Blood Oil: Tyrants, Violence, and the Rules that Run the World
Leif Wenar
Oxford University Press
Contraceptive Risk: The FDA, Depo-Provera, and the Politics of Experimental Medicine
William Green
New York University Press
Development and Human Rights: Rhetoric and Reality in India
Joel E. Oestreich
Oxford University Press
Equal Opportunity Peacekeeping: Women, Peace, and Security in Post-Conflict States
Sabrina Karim and Kyle Beardsley
Oxford University Press
Exceptions to the Rule: The Politics of Filibuster Limitations in the US Senate
Molly E. Reynolds
Brookings Institution Press
An Impossible Dream? Racial Integration in the United States
Sharon A. Stanley
Oxford University Press
Is Congress Broken? The Virtues and Defects of Partisanship and Gridlock
William F. Connelly, Jr., John J. Pitney, Jr., and Gary J. Schmitt, eds.
Brookings Institution Press
Power and Feminist Agency in Capitalism: Toward a New Theory of the Political Subject
Claudia Leeb
Oxford University Press
The Sinews of State Power: The Rise and Demise of the Cohesive Local State in Rural China
Juan Wang
Oxford University Press
Theorizing Race in the Americas: Douglass, Sarmiento, Du Bois, and Vasconcelos
Juliet Hooker
Oxford University Press
The Time Is Always Now: Black Thought and the Transformation of US Democracy
Nick Bromell
Oxford University Press
SPOTLIGHT
The Emperor and the Peasant: Two Men at the Start of the Great War and the End of the Habsburg Empire
Kenneth Janda
Mcfarland & Company Inc.
From the Author: There was more to World War I than the Western Front. This history, presented as two intertwined narratives in alternating chapters, juxtaposes the experiences of a monarch and a peasant on the Eastern Front. Franz Joseph I, emperor of Austria-Hungary, was the first European leader to declare war in 1914 and the first to commence firing. Samuel Mozolak was a Slovak laborer who sailed to New York before being drafted into the army and killed in combat. The author interprets Franz Joseph’s view of the war from the perspective of the emperor and his contemporaries, Kaiser Wilhelm II and Tsar Nicolas II. Mozolak’s story depicts the life of a peasant conscript in an army staffed by aristocratic officers, and illustrates the pattern of East European immigration to America. Both stories are enlivened with references to the art and culture of the period.
Kenneth Janda is Payson S. Wild Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Northwestern University.
SPOTLIGHT
Aftershocks: Great Powers and Domestic Reforms in the 20th Century
Seva Gunitsky
Princeton University Press
From the Publisher: Over the past century, democracy spread around the world in turbulent bursts of change, sweeping across national borders in dramatic cascades of revolution and reform. Aftershocks is the first book to offer a detailed explanation for this wavelike spread and retreat—not only of democracy but also of its twentieth-century rivals, fascism and communism. Seva Gunitsky argues that waves of regime change are driven by the aftermath of cataclysmic disruptions to the international system. These hegemonic shocks, marked by the sudden rise and fall of great powers, have been essential and often-neglected drivers of domestic transformations. The evolution of modern regimes cannot be fully understood without examining the consequences of clashes between great powers, which repeatedly—and often unsuccessfully—sought to cajole, inspire, and intimidate other states into joining their camps.
Seva Gunitsky is assistant professor of political science at the University of Toronto.
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