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Books by Our Readers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 January 2016

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Copyright © American Political Science Association 2016 

SPOTLIGHT

Eurasian Regionalisms and Russian Foreign Policy

Mikhail A. Molchanov

Ashgate

From the Publisher: Bridging foreign policy analysis and international political economy, this volume offers a new look at the problem of agency in comparative regional integration studies. It examines evolving regional integration projects in the Eurasian space, defined as the former Soviet Union countries and China, and the impact that Russian foreign policy has on integration in the region.

Mikhail A. Molchanov is a professor in the department of political science at St. Thomas University, and his research interests span comparative politics, international relations, and international political economy.

SPOTLIGHT

The European Union, Antisemitism, and the Politics of Denial

Amy Elman

University of Nebraska Press

From the Author: This examination of the European Union’s strategy for countering antisemitism discloses escalating prejudice within the EU in the aftermath of 9/11. The author contends that Europe’s political actors have responded to the challenge and provocation of antisemitism with only sporadic rhetoric and inconsistent commitment, a half-hearted strategy for countering antisemitism that exacerbates skepticism toward EU institutions and their commitments to equality and justice. This exposition of the insipid character of the EU’s response simultaneously suggests alternatives that might mitigate the subtle and potentially devastating creep of antisemitism in Europe.

Amy Elman is professor of political science at Kalamazoo College, and she studies comparative politics and western political thought, especially structures of inequality and organized struggles for social justice within industrialized states and international contexts.

America at the Ballot Box: Elections and Political History

Gareth Davies and Julian E. Zelizer, eds.

University of Pennsylvania Press

Christian Human Rights

Samuel Moyn

University of Pennsylvania Press

Contesting Immigration Policy in Court: Legal Activism and Its Radiating Effects in the United States and France

Leila Kawar

Cambridge University Press

The Concealment of the State: Exposing and Challenging the Postmodern State

Jason Royce Lindsey

Bloomsbury

Contemporary Victims of Creative Suffering

David Cunningham

Oxford University Press

Contentious Politics

Charles Tilly and Sidney Tarrow, eds.

Oxford University Press

Counterterrorism and the State: Western Responses to 9/11

Dorle Hellmuth

University of Pennsylvania Press

Debating the American State: Liberal Anxieties and the New Leviathan, 1930–1970

Anne M. Kornhauser

University of Pennsylvania Press

Debating War: Why Arguments Opposing American Wars and Interventions Fail

David J Lorenzo

Routledge

Deceit on the Road to War: Presidents, Politics, and American Democracy

John M. Schuessler

Cornell University Press

Displacing Democracy: Economic Segregation in America

Amy Widestrom

University of Pennsylvania Press

Employment Discrimination, Local School Boards, and LGBT Civil Rights: Reviewing 25 Years of Public Opinion Data

Amy B. Becker

Oxford University Press

Engaging the Everyday: Environmental Social Criticism and the Resonance Dilemma

John M. Meyer

MIT Press

The European Union: Democratic Principles and Institutional Architectures in Times of Crisis

Simona Piattoni, ed.

Oxford University Press

Examining Torture: Empirical Studies of State Repression

Tracy Lightcap and James P. Pfiffner

Palgrave Macmillan

Fidelity to Our Imperfect Constitution: For Moral Readings and Against Originalisms

James E. Fleming

Oxford University Press

The First Primary

David W. Moore and Andrew E. Smith

University Press of New England

Fuels Paradise: Seeking Energy Security in Europe, Japan, and the United States

John Duffield

Johns Hopkins University Press

Get Out the Vote: How to Increase Voter Turnout, 3rd Edition

Donald P. Green and Alan S. Gerber

Brookings Institution Press

Greed, Corruption, and the Modern State

Susan Rose-Ackerman and Paul Lagunes, eds.

Edward Elgar Publishing

Handbook of Digital Politics

Stephen Coleman and Deen Freelon, eds.

Edward Elgar Publishing

The Human Right to Citizenship: A Slippery Concept

Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann and Margaret Walton-Roberts

University of Pennsylvania Press

Labor Standards in International Supply Chains: Aligning Rights and Incentives

Daniel Berliner, Anne Regan Greenleaf, Milli Lake, Margaret Levi, and Jennifer Noveck

Edward Elgar Publishing

Local Politics and Mayoral Elections in 21st Century America: The Keys to City Hall

Sean D. Foreman, Marcia L. Godwin, Melissa Marschall, Carlos E. Cuellar, Joseph P. Caiazzo, Dick Simpson, Melissa Mouritsen, Betty O’Schaughnessy, William J. Miller, Roberty J. Mahu, Lyke Thompson, Fernando J. Guerra, Brianne Gilbert, Larry D. Terry

Routledge

Machiavelli’s Legacy: “The Prince” After Five Hundred Years

Timothy Fuller, ed.

University of Pennsylvania

Nationalism, Language, and Muslim Exceptionalism

Tristan James Mabry

University of Pennsylvania Press

Oxford Handbook of Environmental Political Theory

Teena Gabrielson, Cheryl Hall, John M. Meyer, David Schlosberg, eds.

Oxford University Press

Pakistan’s Enduring Challenges

C. Christine Fair and Sarah J. Watson

University of Pennsylvania Press

PLA Influence on China’s National Security Policymaking

Philip C. Saunders and Andrew Scobell, eds.

Stanford University Press

Political Corruption

Bo Rothstein, ed.

Edward Elgar Publishing

Political Rhetoric

Mary E. Stuckey

Transaction Publishers

The Politics of Local Participatory Democracy in Latin America: Institutions, Actors, and Interactions

Françoise Montambeault

Privacy in a Cyber Age: Policy and Practice

Amitai Etzioni

Palgrave MacMillan

Public Value and Public Administration

John M. Bryson, Barbara C. Crosby, and Laura Bloomberg, eds.

Georgetown University Press

Regional Missile Defense from a Global Perspective

Catherine McArdle Kelleher and Peter Dombrowski, eds.

Stanford University Press

The Rise and Fall of Classical Greece

Josiah Ober

Princeton University Press

The Senator from New England

Sean Savage

SUNY Press

Settlers in Contested Lands: Territorial Disputes and Ethnic Conflicts

Oded Haklai and Neophytos Loizides, eds.

The Socratic Turn: Knowledge of Good and Evil in an Age of Science

Dustin Sebell

University of Pennsylvania Press

Truth Commissions: Memory, Power, and Legitimacy

Onur Bakiner

University of Pennsylvania Press

Uninformed: Why People Know So Little about Politics and What We Can Do about It

Arthur Lupia

Oxford University Press

Watchdogs on the Hill: The Decline of Congressional Oversight of US Foreign Relations

Linda L. Fowler

Princeton University Press

What Would Madison Do? The Father of the Constitution Meets Modern American Politics

Benjamin Wittes and Pietro Nivola, eds.

Brookings Institution Press

Whether to Kill: The Cognitive Maps of Violent and Nonviolent Individuals

Stephanie Dornschneider

University of Pennsylvania Press

Who Governs? Presidents, Public Opinion, and Manipulation

Lawrence Jacobs and James N. Druckman

University of Chicago Press

SPOTLIGHT

Presidential Swing States: Why Only Ten Matter

Stacey Hunter Hecht and David Schultz, eds.

Lexington Books

From the Publisher: The 2016 presidential race is arguably already over in 40 states and the District of Columbia. If recent presidential election trends are any indication of what will happen in 2016, Democrats in Texas and Republicans in New York might as well stay home on election day. The same might be said for the voters in 38 other states too. Conversely, for those in Ohio, Florida, Colorado, Iowa, and a handful of other states will be barraged with presidential candidate visits, commercials, political spending, and countless news stories. Understanding why the presidential race has been effectively reduced to only ten states is the subject of Presidential Swing States: Why Only Ten Matter, a first of its kind examination of why some states are swingers in presidential elections, capable of being won by either of the major candidates.

David Schultz professor, department of political science, Hamline University, studies American politics.

Stacey Hunter Hecht, chair and associate professor of political science, Bethel University studies social policy, citizenship and immigration policy, and religion and politics.

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