol. 32, No. 4 (Winter 2014)
http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/gerpol/2014/00000032/
00000004
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

“Difficult Decisions: The GAL and “Schwarz-Grün” in Hamburg,” by Alice Cooper, 1-
“The Higher the Better? A Comparative Analysis of Sociodemographic Characteristics and
Human Capital of German Federal Government Members,” by Kartin Scharfenkamp,
Alexander Dilger, 21-
“Losing Literature: The Reduction of the GDR to History,” by Elizabeth Preister Steding,
39-
Forum
 “Eastern German Cooperative Farming: On the Cusp of a New Generation,” by Dylan
Bennett, 56German Studies Review, Vol.37, No.3 (October 2014)
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/german_studies_review/

“In Memoriam: Hans-Ulrich Wehler, 1931–2014,” by Volker Berghahn, x34 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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“‘Mein beschränkter Raum zwingt mich, auf das Selbstschauen zu verweisen.’ Adele
Schopenhauers Florenz-Reiseführer,’’ by Anja Peters, 487-
“Evolutionary Theory and the Female Scientist in Wilhelmine von Hillern’s Ein Arzt der
Seele (1869),” by Lisabeth Hock, 507“Friedrich Ritschl, Otto Jahn, Friedrich Nietzsche,” by Anthony K. Jensen, 529-
“Simply Reproducing Reality—: Brecht, Benjamin, and Renger-Patzsch on Photography,”
by Carl Gelderloos, 549“The Racial Yardstick: ‘Ethnotheism’ and Official Nazi Views on Religion,” by Samuel
Koehne, 575“The Meaning of Working Through the East,” by Larson Powell, 597-
“Ostalgie Revisited: The Musealization of Halle-Neustadt,” by Gwyneth Cliver, 615-
Histoire Politique: Politique, Culture, Société, Revue électronique du Centre d’histoire
de
Sciences Po., No.24 (Septembre-Octobre 2014)
http://www.histoire-politique.fr/
Le dossier
 Le programme du Conseil national de la Résistance en perspective
- ‘‘Introduction,’’ by Claire Andrieu
-
‘‘Le programme du CNR dans la dynamique de construction de la nation résistante,’’ by
Claire Andrieu
‘‘The Beveridge Report and Its Implementation: a Revolutionary Project?,’’ by Noel
Whiteside
“Le verre est-il à moitié plein ou à moitié vide ? Résistance et réformes dans la
transition italienne, 1943-1948,” by Giovanni Focardi
‘‘Une évolution inachevée. Les partis communistes français et italien face au
gouvernement de l’économie, 1944-1947,’’ by Massimo Asta
‘‘Nationalisations et souveraineté de l’État,’’ by Olivier Beaud
‘‘Singularité, postérité différentielle et actualité du programme du CNR,’’ by Michel
Margairaz
‘‘Témoignage de Jean Auroux, ancien ministre du Travail du gouvernement d'union de
la gauche, 1981-1983 (Sciences Po, 15 mars 2014,’’ by Jean Auroux
Vari@rticles
 ‘‘Enjeux et enseignements des élections intermédiaires au temps du Cartel (1924-1926).
L’exemple de Léon Daudet, indésirable sénateur du Maine-et-Loire en juin 1925,’’ by JeanÉtienne Dubois
35 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015


‘‘Le fait religieux dans les travaux parlementaires : constantes et évolutions récentes
(1958-2011),’’ by Jean-Pierre Delannoy
‘‘Le RPR face au traité de Maastricht : divisions, recompositions et réminiscences autour de
la dialectique souverainiste,’’ by Jérôme Pozzi
‘Pistes & débats
 “De la difficulté d’être historien du temps présent : entre histoire nationale et histoiremonde,’’ by Jean-François Sirinelli
Sources
 ‘L’Office universitaire de recherche socialiste (OURS), 45 ans d’histoire (et) d’archives
socialistes,’’ by Frédéric Cépède
Portraits & témoignages
 ‘‘Entretien avec Jean-Marc de la Sablière,’’ by Anne Dulphy, Christine Manigand
The Historian, Vol.76, No.4 (Winter 2014)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291540-6563




“A Hierophany Emergent: The Discursive Reconquest of the Urban Landscape of Jerusalem
in Latin Pilgrimage Accounts from the Twelfth Century,” by Basit Hammad Qureshi, 725“A Case Study of Education and Nationalism: The Multicultural Fight for “Souls and Minds”
in Finland, 1891–1921,” by Jyrki Loima, 750-
“Jessie Jordan: A Rejected Scot who Spied for Germany and Hastened America's Flight from
Neutrality,” by Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones, 766“Finding the Nation in Assassination: The Death of S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike and the
Assertion of a Sinhalese Sri Lankan Identity,” by Ian Barrow, 784-
The Historical Journal, Vol.57, No.4 (December 2014)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayIssue?jid=HIS&volumeId=57&seriesId=0&issue
Id=04




“Elizabethan Puritanism And The Politics Of Memory In Post-Marian England,” by Robert
Harkins, 899“Occasional Politeness And Gentlemen's Laughter In 18th C England,” by Kate Davidson,
921“Beethoven And The Sound Of Revolution In Vienna, 1792–1814,” by Rhys Jones, 974-
“Conservative Political Economy And The Problem Of Colonial Slavery, 1823–1833,” by
Michael Taylor, 973-
36 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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



“French And British Post-War Imperial Agendas And Forging An Armenian Homeland
After The Genocide: The Formation Of The Légion D'orient In October 1916,” by Andrekos
Varnava, 997“The Periodical Press And The Intellectual Culture Of Conservatism In Interwar Britain,”
by Gary Love, 1027-
“From A Fascist's Notebook To The Principles Of Rebirth: The Desire For Social Integration
In Hebrew Fascism, 1928–1942,” by Dan Tamir, 1057“Ten Rillington Place And The Changing Politics Of Abortion In Modern Britain,” by Emma
L. Jones and Neil Pemberton, 1085“Daniel Patrick Moynihan, The 1976 New York Senate Race, And The Struggle To Define
American Liberalism,” by Patrick Andelic, 1111-
Historiographical Reviews
 “The Making Of The Early Modern British Fairy Tradition,” by Ronald Hutton, 1135-
“Humanitarianism In Nineteenth-Century Context: Religious, Gendered, National,” by
Abigail Green, 1157________________________________________________________________________________

Historical Reflections Vol.40, No.3 (Winter 2014)
http://berghahn.publisher.ingentaconnect.com/content/berghahn/hisref/2014/00000040/0
0000003
 “Rescuing Early America from Nationalist Narratives: An Intra-Imperial Approach to
Colonial Canada and Louisiana,” by Daniel H. Usner, 1-
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




“‘Source de lumières & de vertus’: Rethinking Éducation, Instruction, and the Political
Pedagogy of the French Revolution,” by Adrian O’Connor, 20“Neither Reformers nor Réformés: The Construction of French Modernity in the
Nineteenth Century,” by Gavin Murray-Miller, 44“A History around Housman's Circumcision,” by Mihail Evans, 68-
“Du symbolisme au néo-classicisme, de l'anarchisme à l'extrême droite: le double
revirement de Camille Mauclair,’’ by Amotz Giladi, 91‘‘Mais qui était donc Gaston Bergery?’’ by Yves Pourcher, 110“Just Who Was Gaston Bergery?” by Yves Pourcher, 131-
Historical Research, Vol.87, No.238 (November 2014)
37 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291468-2281
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“Toward a historical dialectic of culinary styles,” by Ken Albala, 581-
“Episcopal emotions: tears in the life of the medieval bishop,” by Katherine Harvey, 591-
“Licit medicine or ‘Pythagorean necromancy'? The ‘Sphere of Life and Death’ in late
medieval England,” by Joanne Edge, 611-
“The Elizabethan succession question in Roger Edwardes's ‘Castra Regia’ (1569) and ‘Cista
Pacis Anglie’ (1576),” by Victoria Smith, 633-
“The harassment of Isaac Allen: puritanism, parochial politics and Prestwich's troubles
during the first English civil war,” by James Mawdesley, 655“‘Britons, strike home’: politics, patriotism and popular song in British culture, c.1695–
1900,” by Martha Vandrei, 679-
“‘The other boys of Kilmichael’: No. 2 Section, ‘C’ Company, Auxiliary Division Royal Irish
Constabulary, 28 November 1920,” by Andrew Nelson, 703-
“‘For the freedom of captive European nations’: east European exiles in the Cold War,” by
Martin Nekola, 723-
Historien Vol.14 No. 1 (2014)
http://www.historeinonline.org/index.php/historein/issue/current
Editorial
 “Introduction: On the Edge of History and Philosophy,” by Editorial Committee, 5Articles
 “About lost futures or the political heart of history,” by María Inés Mudrovcic, 7

“Illuminating affects: Sexual violence as a crime against humanity. The Argentine case,” by
Cecilia Macon, 22“The ambiguous victim: Miklós Nyiszli's narrative of medical experimentation in
Auschwitz-Birkenau,” by Marius Turda, 43-
Dialogos: Crossing The Borders of Philosophy and History
 “Explorations between philosophy and history,” by Chris F.G. Lorenz, 59

“On the research and the writing phase of the historian's work,” by Hayden White, 71-
“Between positivism and narrativism in Polish methodology of history,” by Krzysztof
Brzechczyn, 75-
38 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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


“On the 'strudel and apples' theory of historiography: A reply to Chris Lorenz,” by Aviezer
Tucker, 88“Chris Lorenz's idea of conceptual inversion,” by Ewa Domanska, 93“Postcolonial theory and false dichotomies,” by Monika Bobako, 95“Reply to my critics,” by Chris F.G. Lorenz, 98-
History Vol.99, No.338 (December 2014)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291468-229X




“Drapery in Exile: Edward III, Colchester and the Flemings, 1351–1367,” by Bart Lambert
and Milan Pajic, 733“The Speed and Efficiency of the Tudor South-West's Royal Post-Stage Service,” by Ian
Cooper, 754“Technologies of the Body: Polite Consumption and the Correction of Deformity in
Eighteenth-Century England,” by David M. Turner and Alun Withey, 755“The Chartist Legacy in the British World: Evidence from New Zealand's Southern
Settlements, 1840s−1870s,” by John Griffiths and Vic Evans, 797-
 “Presenting the History of Africans in Provincial Britain: Norfolk as a Case Study,” by
Richard C. Maguire, 819
“Constitutional Change in England and the Diffusion of Regulatory Initiative, 1660–1714,”
by William A. Pettigrew, 839-
History Compass, Vol.12, No.10 (October 2014)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291478-0542
Britain & Ireland
 “The English Gentry and Military Service, 1300–1450,” by Andy King, 759-
Caribbean & Latin America
 “More than Slaves and Sugar: Recent Historiography of the Trans-imperial Caribbean and
Its Sinew Populations,” by Jesse Cromwell, 770Europe
 “Material Culture and Social History in Early Medieval Western Europe,” by Valerie L.
Garver, 784
“Knowing Skin in Early Modern Europe, c. 1450–1750,” by Craig Koslofsky, 794-
39 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
North America
 “Canada and the Human Rights Framework: Historiographical Trends,” by Jennifer
Tunnicliffe, 807-
World
 “Idealizing Inhabited Wilderness: A Revision to the History of Indigenous Peoples and
National Parks,” by Ezra D. Rashkow, 818History Compass, Vol.12, No.11 (November 2014)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291478-0542
Caribbean and Latin America
 “The Experience of Children in Perón's Argentina: Recent Interventions and Future
Directions,” by Thomas J. Brinkerhoff, 833
“Frontier/Fronteira: A Transnational Reframing of Brazil's Inland Colonization,” by Hal
Langfur, 843-
Europe
 “The Place of Rus' in Medieval Europe,” by Christian Raffensperger, 853-
Middle & Near East
 “An Introduction to the Environmental History of the Mamlūk Sultanate,” by Yehoshua
Frenkel, 866-
North America & World
 “Exploring the Concept of Empire in Pacific History: Individuals, Nations, and Ocean Space
Prior to 1850,” by David Igler, 879History Compass, Vol.12, No.12 (December 2014)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291478-0542
Asia
 “East Asian Odyssey towards One Region: The Problem of East Asia as a Historiographical
Category,” by Hye Jeong Park, 889Australasia & Pacific/North America
 “The Rise of Indigenous Military History,” by Noah Riseman, 901-
Middle & Near East
 “Islamic Architecture and Institutions in the Late Medieval City,” by Ethel Sara Wolper,
912Europe/World History
 “The Reformation in Global Perspective,” by Charles H. Parker, 924-
40 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
Europe
 “The Social and Religious Meanings of Charity in Medieval Europe,” by Adam J. Davis, 935History and Theory, Vol.53, No.4 (December 2014)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291468-2303

“A Regime Of Untranslatables: Temporalities Of Translation And Conceptual History,” by
Alexandra Lianeri, 473-
Forum: Multiple Temporalities
 “Introduction: Multiple Times And The Work Of Synchronization,” by Helge Jordheim, 498



“On Islamic Time: Rethinking Chronology In The Historiography Of Muslim Societies,” by
Shahzad Bashir, 519“Radicalizing Temporal Difference: Anthropology, Postcolonial Theory, And Literary
Time,” by Stefan Helgesson, 454-
“All Together Now: Synchronization, Speed, And The Failure Of Narrativity,” by Geoffrey C.
Bowker, 563“Time Gardens: Historical Concepts In Modern Historiography,” by Lucian Hölscher, 577-
Review Essays
 “From Catastrophe To Hope,” by Carolyn J. Dean, 592-


“Resisting Modern Temporalities: Toward A Critical History Of Breaks In Time,” by
Alexandra Lianeri, 603-
“A Treasure Trove Of Chronological Learning,” by Michał Choptiany, 616-
The History of European Ideas, Vol. 40, No.7 (2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rhei20/40/7
Special Issue: Translation, reception and Enlightened Reform: The case of Forbonnais in
eighteenth-century political economy



“Translation, Reception and Enlightened Reform: The Case of Forbonnais in EighteenthCentury Political Economy,” by Antonella Alimento, 1011-
“Between Utrecht and the War of the Austrian Succession: The Dutch Translation of the
British Merchant of 1728,” by Koen Stapelbroek, 1026-
“Beyond the Treaty of Utrecht: Véron de Forbonnais's French Translation of the British
Merchant (1753),” by Antonella Alimento, 1044-
41 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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
“Véron de Forbonnais and Plumard de Dangeul as Translators of Uztáriz and Ulloa,” by
Niccolò Guasti, 1067-
“Forbonnais and the Discovery of the ‘Science of Commerce’ in Spain (1755–1765),” by
Jesús Astigarraga, 1087-
“The Spanish Translation of the Elémens du Commerce by François Véron Duverger de
Forbonnais: A Linguistic Analysis,” by Elena Carpi, 1089-
“The ‘New Science of Commerce’ in the Holy Roman Empire: Véron de Forbonnais's
Elémens du commerce and its German Readers,” by Marco Cavarzere, 1130-
“Translation as Import Substitution: The Portuguese Version of Véron de Forbonnais's
Elémens du commerce,’’ by Monica Lupetti & Marco E. L. Guidi, 1151-
“Landmarks of Economic Terminology: The First Portuguese Translation of Elémens du
commerce,” by João Paulo Silvestre, Alina Villalva & Esperança Cardeira, 1189“For the Sake of the Republic: The Dutch Translation of Forbonnais's Elémens du
commerce,” by Ida Nijenhuis, 1202-
The History of European Ideas, Vol. 41, No.1 (2015)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rhei20/41/1








“Ancient and Non-Western International Thought,” by Antony Black, 2-
“Thomas Hobbes as a Theorist of Anarchy: A Theological Interpretation,” by William Bain,
13“Hobbes's Contribution to International Thought, and the Contribution of International
Thought to Hobbes,” by David Boucher, 29-
“Armitage on Locke on International Theory: The Two Treatises of Government and the
Right of Intervention,” by Paul Kelly, 49“Historiographical Foundations of Modern International Thought: Histories of the
European States-System from Florence to Göttingen,” by Richard Devetak, 62-
“Non-Cosmopolitan Universalism: On Armitage's Foundations of International Political
Thought,” by Duncan Ivison, 78“The Diffusion of Sovereignty,” by Terry Nardin, 89-
“Turning International: Foundations of Modern International Thought and New Paradigms
for Intellectual History,” by Glenda Sluga, 10342 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015


“Modern International Thought: Problems and Prospects,” by David Armitage, 116-
“Rousseau's Discarded Children: The Panoply of Excuses and the Question of Hypocrisy,”
by Matthew D. Mendham, 131-
Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Vol.28, No.3 (Winter 2014)
http://hgs.oxfordjournals.org/archive/




“Entangled Memories: A Reassessment of 1950s French Holocaust Historiography,” by
Johannes Heuman, 409“‘He spoke Yiddish like a Jew”: Neighbors' Contribution to the Mass Killing of Jews in
Northern Bukovina and Bessarabia, July 1941,” by Simon Geissbühler, 430-
“Treating an Auschwitz Prisoner-Physician: The Case of Dr. Maximilian Samuel,” by Sari J.
Siegel, 450“Neutrality, Objectivity, and Dissociation: Cultural Trauma and Educational Messages in
German Holocaust Memorial Sites and Documentation Centers,” by Gad Yair, 482-
Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 30, No. 1 (2015)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fint20/30/1#.U0lUuVcUqSo
Interview
 “A Conversation with James R. Clapper, Jr., The Director Of National Intelligence in the
United States,” by Loch K. Johnson, 1Articles
 “The Institution of Modern Cryptology in the Netherlands and in the Netherlands East
Indies, 1914–1935,” by Karl de Leeuw, 26



“Increasing Canada's Foreign Intelligence Capability: Is it a Dead Issue?” by Stuart Farson
& Nancy Teeple, 47-
“Handling and Mishandling Estimative Probability: Likelihood, Confidence, and the Search
for Bin Laden,” by Jeffrey A. Friedman & Richard Zeckhauser, 77“NSA: National Security vs. Individual Rights,” by Amitai Etzioni, 100-
“Propaganda, Internal Security and Alliance Politics: Greek Proposals to NATO in the
1950s,” by Evanthis Hatzivassiliou, 137-
Review Essay
 “Isabelle Duyvesteyn (ed.), Intelligence and Strategic Culture,” by Roel van der Velde, 15943 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
International History Review, Vol.36, No. 5 (2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rinh20/36/5
Special Issue: Traditions in British International Thought








“Traditions of British International Thought,” by Ian Hall & Mark Bevir, 823-
“Halford J. Mackinder, Geopolitics, and the Heartland Thesis,” by Torbjorn L. Knutsen, 835“G.D.H. Cole's International Thought: the Dilemmas of Justifying Socialism in the
Twentieth Century,” by Leonie Holthaus, 858“Russell’s Realist Radicalism,” by Casper Sylvest, 876-
“Barbara Wootton, Friedrich Hayek and the debate on democratic federalism in the
1940s,” by Or Rosenboim, 894“F.A. Hayek and the Reinvention of Liberal Internationalism,” by Jorg Spieker, 919-
“Rival Traditions of Natural Law: Martin Wight and the Theory of International Society,”
by William Bain, 943-
“Martin Wight, Western Values, and the Whig Tradition of International Thought,” by Ian
Hall, 961-
International Interactions: Empirical and Theoretical Research in International
Relations, Vol. 40, No. 5 (2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/gini20/40/5





“Trade and Welfare Compensation: The Missing Links,” by Eunyoung Ha, Dong-Wook Lee
& Puspa Amri, 631“Buying National: Democracy, Public Procurement, and International Trade,” by Daniel
Yuichi Kono & Stephanie J. Rickard, 657-
“The Effects of Political Risk on Different Entry Modes of Foreign Direct Investment,” by
Hoon Lee, Glen Biglaiser & Joseph L. Staats, 683“Ruling the Sea: Managing Maritime Conflicts through UNCLOS and Exclusive Economic
Zones,” by Stephen C. Nemeth, Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, Elizabeth A. Nyman & Paul R.
Hensel, 711-
“Socioeconomic Inequality and Communal Conflict: A Disaggregated Analysis of SubSaharan Africa, 1990–2008,” by Hanne Fjelde & Gudrun Østby, 737-
44 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015



“Smuggler’s Blues: Examining Why Countries Become Narcotics Transit States Using the
New International Narcotics Production and Transit (INAPT) Data Set,” by Peter F.
Trumbore & Byungwon Woo, 763-
“De Facto States in International Politics (1945–2011): A New Data Set,” by Adrian Florea,
788“The Impact of Pro-Government Militias on Human Rights Violations,” by Neil J. Mitchell,
Sabine C. Carey & Christopher K. Butler, 812-
Research Note
 “Minimizing the Effects of Temporal Aggregation on Event Data Analysis,” by G. Dale
Thomas, 837-
International Journal, Vol. 69, No.4 (December 2014)
http://ijx.sagepub.com/
Guest Introduction
 “Contemporary military contracting and the future: Teeth, tails, and concerns,” by
Christopher Spearin, 470
“Women, gender, and international security,” by Maja Catic and Stéfanie von Hlatky, 474-
Scholarly Articles
 “Reframing the anti-mercenary norm: Private military and security companies and
mercenarism,” by Ulrich Petersohn, 475



“Transforming war supply: Considerations and rationales behind contractor support to UK
overseas military operations in the twenty-first century,” by Christopher Kinsey, 494“The future of US military contracting: Current trends and future implications,” by Molly
Dunigan, 510“Canada and contracted war: Afghanistan and beyond,” by Christopher Spearin, 525“Realizing the “market-state”? Military transformation and security outsourcing in
Sweden,” by Joakim Berndtsson, 542-
Review Essay
 “After the gold rush: Corporate Warriors and The Market for Force revisited,” by Aaron
Ettinger, 559Scholarly Essay
 “Deconstructing the 2012 Human Security Report: Examining narratives on wartime
sexual violence,” by Roxanne Krystalli, 574-
45 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015

“Engendering two solitudes? Media representations of women in combat in Quebec and
the rest of Canada,” by Krystel Chapman (née Carrier) and Maya Eichler, 594-
The Lessons of History
 “Human rights for some: Universal human rights, sexual minorities, and the exclusionary
impulse,” by Bonny Ibhawoh, 612______________________________________________________________________________
International Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 11, No. 2 (July 2014)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayBackIssues?jid=ASI



“The Kokuryūkai (Black Dragon Society) and the Rise of Nationalism, Pan-Asianism, and
Militarism In Japan, 1901–1925,” by Sven Saaler, 125“Decentralised Governance as Sites for Self-Formation: A Comparison of Practices of
Welfare Distribution in Telangana, India, and Central Lombok, Indonesia,” by Tanya
Jakimow, 161-
“Mahjong and Urban Life: Individual Rights, Collective Interests, and City Image in PostMao China,” by Di Wang, 187-
The International Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 18, No. 6 (October 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjhr20/18/6
Special Issue: A Renewed Call to Address Women's and Children's Human Rights






“Introduction to the special issue on children's and women's human rights,” by Sonja
Grover, 579“The relationship between children's rights and business,” by Tara M. Collins, 582-
“Genuine social inclusion or superficial co-existence? Former girl soldiers in eastern Congo
returning home,” by Milfrid Tonheim, 634“Democratising democracy: the road from women's to children's suffrage,” by John Wall,
649-
“Women and children versus domestic violence. Legal reflections, needs and challenges in
Spain today,” by Pilar Villanueva Sainz-Pardo, 660-
“The plight of Romanian social protection: addressing the vulnerabilities and well-being in
Romanian Roma families,” by Maria Roth & Stefánia Toma, 714-
The International Journal of Human Rights, Vol. 18, No. 7-8 (November 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fjhr20/18/7-8
46 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015









“The right to assisted suicide in the case law of the European Court of Human Rights,” by
Gregor Puppinck & Claire de La Hougue, 735-
“The European Court of Human Rights and domestic violence: Valiuliene v. Lithuania,” by
Ronagh J.A. McQuigg, 756-
‘‘‘Teacher, we are hungry’. The violation of Quilombolas students’ right to adequate food, a
case study,” by Roseane do Socorro Gonçalves Viana & Anne C. Bellows, 774“Sustainable development for whose benefit? Brazil's economic power and human rights
violations in the Amazon and Mozambique,” by Helle Abelvik-Lawson, 795“Developing public support for human rights in the United Kingdom: reasserting the
importance of socio-economic rights,” by Karen Bell & Sarah Cemlyn, 822-
“Testing the Atlantic Charter: linking anticolonialism, self-determination and universal
human rights,” by Bonny Ibhawoh, 842“Re-entry problems: the post-prison challenges and experiences of former political
prisoners in South Africa and Northern Ireland,” by Bill Rolston & Lillian Artz, 861-
“The African Women's Protocol and sexual rights,” by Ebenezer Durojaye & Lucyline
Nkatha Murungi, 881-
“Intellectual-HRDs and claims for academic freedom under human rights law,” by Robert
Quinn & Jesse Levine, 898-
International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, Vol. 28, No. 1 (January
2015)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ujic20/28/1





“Ghosts of the Spy Wars: A Personal Reminder to Interested Parties,” by Tennent H. (Pete)
Bagley, 1-
“Intelligence-Led Air Transport Security: Pre-Screening for Watch-Lists, No-Fly Lists to
Forestall Terrorist Threats,” by Martin Rudner, 38“Warning Analysis: Focusing on Perceptions of Vulnerability,” by John A. Gentry, 64-
“Israel's Strategic Doctrine: Updating Intelligence Community Responsibilities,” by Louis
René Beres, 89“Soft Spying: Leveraging Globalization as Proxy Military Rivalry,” by Matthew Crosston,
105-
47 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015



“Building Better Intelligence Frameworks Through Effective Governance,” by Patrick F.
Walsh, 123-
“Counterintelligence Outreach: Building a Strategic Capability,” by Michael D. Stouder &
Scott Gallagher, 143-
“Argo/Our Man in Tehran,” by William J. Daugherty, 156-
International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 46, No. 4 (November 2014)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayBackIssues?jid=MES
Special Issue: World War I







“Introduction,” by Mustafa Aksakal, 653-
“Republic Of Paradox: The League of Nations Minority Protection Regime and the New
Turkey's Step-Citizens,” by Lerna Ekmekcioglu, 657-
“The Case of William Yale: Cairo’s Syrians and the Arab Origins of American Influence in
the Post-Ottoman Middle East, 1917–19,” by Max Reibman, 681-
“Memories of the Beloved”: Oral Histories from the 1916–19 Siege of Medinam” by Alia El
Bakri, 703“When Mothers Ate Their Children: Wartime Memory and the Language of Food in Syria
and Lebanon,” by Najwa al-Qattan, 719-
“Feeding the City: The Beirut Municipality and the Politics of Food During World War I,” by
Melanie Schulze Tanielian, 737“Atrocity Propaganda and the Nationalization of The Masses in the Ottoman Empire
During the Balkan Wars (1912–13),” by Y. Doğan Çetinkaya, 759-
Roundtable: The Technopolitics of War in the 20th and 21st Centuries
 “Introduction,” by Toby C. Jones, 779




“The Dirty Subject of the First World War,” by Jennifer L. Derr, 781-
“Bodies and Needs: Lessons from Palestine,” by Sherene Seikaly, 784-
“Sequestration, Scholarship, Sentinel: The Post-Politics of Peace (and War),” by Nikolas
Kosmatopoulos, 787-
“The Government of War,” by Dina Rizk Khoury, 791-
“The 21st-Century Turn to Culture: American Exceptionalism,” by Rochelle Davis, 794-
48 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015

“Toxic War and the Politics of Uncertainty in Iraq,” by Toby C. Jones, 797-
Review Articles
 “Recording World Wars,” by Miriam Cooke, 801-
International Organization, Vol. 68, No.4 (Fall 2014)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayBackIssues?jid=INO







“Explaining the Transnational Design of International Organizations,” by Jonas Tallberg,
Thomas Sommerer, Theresa Squatrito and Christer Jönsson, 741-
“To Concede or to Resist? The Restraining Effect of Military Alliances,” by Songying Fang,
Jesse C. Johnson and Brett Ashley Leeds, 775“Trade, Foreign Direct Investment, and Immigration Policy Making in the United States,”
by Margaret E. Peters, 811“Decision Maker Preferences for International Legal Cooperation,” by Emilie M. HafnerBurton, Brad L. LeVeck, David G. Victor and James H. Fowler, 845“Audience Features and the Strategic Timing of Trade Disputes,” by Stephen Chaudoin,
877“The Secret Success of Nonproliferation Sanctions,” by Nicholas L. Miller, 913“Going Abroad: Transnational Solicitation and Contention by Ethnopolitical
Organizations,” by Victor Asal, Justin Conrad and Peter White, 945-
Research Notes
 “From Loss to Looting? Battlefield Costs and Rebel Incentives for Violence,” by Reed M.
Wood, 979-
International Organization, Vol. 69, No.1 (Winter 2015)
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayBackIssues?jid=INO




“Democracy and Multilateralism: The Case of Vote Buying in the UN General Assembly,” by
David B. Carter and Randall W. Stone, 1“Price Stability and Central Bank Independence: Discipline, Credibility, and Democratic
Institutions,” by Cristina Bodea and Raymond Hicks, 35-
“Central Banks at War,” by Paul Poast, 63-
“Multilateral Aid and Domestic Economic Interests,” by Elena V. McLean, 9749 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015

“When Are Sanctions Effective? A Bargaining and Enforcement Framework,” by Navin A.
Bapat and Bo Ram Kwon, 131-
Research Notes
 “Revolution, Personalist Dictatorships, and International Conflict,” by Jeff D. Colgan and
Jessica L.P. Weeks, 163
“Human Rights, Geostrategy, and EU Foreign Policy, 1989–2008,” by Joakim Kreutz, 195-
“Do Finite Duration Provisions Reduce International Bargaining Delay?” by David H.
Bearce, Cody D. Eldredge and Brandy J. Jolliff, 219________________________________________________________________________________

International Peacekeeping, Vol. 21, No. 5 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/finp20/21/5






“The ‘Responsibility to Protect’ and the Structural Problems of Preventive Humanitarian
Intervention,” by Roland Paris, 569“Gender and Security Sector Reform: Gendering Differently?” by Rahel Kunz, 604-
“Reducing Sexual Exploitation and Abuse: Does Deterrence Work to Prevent SEAs in UN
Peacekeeping Missions?” by Kelly Neudorfer, 623“Sweden's Participation in Operation Unified Protector: Obligations and Interests,” by
Fredrik Doeser, 642-
“Dying for Peace? Fatality Trends for United Nations Peacekeeping Personnel,” by James I.
Rogers & Caroline Kennedy, 658“Peacebuilding and International Responsibility,” by Gëzim Visoka & John Doyle, 673pages 673-692
International Politics, Vol. 51, No. 6 (November 2014)
http://www.palgrave-journals.com/ip/journal/v51/n6/index.html

“Russian–American relations: From Tsarism to Putin,” by Charles E Ziegler, 671-
Power Size
 “Middle powerhood as a legitimation strategy in the developing world: The cases of Brazil
and Turkey,” by Nukhet A Sandal, 693
“Small states: Survival and proliferation,” by Matthias Maass, 709-
Apathy at the UN?
50 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015

“Absenteeism in the General Assembly of the United Nations: Why some member states
rarely vote,” by Diana Panke, 729-
Disarming
 “Deterrence, disarmament and arms control,” by Heinz Gärtner, 750International Politics, Vol. 52, No. 1 (January 2015)
http://www.palgrave-journals.com/ip/journal/v52/n1/index.html

“Parallels, prescience and the past: Analogical reasoning and contemporary international
politics,” by Andrew Mumford, 1-
Rethinking Iraq
 “Knowledge without power: International relations scholars and the US war in Iraq,” by
James D. Long, Daniel Maliniak, Susan M. Peterson and Michael J. Tierney, 20
“(Ac)Counting (for) their dead: Responsiveness to Iraqi civilian casualties in the US House
of Representatives,” by Matthew Coen Leep, 45-
Terrorism and the War of Terror
 “Framing the threat of catastrophic terrorism: Genealogy, discourse and President
Clinton’s counterterrorism approach,” by Chin-Kuei Tsui, 66
“The roots of strategic failure: The Somalia Syndrome and Al Qaeda’s path to 9/11,” by
Robert G Patman, 89-
Rationalism or Constructivism?
 “Rationality, norms and identity in international relations,” by Ji Young Choi, 110-
R2P Revisited
 “The responsibility to protect doctrine – Coherent after all: A reply to Friberg-Fernros and
Brommesson,” by Tim Haesebrouck, 128International Relations, Vol. 28, No. 4 (December 2014)
http://ire.sagepub.com/content/vol28/issue4/



“What can International Relations Theory learn from the origins of World War I?” by
Richard Ned Lebow, 387-
“Manufacturing a ‘Muted Public Reaction’: Pakistani political discourse in the wake of
9/11,” by Nazya Fiaz, 411-
“What constitutes a ‘Manifest Failing’? Ambiguous and inconsistent terminology and the
Responsibility to Protect,” by Adrian Gallagher, 428-
Forum
51 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015






“The expansion of international society after 30 years: Views from the European
periphery,” by Filip Ejdus, 445-
“Entry into international society: Central and South East European experiences,” by Filip
Ejdus, 446“Remembering the Roman past, building a European future,” by Alexandra Gheciu, 449-
“Lost in translatio imperii: Slovakia’s layered entry into international society,” by Jozef
Bátora, 456“The long shadow of Byzantium over Serbia’s entry into international society,” by Filip
Ejdus, 461“Go West! Turkey’s entry into international society,” by Einar Wigen, 468-
Conversations in International Relations
 “Interview with Robert Jervis,” by Nicholas J. Wheeler, 479___________________________________________________________________________
International Relations of the Asia Pacific, Vol.15, No. 1 (January 2015)
http://irap.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol15/issue1




“Who defines the rules of the game in East Asia? The Trans-Pacific Partnership and the
strategic use of international institutions,” by Xinyuan Dai, 1-
“Doubts down under: American extended deterrence, Australia, and the 1999 East Timor
crisis,” by Michael Cohen and Andrew O′Neil, 27“Rethinking the IR theory of empire in late imperial China,” by Joseph MacKay, 53-
“Crouching tiger, lurking dragon: understanding Taiwan's sovereignty and trade linkages
in the twenty-first century,” by Michael I. Magcamit and Alexander C. Tan, 81-
Research Notes
 “‘The Loud Dissenter and its Cautious Partner’ – Russia, China, global governance and
humanitarian intervention,” by Aglaya Snetkov and Marc Lanteigne, 113
“The rationale for supporting nuclear power: analysis of Taiwanese public opinion
survey,” by Xiaochen Su, Chung-li Wu, Yen-chieh Liao, Tai-De Lee, and Chen Tsao, 147-
International Security, Vol. 39, No. 2 (Fall 2014)
http://www.mitpressjournals.org/loi/isec

“The Strategic Logic of Nuclear Proliferation,” by Nuno P. Monteiro, Alexandre Debs, 7-
52 | P a g e
H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015




“Racing toward Tragedy?: China's Rise, Military Competition in the Asia Pacific, and the
Security Dilemma,” by Adam P. Liff, G. John Ikenberry, 52-
“Why Factions Switch Sides in Civil Wars: Rivalry, Patronage, and Realignment in Sudan,”
by Lee J.M. Seymour, 92“Old Habits, New Consequences: Pakistan's Posture toward Afghanistan since 2001 No
Access,” by Khalid Homayun Nadiri, 132“Pakistan's Forgotten Genocide—A Review Essay,” by Sumit Ganguly, 169-
 “Correspondence: A Cyber Disagreement,” by Jon R. Lindsay, Lucas Kello, 181______________________________________________________________________________
International Spectator, Vol. 49, No. 4 (December 2014)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rspe20/49/4
The EU’s Institutional Turnover
 “In Search of a Role for the High Representative: The Legacy of Catherine Ashton,” by
Niklas Helwig & Carolin Rüger, 1

“The Rotating Council Presidency and the New Intergovernmentalism,” by Uwe Puetter,
18“Populism in the European Parliament: What Implications for the Open Society?” by
Heather Grabbe & Nadja Groot, 33-
Opinions
 “The Crisis of the E/xceptional U/nion,” by Ivan Krastev, 47
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 “The Four Pillars of Russia’s Power Narrative,” by Andrey Makarychev & Alexandra Yatsyk,
62
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at Work,” by Alena Vysotskaya Guedes Vieira, 97“The European Endowment for Democracy and Democracy Promotion in the EU
Neighbourhood,” by Serena Giusti & Enrico Fassi, 112-
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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International Studies Perspectives, Vol. 15, No. 4 (November 2014)
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118516737/home
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Pedagogical Suggestions,” by Helen Dexter and Emmanuel-Pierre Guittet, 374-
“Simulation Games in Teaching International Relations: Insights from a Multi-Day, MultiStage, Multi-Issue Simulation on Cyprus,” by Emre Hatipoglu, Meltem Müftüler-Baç and
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“The Drama of International Relations: A South China Sea Simulation,” by Tanya Kempston
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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Review Essay
 “The First World War and International Relations Theory: A Review of Books on the 100th
Anniversary,” by John A. Vasquez, 623Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, Vol. 16, No. 6 (2014)
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H-Diplo Journal Watch [jw], A-I, First Quarter 2015
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