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In the Cross Fire: A Political History of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms

William J. Vizzard
In the aftermath of Ruby Ridge and Waco, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) has become one of the most controversial of government agencies.  Yet, despite the headlines and congressional hearings, little has been written about the history and organizational culture of the bureau.  William Vizzard draws both on his 27 years of insider experience as a special agent and  More >

In the Tavern of Life and Other Stories

Tawfiq al-Hakim, translated by William Maynard Hutchins
This first collection of al-Hakim’s stories to be published in English includes 27 of the author’s best works written from 1927 to 1966. Some inspired by literature and others by Egyptian social conditions, the stories range from mock-autobiographical to science fiction and folk fantasy to allegory and philosophy.  More >

Inclusive Development in Africa: Transformation of Global Relations

Vusi Gumede
What can—and should—be done to achieve effective development in Africa? Addressing this fundamental question, the authors offer specific suggestions emphasizing the need to both radically transform global power relations and to reform domestic socioeconomic policies.  More >

Independence and Revolution in Portuguese-Speaking Africa: Selected Articles and Interviews, 1980-1986

Tomaz Aquino de Bragança, edited and annotated by Marco Mondaini and Colin Darch
Tomaz Aquino de Bragança, a close adviser to former Mozambican president Samora Machel, dedicated his life to the liberation struggles of southern Africa. Before his death in a plane crash (along with President Machel) in 1986, he was a journalist, an academic, a diplomat, and a public intellectual known for his skill in sensitive and discreet political negotiation, most notably his role in  More >

India's Industrialists

Gita Piramal and Margaret Laniak Herdeck
This study of thirteen of India's leading industrial families pays particular attention to the key decisions, cultural traditions, and personality issues that have contributed to their success. Based on interviews with scholars, journalists, government officials, and the business leaders themselves, the book covers each family business from its founding through its expansion into a large-scale,  More >

India's Nuclear Security

Raju G. C. Thomas & Amit Gupta, editors
The nuclear weapons and ballistic missile tests conducted by India and Pakistan in the late 1990s have substantially altered the security environment, both in the region and globally. Examining the complexities, controversies, and dynamics of this new strategic context, India's Nuclear Security explores India's motivations for becoming a nuclear weapons state, its proposed nuclear and  More >

Indigenous Systems and Africa’s Development

Vusi Gumede, Mammo Muchie, and Ajebush Shafi, editors
In an effort to solve the enduring puzzle of slow economic and social development in Africa, the contributors to Indigenous Systems and Africa's Development advocate for a paradigm shift in both thinking and practice that would integrate indigenous knowledge systems into the development process.  More >

Indonesia: State and Society in Transition

Jemma Purdey, Antje Missbach, and Dave McRae
Indonesia remains a country in transition even now, some two decades after its extraordinary shift from authoritarianism to democracy and from economic crisis to a rapidly growing economy. What explains the trajectory of that shift? What challenges does this island nation of 270 million people—with the world's largest Muslim population—face now, as the quality of democratic life  More >

Inequity in the Global Village: Recycled Rhetoric and Disposable People

Jan Knippers Black
Jan Black shows us how the narrow distribution of benefits from globalization has created a yawning gap in wealth and power both among and within states—a gap that she attributes to a globalized capitalist system run amuck, or more pungently, "mobile money and immobilized political leadership."  More >

Inevitable Partnership: Understanding Mexico-U.S. Relations

Clint E. Smith
This concise, accessible volume astutely describes the complex Mexico-U.S. relationship from the beginning of the nineteenth century through the end of the twentieth. Smith begins with a brief history of early U.S.-Mexico relations, focusing on the Texas Secession, the Mexican War, and the Gadsden Purchase. By 1853, one-half of what used to be Mexico had become one-third of what is now the United  More >
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