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South African Foreign Policy Review: Volume 3, Foreign Policy, Change and the Zuma Years

Lesley Masters and Jo-Ansie van Wyk, editors
Spanning the Mbeki and Zuma administrations, this volume of South African Foreign Policy Review explores questions of continuity and change. Among the topics covered are the roles of the foreign minister, special advisers, think tanks, and other domestic sources that shape foreign policy, as well as international issues such as strategic partnerships, the ICC, international trade, development  More >

South African Foreign Policy Review: Volume 4, Ramaphosa and a New Dawn for South African Foreign Policy

Lesley Masters, Philani Mthembu, and Jo-Ansie van Wyk, editors
This latest volume of South African Foreign Policy Review assesses South Africa's foreign policy during the presidency of Cyril Ramaphosa. Focusing on such themes as foreign policy leadership, policy architecture, diplomacy, national interests, and the country's bi- and multilateral relations, the authors also consider how South Africa can maintain—and even increase—its role  More >

South African National HIV Prevalence, Incidence, Behaviour, and Communication Survey, 2017

Leickness Simbayi, Khangelani Zuma, Nompumelelo Zungu, et al.
This study reports the results of the most recent in a series of cross-sectional surveys undertaken by a research consortium led by the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC). The consortium includes local researchers from the South African Medical Research Council, National Institute of Communicable Diseases, Global Clinical and Viral Laboratories, and University of Cape Town, as well as  More >

South Korea and the Politics of Ethnic Nationalism

Timothy C. Lim, editor
Though for decades South Korea was considered the quintessential homogeneous nation-state, the more recent influx of significant immigration has given rise to intensely debated questions about the nature of the country's national identity. Who is a "real" Korean? Who has a right to be a member of South Korean society? Which immigrants are acceptable? Who qualifies for citizenship?  More >

South Korea’s New Nationalism: The End of “One Korea”?

Emma Campbell
Why have traditional views of national identity in South Korea—views that for years drove a demand for reunification—been challenged so dramatically in recent years? What explains the growing ambivalence and even antagonism of South Korean young people toward unification with North Korea? Emma Campbell addresses these related puzzles, exploring the emergence of a new kind of  More >

Southern Exposure: International Development and the Global South in the Twenty-First Century

Barbara P. Thomas-Slayter
This widely used introductory text, rich with illustrative case studies, addresses the key political and economic challenges facing the countries of the global south as they engage with the global system.  More >

Sovereignty and Subjectivity

Jenny Edkins, Nalini Persram, and Véronique Pin-Fat, editors
This provocative analysis of notions of subject and identity in international relations goes beyond discussions of identity politics to argue that sovereignty and subjectivity implicate each other, together constituting the political. The authors consider how specific pictures of the subject and of political space still capture our desires; they also examine the links those pictures have with  More >

Soviet Blitzkrieg: The Battle for White Russia, 1944

Walter S. Dunn, Jr.
Walter Dunn's book narrates the details of a battle on the Eastern Front that was perhaps the largest of all time and certainly one of the most significant of World War II. Nearly three million Soviet and German soldiers participated in a campaign in which Soviet forces advanced 275 kilometers in two weeks over bad roads and marshy terrain, destroying 50 German divisions and capturing 50,000  More >

Soviet-Iraqi Relations, 1968-1988: In the Shadow of the Iraqi-Iran Conflict

Haim Shemesh
From the beginning of the Ba'th regime in 1968 to the end of the Iran-Iraq war in 1988, Iraq was an important ally of the Soviet Union in the Middle East. Haim Shemesh explores the evolution of this Soviet-Iraqi relationship—one that Moscow often exploited—concentrating on the impact of the 1969-1975 and 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq conflicts on the fluctuations in Soviet-Iraqi ties and  More >

Special Operations: Out of the Shadows

Christopher Marsh, James D. Kiras, and Patricia J. Blocksome, editors
Why have special operations forces become a key strategic tool in the conduct of modern warfare? How do these specially trained and equipped elite units function? What types of missions do they conduct?  Special Operations: Out of the Shadows addresses these questions and more in a comprehensive survey of special ops, encompassing cutting-edge research, current debates, and critical case  More >
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