Sort by: Author | Title | Publication Year
BOOKS
Global Shaping and Its AlternativesYildiz Atasoy and William K. Carroll, editors | |
Lina: Portrait of a Damascene GirlSamar Attar A revealing study of a girl growing to maturity in middle-class Syria and of her family’s struggle to survive in the tumultuous years of 1940–1961 in Damascus. Attar’s work shows a keen eye for the daily scene, a keen ear for conversation, and a tragic sense of history. Reflecting the rapid sociopolitical changes in Syria that exalted some, but crushed others, it marks anew the More > | |
Dennis Brutus: The South African YearsTyrone August Dennis Brutus (1924-2009) is perhaps best known for his powerful poems chronicling the suffering of apartheid in South Africa. But he was also a political activist whose voice helped to mobilize and intensify opposition to injustice and oppression worldwide. Tyrone August traces the many facets of Brutus's life from his childhood until his exile from South Africa in 1966.
Placing the More > | |
World Agriculture and the GATTWilliam P. Avery, editor Agriculture—central to the interests of both the rich industrialized countries, where it is heavily subsidized, and the poor nonindustrialized countries, where it is often the principal source of export earnings—has posed a problem for the global-free-trade regime since the beginning of the GATT. Multilateral trade negotiations have continually failed to bring agriculture into the More > | |
Death in Beirut [a novel]Tawfiq Yusuf Awwad, translated by Leslie McLoughlin Set against the background of post-1967 Lebanon, this novel caused a sensation in the Arab world because of its frank and realistic descriptions of Lebanon's—and particularly Lebanese women's—problems.
Tragedy awaits Tamina, who is drawn by the lure of the city to leave her Shia Muslim village for the university in Beirut. Injured in a student demonstration, she is rescued by More > | |
The Third World Security Predicament: State Making, Regional Conflict, and the International SystemMohammed Ayoob This book explores the multifaceted security problems facing the Third World in the aftermath of the Cold War.
Ayoob proposes that the major underlying cause of conflict and insecurity in the Third World is the early stage of state making at which postcolonial states find themselves. Drawing comparisons with the West European experience, he argues that this approach provides richer comparative More > | |
From Regional Security to Global IR: An Intellectual JourneyMohammed Ayoob, edited and with an introduction by Yong-Soo Eun and Amitav Acharya Mohammed Ayoob's work in the field of international relations, spanning more than four decades, offers invaluable insights into both international conflicts and the security dynamics of the Global South. From Regional Security to Global IR presents a chronological selection of that work from 1989 to 2024, providing a guide to Ayoob's intellectual journey and advancing the concept of Global More > | |
Religion and Politics in Saudi Arabia: Wahhabism and the StateMohammed Ayoob and Hasan Kosebalaban, editors Choice Outstanding Academic Book!
What is Wahhabism? What is its relationship with the Saudi state? Does it play a part in Islamist terrorist threats? These are among the complex questions tackled in Religion and Politics in Saudi Arabia. Moving from the historical, social, and political contexts in which Wahhabism originated and flourished to its current internal divisions and its impact on More > | |
Assessing the War on TerrorMohammed Ayoob and Etga Ugur, editors Was the US-led war on terror, especially the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, a necessary response to the September 11 terrorist attacks? What did the two invasions accomplish? How have the fortunes of al-Qaeda and like-minded organizations been affected? The authors of this important contribution to ongoing debates address these questions as they assess the impact and implications of the war on More > | |
Party Politics and Social Cleavages in TurkeyErgun Özbudun Despite radical changes in Turkish politics since the transition to a multiparty system in the mid-1940s, the center-right parties have consistently won an electoral majority. Why? How have they managed to maintain such a firm hold in the face of social cleavages that pit modernizing, secularist state elites against a conservative and pious majority? Ergun Özbudun uses the lens of More > |