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The Corporation's Program

 


Overview

CARNEGIE SCHOLARS PROGRAM


The Carnegie Scholars program was established by Vartan Gregorian in 1999 to provide financial and intellectual support to writers, analysts and thinkers addressing some of the most critical research questions of our time. By identifying and investing in some of the brightest and most innovative contemporary thinkers, Carnegie Corporation seeks to inform its own programs as well as to advance and diffuse knowledge that will uplift our nation and humanity. Since 2005, the program has supported scholars whose work seeks to promote American understanding of Islam as a religion, the characteristics of Muslim societies, in general, and those of American Muslim communities, in particular.

2006-2007 Grants Budget: $2,100,000

Program Staff

Patricia L. Rosenfield, Program Director, Carnegie Scholars

Heather Mckay, Program Associate and Assistant to the President for Special Projects

Carnegie Corporation of New York
437 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10022 USA
Tel: (212) 371-3200 Fax: (212) 754-4073

 

Scholars Program

Important Dates

Invitations for nominators sent out By May 23rd, 2008
Deadline for all nominations August 28, 2008
Notification for all nominees of first round results By the last week of October 2008
Deadline for all invited finalist proposals By the last week of November 2008
Notification for all finalists By late April 2009
Carnegie Scholars public announcement TBD

 

Frequently Asked Questions

 

THE FELLOWSHIP

Q. What is the Carnegie Scholars Program?

A. The Carnegie Scholars Program provides direct support to innovative individuals whose research will extend understanding of issues related to intellectual and policy developments in Islam and Muslim communities in the context of subjects that are of both past and current concern in light of Corporation priorities. The Corporation is especially seeking to support promising individuals who demonstrate the capacity to communicate their findings beyond the scholarly community to the public and to policymakers. Up to 20 fellowships, with a maximum grant of $100,000 for one to two years of research, will be awarded annually.

Q. What does the program mean by “innovative,” and “promising”?

A. The terms above all reflect the Program’s commitment to supporting scholars who have the potential to contribute original, relevant perspectives to the pressing issues related to the Program's theme. The Program seeks individuals who approach scholarly research with a willingness to take intellectual risks and re-conceptualize basic assumptions surrounding societal concerns.

Q. What is the level of financial support provided by the Corporation and for how long?

A. The fellowship offers Scholars a maximum of $100,000 to pursue one to two years of research.

Q. For what purposes may the funds be allocated?

A. The award may be allocated toward salary, travel, and/ or research assistance, materials and costs.

Q. Are there any budgetary restrictions?

A. Funds cannot be used for dissertations, debt repayments, projects that already have substantial outside funding, purchase of equipment (i.e. computers) and/ or rent.

Q. How and when are individuals notified of the results of the competition?

A. All nominees are informed of their status via mail by the last week of October 2007. All finalists are informed of the results via mail by April 2008. The notification timeline can be viewed in the program calendar.

Q. How many individuals may one nominator nominate?
A. Nominators usually nominate up to 2 nominees. If a nominator wishes to submit additional nominations, he or she first must check with the program staff (either Patricia Rosenfield, plr@carnegie.org, or Heather McKay, hsm@carnegie.org).

 

ELIGIBILITY

Q. Who is eligible to become a Carnegie Scholar?

A. Individuals must be nominated by an invited nominator in order to be considered. Self-nominations and unsolicited applicants will not be considered. Nominees may range from recent Ph.D.s to more established scholars or individuals with equivalent professional experience or degrees. Women and minority nominees are especially welcome. All candidates must be U.S. citizens or permanent residents.

Q. What are eligible fields of research?

A. Research must relate to the Scholars Program's new focus on a topic that is of significance to our understanding of Islam and Muslim communities in the modern world. The Corporation is seeking to support scholars who will pursue new scholarship on issues such as, but not limited to, the following: Islam's relationship with international law, science, banking, property, democracy, pluralism or tolerance, the role and rights of women in Muslim societies, the structure and status of Muslim communities in the U.S., the appeal of Islam, and historical and modern interpretations of jihad. Any other related topic that is of significance to our understanding of Islam and Muslim communities in the modern world will also be considered.

Q. Do candidates need to be affiliated with an institution?

A. No. Scholars need not be affiliated with an institution.

Q. Can a team of individuals apply for the fellowship?

A. No. Teams are not eligible for consideration.

 

SELECTION PROCESS

Q. What are the stages of the selection process?

A. The review takes place in the following three stages:

First, an internal review committee composed of Corporation Vice Presidents and Program Chairs meets in the fall of each year to review nominations. The pool of nominees narrowed down to a group of finalists who are asked to submit more detailed project proposals. Finalists are given approximately five weeks to submit a project proposal.

Second, an external selection committee, comprising of outside experts working in the fields related to the Corporation’s focus areas, convenes in early winter to review the finalist proposals and submit final recommendations to the president of the Carnegie Corporation. Corporation staff members participate and provide comments but do not vote on the final recommendations.

Third, the President reviews all recommendations and approves the final list of scholars to be presented to the Corporation’s Board of Trustees at their March meeting.

Q. What are the selection criteria?

A. For all stages of the competition, the criteria are as follows:

  1. Originality and promise of the idea.
  2. Quality of the proposal in light of its persuasiveness, potential for impact on the field, and the applicant’s capacity to communicate the findings beyond the academic community to the broader public and policy making communities.
  3. Record of the applicant.
  4. Likelihood of success within the time frame and budget proposed.

 

NOMINATORS

Q. Who are the nominators?

A. Nominators are selected by the Corporation’s President and staff from a broad range of institutions including traditional research universities, public and private universities, liberal arts colleges, community colleges, think tanks, the media, the private sector, the government, and other foundations. A core of nominators from each year is retained depending on the nominators’ responsiveness, position, and institutional base; new nominators are added as suggested by colleagues, academic fellows, and Corporation staff members’ review of relevant articles and books. Individuals may not request to become nominators.

Q. What materials do nominators need to submit?

A. Nominators should submit the following material:

  1. A one-page letter of recommendation. This should address the nominee’s qualification and potential as well as the nominee's capacity to make a significant impact on this new theme.
  2. A brief prospectus (1000 words maximum, 12 pt. font, double spaced) prepared by the nominee. It should present the project, include an approximate time frame, and have a preliminary estimate of budgetary requirements (preliminary budget estimates need only be one or two sentences long).
  3. A copy of the nominee’s curriculum vitae (15 page maximum).

A nomination is not considered complete until all three materials are received.

Q. How many individuals may one nominator nominate?

A. Nominators usually nominate up to 2 nominees. If a nominator wishes to submit additional nominations, he or she first must check with the program staff (either Patricia Rosenfield, plr@carnegie.org, or Heather McKay, hsm@carnegie.org).

 

NOMINEES

Q. What materials are nominees required to prepare for their nomination?

A. Nominees should prepare a brief prospectus (1000 word limit, 12 pt font, double spaced) and a curriculum vitae (15 page max) to be submitted by the nominator along with his/ her nomination letter.

The prospectus should describe the intended project, an approximate timeframe, and an estimate of budgetary requirements (for this stage, a one or two sentence estimate will suffice).

Q. Can individuals nominate themselves for consideration?

A. No. Self-nominations will not be accepted.

Q. How many nominations does the Corporation receive in one year?

A. The Carnegie Scholars Program receives between 100-150 nominations annually.

Q. How many nominees are chosen as finalists?

A. Approximately 60-70 nominees each year are selected as finalists and asked to submit more detailed proposals.

 

FINALISTS

Q. What materials are finalists required to submit?

A. Finalists are asked to submit the following:

  1. A detailed proposal. Proposals (12 page limit, 12 pt font, double spaced) should succinctly address the project’s significance, impact on the field, research design, and outcomes-to-date if the project is already underway. Finalists should also describe any expected immediate or long-term implications of the project as well as any plans to disseminate the results of the research.
  2. An itemized budget. (A budget form will be included in finalist notification letters).
  3. A specified timetable linking the project work plan with the budget. Finalists are responsible for determining the timeframe with a maximum of two years for completion.

Q. Can finalists include additional materials other than what is requested?

A. No. Finalists should not send additional materials. They will not be considered.

Q. Can finalists review successful proposals from previous years?

A. No. The Corporation strictly adheres to a policy of confidentiality and does not release proposals.

Q. Does the Carnegie Scholars Program provide feedback for unsuccessful finalists?

A. No. Because of limited staff, the Scholars Program is unable to accommodate unsuccessful finalists seeking feedback.

Q. How many fellowships are awarded annually?

A. Up to 20 fellowships are awarded each year.

Q. What are the tax implications of this award?

A. Because the funds are given directly to individuals, it is considered taxable income. Finalists should keep this in mind when developing their budgets. The Corporation cannot provide tax advice; finalists should consult an accountant for guidance.

SCHOLARS

Q. What materials are scholars required to submit upon completion of the fellowship?

A. Upon completion of the fellowship, scholars are required to submit:

  1. Results of research: published book or manuscript; published article or comparable result of output.
  2. Narrative report on fellowship activities per reporting schedule in award letter.
  3. Financial report per reporting schedule in award letter.

Q. How should the Corporation be acknowledged?

A. If Scholars contribute to or author any publication relating to research conducted under the fellowship, they should acknowledge the Corporation’s support by including the descriptive phrase, “Carnegie Scholar.” Publications should also indicate that the Corporation does not take responsibility for any statements or views expressed.

Q. Will the Scholar’s results be disseminated by the Corporation?

A. The Carnegie Scholars Program, together with the Corporation’s Public Affairs Division, will work with each scholar to develop an appropriate dissemination strategy. To date, these have included seminars and book launches held at the Corporation.

 

Carnegie Scholars

ANNOUNCEMENTS

April 2008Carnegie Corporation Announces 2008 Carnegie Scholars

April 2007Carnegie Corporation Announces 2007 Carnegie Scholars

April 2006Carnegie Corporation Announces 2006 Carnegie Scholars

April 2005Carnegie Corporation Announces 2005 Carnegie Scholars

May 2004Class of 2004 Carnegie Scholars Announced

Carnegie Reporter, Fall 2002; “Scholarship for Social Change,”

May 2003—Class of 2003 Carnegie Scholars Announced

May 2002—Class of 2002 Carnegie Scholars Announced

May 2001—Carnegie Corporation of New York Awards 1.5 Million to 16 “Scholars of vision.”

May 2000—Carnegie Corporation of New York Awards 1.1 Million to the First Class of Carnegie Scholars.

 

SCHOLARS' BOOKS

Class of 2000:

Evangelista, Matthew. Books—Chechnya, in Jay Winter and John Merriman, eds., Encyclopedia of Modern Europe, Europe since 1914 - Encyclopedia of the Age of War and Reconstruction, 2nd ed. (New York: Charles Scribner's Son, 2006).

Hoxby, Caroline. Ideal School Choice: The Design of Socially-Conscious Vouch and Charter School Programs. New York: Rowman and Littlefield, forthcoming.

Jolly, Richard. Books: The Power of UN Ideas: Lessons from the First 60 Years co-authored by Richard Jolly, Louis Emmerij and Thomas G. Weiss)(New York, UN Intellectual History Project) 2005

UN Voices: The Struggle for Development and Social Justice co-authored by Tom G. Weiss, Tatiana Carayannis, Louis Emmerij and Richard Jolly (Bloomington, Indiana University Press) 2005

Langhorne, Richard. Diplomacy and Governance. Moscow: MGIMO, 2004.

The Essentials of Global Politics. London: Hodder & Stoughton, forthcoming April 2006.

Mack, Beverly. Muslim Women Sing: Hausa Popular Song. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004.

Rosefielde, Steven. Comparative Economic Systems (Russian Language edition). Moscow: Rospen, 2004.

Russia in the 21st Century: The Prodigal Superpower, Cambridge UP, 2005.

Masters of Illusion: American Leadership in the Media Age, Cambridge University Press, 2007 (with Quinn Mills)

Russian Economics from Lenin to Putin, Blackwell, 2007.

Russia Since 1980, Cambridge University Press, 2008(with Stefan Hedlund)

Forthcoming: The Poverty of American Public Policymaking, Cambridge University Press, provisional.

Shapiro, Ian. Death by a Thousand Cuts: The Fight Over Taxing Inherited Wealth. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005.

The State of Democratic Theory. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003.

Shipps, Dorothy. Books—School Reform, Corporate Style: Chicago 1880-2000, University Press of Kansas (2006)

“Neo-progressivism in Chicago School Reform,” in William Boyd and Charles Kershner (eds.) Major Change in Urban School Governance: Paradigm Shift in Control and Operations. Harvard University Press.

“Urban Regime Theory and the Reform of Public Schools:
Governance, Power and Leadership” in Bruce Cooper, Lance Fusarelli, and James Cibulka (Eds.), Understanding the Politics of Education: A Handbook of Theory, Applications, and Reform. Lawrence Erlbaum & Associates

Class of 2001:

Bates, Robert H. Cambridge Economic Survey of Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming.

Books:R.H.Bates, When Things Fell Apart (Cambridge University Press)

Davis, Diane E. 2006: The New Sociological Imagination. Two Volume Special Issue of The International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society. Springer Verlag Publishers.

“Who Polices the Police? The Challenges of Police Accountability in Newly Democratic Mexico.” In Mercedes Hinton and Timothy Newburn (eds.), Policing Developing Democracies, Routledge Ltd., forthcoming

“The Political and Economic Origins of Violence and Insecurity in Contemporary Latin America: Past Trajectories and Future Prospects.” In Desmond Arias and Daniel Goldstein (eds.), Violent Pluralisms, Duke University Press, forthcoming

“The Giuliani Factor: Crime, Zero Tolerance Policing and the Transformation of the Public Sphere in Downtown Mexico City.” In Gareth A. Jones, Public Sphere and Public Space in Mexico, forthcoming, Palgrave MacMillan (also to be published in the Revista de Estudios Sociológicos, El Colegio de Mexico, in press).

“Policing and Populism in the Cardenas and Echeverria Administrations.” In William Beezley, Populism in Mexico in Historical Perspective, University of Arizona Press, forthcoming.

“Violence and Shifting Political Regimes in Post-Revolutionary Mexico: Police and the challenges of political transition in Will Pansters (ed.), Violence and the State in Mexico, forthcoming.

Derluguian, Georgi, books, “Bourdieu's Secret Admirer in the Caucasus: A World s System Biography.

Donohue, Laura K. Civic Defense. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, forthcoming 2006.

Smith, Rogers. Stories of Peoplehood: The Politics and Morals of Political Memberships. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.

Wells, Amy Stuart and J. Petrovitch, eds. Bringing Equity Back: Research for a New Era in American Educational Policy. New York: Teachers College Press, 2005.

Wells, Amy Stuart, ed. The Souls of Desegregated Folk: Graduates of Racially Diverse Schools Look Back from Segregated Lives. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, forthcoming.

Wells, Amy Stuart, ed. Where Charter School Policy Fails: The Problems of Accountability and Equity. New York: Teachers College Press, 2002.

Class of 2002:

Lancaster, Carol. Foreign Aid: Diplomacy, Development, Domestic Politics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, forthcoming 2006.

Loury, Glenn Cartman and Roland Fryer. What Price Diversity? The Economics and the Ethics of Affirmative Action Policies. Princeton: Princeton University Press, forthcoming 2006.

Jenne, Erin Kristin, book: Ethnic Bargaining: The Paradox of Minority Empowerment (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2007).

Menon, Rajan Books:“The End of Alliances” – recently published by Oxford University Press

Shweder, Richard and Byron Good, eds. Clifford Geertz by His Colleagues: A Colloquy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 15 Mar 2005.

Shweder, Richard. Why Do Men Barbecue? Recipes for Cultural Psychology. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003.

 

Class of 2003:

Bronson, Rachel.Thicker than Oil: The United States and Saudi Arabia: A History. Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming Jan 2006.

Galbraith, James K. Unbearable Cost: Bush, Greenspan and the Economics of Empire, London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2006.

With Blandine Laperche and Dimitri Uzinides, eds., Innovation, Evolution and Economic Change: New Ideas in the Tradition of Galbraith, New Directions in Modern Economics, Cheltenham and Northampton: Edward Elgar, 2006.

Kruger, Alan B. Alan B. Kruger, What Makes A Terrorist, Princeton University Press,Princeton, NJ 2007, pg 192.

Rejali, Darius. Approaches to Violence. Princeton: Princeton University Press, forthcoming 2006. Darius Rejali Torture and Democracy, Princeton University Press, Princenton NJ 2007, pg.880.

 

Class of 2004:

Mandelbaum, Michael. The Case for Goliath: How America Acts as the World’s Government in the Twenty-First Century. New York: PublicAffairs, forthcoming Jan 2006.

Mandelbaum, Michael.The Case for Goliath: How America Acts as the World’s Government in the Twenty-first Century. Public Affairs, January, 2006. (Paperback Edition published in January, 2007)

Forthcoming: Democracy’s Good Name: The Rise and Risks of the World’s Most Popular Form of Government. Public Affairs, August 2007.

Pape, Robert. Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism. New York: Random House, 2005.

Pape, Jr., Robert A. Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism (New York: Random House, 2005) Foreign editions: Australia, Spain, Great Britain. Paperback edition with new afterword, 2006.

 

Class of 2005:

Abdulaziz Sachedina, Islamic Roots Of Democratic Pluralism Oxford University Press, New York, 2001.

Adeeb Khalid, Islam after Communism: Religion and Politics in Central Asia (University of California Press, January 2007.

Asma Afsaruddin, The First Muslims: History and Memory. Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 2007

Ayesha Jalal, Partisans of Allah: Jihad in South Asia will be published in the spring of 2008 by Harvard University Press

Bowen John, In Preparation, Can Islam be French? Knowledge, Norms, and Sacrifice in a Secularist State. Princeton University Press (scheduled for 2008).

2006 “Anti-Americanism as Schemas and Diacritics across Indonesia and France,” in Peter Katzenstein and Robert Keohane, eds., Anti-Americanisms in World Politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.

Sohail Hashmi, “‘World’ Society in the Middle East: Islam and the Pan-Islamic Movement” will be published in International Society and the Middle East: English School Theory at the Regional Level, ed. Barry Buzan and Ana Gonzalez-Pelaez.

Zaman, Muhammad Qasim, Robert W. Hefmer and Muhammad Qasim Zaman, eds., Schooling Islam: The Culture and Politics of Modern Muslim Education (Princeton University Press, 2007).

 

Class of 2006:

Jen’nan Ghazal, 2007. Read, Jen’nan Ghazal. “More of a Bridge than a Gap: Gender Differences in Arab American Political Incorporation.” Social Science Quarterly (forthcoming in the fall).

Madhavi Sunder, GENDER AND FEMINIST THEORY IN LAW & SOCIETY (Editor) (Dartmouth/Ashgate 2007).

Marwa Elshakry, ‘The Gospel of Science and American Evangelism in Late Ottoman Beirut’, Past and Present, forthcoming, August 2007.

Zvi Ben-Dor Benite, “Nine Years in Egypt: The Chinese at al-Azhar University,” Hagar, forthcoming, March 2008.

“Islam: China,” for Encyclopedia of the Modern World (Oxford University Press, in press).

Recent Articles By Scholars

Adeeb Khalid

“L’Islam et l’État post-soviétique en Asie centrale,” La revue internationale et stratégique, n¼ 64 (Winter 2006-07), 101-109.
“Tolerating Islam,” London Review of Books, 24 May 2007, 15-16.

Asma Afsaruddin

“American Muslims are Playing a Role in Bridging the Chasm,” in Islamophobia and Anti-Americanism: Causes and Remedies, ed. Mohamed Nimer (Beltsville, Md., Amana Publications: 2007), 135-42.

“Democratic Virtues, Diversity, and the Common Good: Exploring the Nexus of Peace and Justice in Islamic Societies,” African Safety Promotion: A Journal of Injury and Violence Prevention 4 (2006): 32-47

“‘Enlightened’ Interpretations of Hadith,” Concilium (Special issue on “Islam and the Enlightenment)” 5 (2006): 61-70 (German, Italian, Spanish editions also available)

Sunni-Shi‘i Dialectics on Legitimate Leadership,” in Speaking for Islam: Religious Authorities in Middle Eastern Islam. Ed. Sabine Schmidtke and Gudrun Kramer. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2006. Pp. 49-69.

“Obedience to Political Authority: An Evolutionary Concept,” in Islamic Democratic Discourse: Theory, Debates, and Directions. Ed. Muqtedar Khan. Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books, 2006. Pp. 37-60

“The ‘Islamic State’: Genealogy, Facts, and Myths,” Journal of Church and State 48 (2006): 153-173.

“Of Jihad, Terrorism, and Pacifism: Scripting Islam in the Transnational Sphere,” Global Dialogue 7 (2006): 20-133
“Competing Perspectives on Jihad and Martyrdom in Early Islamic Sources,” in Witnesses to Faith?: Martyrdom in Christianity and Islam. Ed. Brian Wicker. Aldershot, U.K.: Ashgate Publishing, 2006. Pp. 15-31.

“Muslim Views on Education: Parameters, Purview, and Possibilities,” Journal of Catholic Legal Studies 44 (2005): 143-178 (special issue on “Religious Education and the Liberal State”)

Aziz Huq

“Wars of Crime and Terror: Convergences and Differences,” International Journal of the Sociology of Law (forthcoming 2008) (with Christopher Muller).

“The New Counterterrorism: Investigating Terrorism, Investigating Muslims,” in Liberty Under Attack: Reclaiming Our Freedoms in an age of Terror 167-85 (Richard C. Leone and Greg Anrig, Jr., eds., 2007)

“Faith is Not Destiny: Three Inquiries into Jihadism and its Sources,” World Policy Journal, Vol. 23, No. 3 (Fall 2006), 99-106 (book review).

“Five Squandered Years,” The American Prospect, October 4, 2006
http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=five_squandered_years

“Threat Assessment,” The American Prospect, August 28, 2006 (http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=threat_assessment)
“Continental Divide,” The American Prospect, December 12, 2006
http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=continental_divide

2007 book review in the New York Times – “Unchecked and Unbalanced” by Michiko Kakutani - http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/06/books/06book.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&oref=slogin

Binder, Sarah A.

Binder, Sarah A., Anthony Madonna, and Steven S. Smith. In press. “Going Nuclear, Senate Style.” Perspectives on Politics.

Binder, Sarah A. 2007. “Where do Institutions Come From? Exploring the Origins of the Senate Blue Slip.” Studies in American Political Development, V. 21 (Spring) 1-15.

Binder, Sarah A. In press. “The Consequences of Polarization: Congress and the Courts,” In David Brady and Pietro Nivola, Eds., Red and Blue Nation? Volume 2. Consequences and Correction of America's Polarized Politics.

Bowen John

2006 “France’s Revolt: Can the republic live up to its ideals?” Boston Review January/February, pp. 29-32.

Dawisha, Adeed

the Journal of Democracy (July 2005 and April 2006), one in the Middle East Journal (Winter 2005) and one in the Third World Quarterly (nos.4-5, 2005)”..

Davis, Diane E.

2007: “The Urban is Political: A Journey from the Midwestern Suburbs to the World’s Largest Cities (and Back Again).” In Matthiew Deflem (ed.), Sociologists in a Global Age: Biographical Perspectives. Ashgate Publications, UK.

2006: “Speaking to the Silences: A New Sociological Imagination for a post-9/11 World?” International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society.

*2006: “Conflict, Cooperation, and Convergence: Globalization and the Politics of Downtown Development in Mexico City.” Research in Political Sociology [special issue on Politics and Globalization], vol. 15: 143-178.

*2006: “Whither the Quality of Democracy? State Fragmentation, Social Disintegration, and the Unintended Consequences of Police Reform in Mexico.” Latin American Politics and Society, 48/1 (Spring): 55-86.

2007: “What kind of Conflict? Cities, War, and the Failure of Urban Public Security.” In Human Security for an Urban Century: Local Challenges, Global Perspectives, edited by Maciek Hawrylak. Ottawa, Canada: Human Security Policy Division, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT), in conjunction with University of British Columbia and humansecurity-cities.org.

2007: “Global Cities” (with Gerardo del Cerro), Encyclopedia of Urban Studies, edited by Bob Beauregard. London and Beverly Hills: Sage Publications, forthcoming.

2006: “Scales of Conflict, Spaces of Contention.” In Block #03 (in English and Hebrew), special Issue on Y-UTOPIA.

2006: “Beyond the Democracy-Development in Mantra: The Challenges of Violence and Insecurity in the Contemporary Global South.” Contexts (a journal of the American Sociological Association).

2006: “Mexico City in the 21st Century: Facing the Social, Spatial, and Employment Challenges Ahead” Urban Age Newsletter (LSE), summer 2006.

Devin, DeWeese

"Ahmad Yasavi and the Dog-Men: Narratives of Hero and Saint at the Frontier of Orality and Textuality," in Theoretical Approaches to the Transmission and Edition of Oriental Manuscripts, ed. Manfred Kropp and Judith Pfeiffer (Würzburg: Ergon Verlag, 2007; Beiruter Texte und Studien, 111), pp. 147-176 (?)

"Cultural Transmission and Exchange in the Mongol Empire: Notes from the Biographical Dictionary of Ibn al-Fuwati," in Beyond the Legacy of Genghis Khan, ed. Linda Komaroff (Leiden: Brill, 2006), pp. 11-29.

"The Legitimation of Baha’ ad-Din Naqshband," Asiatische Studien/Études asiatiques (Bern), 50/2 (2006), pp. 261-305.

"`Stuck in the Throat of Chingiz Khan:' Envisioning the Mongol Conquests in Some Sufi Accounts from the 14th to 17th Centuries," in History and Historiography of Post-Mongol Central Asia and the Middle East: Studies in Honor of John E. Woods, ed. Judith Pfeiffer and Sholeh A. Quinn in collaboration with Ernest Tucker (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2006), pp. 23-60.

"The Yasavi Order and the Uzbeks in the Early 16th Century: The Story of Shaykh Jamal ad-Din and Muhammad Shïbani Khan," in Tsentral'naia Aziia: Istochniki, Istoriia, Kul'tura. Materialy mezhdunarodnoi nauchnoi konferentsii, posviashchennoi 80-letiiu doktora istoricheskikh nauk E. A. Davidovicha i deistvitel'nogo chlena Akademii nauk Tadzhikistana, akademika RAEN, doktora istoricheskikh nauk B. A. Litvinskogo, Moskva, 3-5 aprelia 2003 g., ed. E. V. Antonova and T. K. Mkrtychev (Moscow: Izdatel'skaia Firma `Vostochnaia Literatura' Rossiiskoi Akademii Nauk, 2005), pp. 297-310

Dunlop, John B. and Menon, Rajan (Carnegie Scholar 2002)
Chaos in the North Caucasus and Russia's Future

Evangelista, Matthew

Is Putin the New de Gaulle? A Comparison of the Chechen and Algerian Wars, Post-Soviet Affairs, vol. 21, no. 4, (October-December 2005).

Ingushetia as a Microcosm of Putin’s Reforms, Global Dialogue, vol. 7, nos. 3-4 (Summer/Autumn 2005).

Il caso Cecenia, Putin e la guerra al terrorismo [The Case of Chechnya, Putin, and the War on Terrorism], Vita e Pensiero (Milan), no. 4 (July-August) 2004.

Zostawcie nozúe w szatni [Leave the knives in the cloakroom], Forum (Warsaw), no. 37, 13-19 September 2004.

Farzaneh, Milani

No More Walls: I Want my Country Back,” Daily Progress, May 6, 2007

Payvand’s Iran News http://www.payvand.com/news/07/may/1112.html
Guest editor, Iran Nameh: a Journal of Iranian Studies, Special issues on Simin Behbahani, Vol. 23, No. 1 and 2, summer and spring 2006

The Rainbow World of Simin Behbahani,” Iran Nameh: a Journal of Iranian Studies, Vol. 23, No. 1 and 2, pp. 9-24

Uncovering Coverings: A Crash Course,” Washington Post, Sunday October 22, 2006. B5. Printed as “Take the Time to Consider the woman behind the Veil,” in Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, October 27, 2006 (this essay was solicited by the Washington Post in October 2006)

Iran an Enigma to Americans,” an Op-Ed for Daily Progress, Sunday, February 18, 2007, pp. B6& B8; posted as "Politics Perpetuate False Images of Iranians,"www.dailyprogress.com; Payv and News at http://www.payvand.com/news/

Women, Gender and Representations of Sexualities in Poetry, Modern Iran,” Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures, ed. Suad Joseph, Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers.

Misreading Iran in America,” Thinking about Reading, ed. Jessica Feldman

Fischer, Michael M.J.
"Four Genealogies for a Recombinant Anthropology Science and Technology for the Twenty-first Century" (the fourth genealogy draws on Fischer’s Carnegie fieldwork, and is an effort to turn the field's attention to the Islamic world as well as other areas outside the canonic West for these studies). Cultural Anthropology Nov. 2007. (Will also appear in a volume, Anthropological Futures).

"To Live With What Would Otherwise Be Unendurable: Caught in the Borderlands of Palestine-Israel." In M.J. Good, and Sandra Hyde, ed. Postcolonial Disorders.

“Ptolemaic Jouissance and the Anthropology of Kinship: a Commentary on Ager, 'The Power of Excess: Royal Incest and the Ptolemaic Dynasty.' Anthropologia.

"Changing Palestine-Israel Ecologies: Narratives of Water, Land, Conflict and Political Economy, Then, Now and Life to Come." Cultural Politics. 2006.

"Persian Poesis" in Theory, Culture, and Society, 23(2-3). 2006.

"Persian Minatures: I. Bahs (Debate) in Qum; II. Simulation in Tehran." New Initiative for Middle East Peace (NIMEP) Insights, Vol. 1: 14-24. 2005.

Galbraith, James K.

“Maastricht 2042 and the Fate of Europe: Toward Convergence and Full Employment.” Levy Economics Institute Public Policy Brief,No. 87, November 2006.

With Travis Hale, “American Inequality: From IT Bust to Big Government Boom,” The Economists' Voice, 2006, vol. 3, issue 8, article 6.

“La Prédation économique moderne: guerre, fraude d’entreprise et cruelle chimère des réformes du marché du travail” A Contrario, Vol. 4, No. 1, 2006, 90-98.
“Unemployment in Europe: Some American Suggestions,” Journal of International Politics and Society. 1:2006, 39-45

“Endogenous Doctrine, or Why is Monetary Policy in America So Much Better Than in Europe?” , Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Spring 2006, Vol. 28., No. 3, 423-432.

“Some notes on entrepreneurship and welfare state,” Industrial and Corporate Change, (2006) Vol. 15, No. 1, 203-206.

“Inequality and Unemployment: Reflections on Theory and on Europe,” in Bent Greve, ed., The Future of the Welfare State: European and Global Perspectives, Hampshire and Burlington: Ashgate, Alternative Voices in Contemporary Economics, 2006, 79-94.

“Taming Predatory Capitalism,” The Nation, April 17, 2006

Horowitz, Donald L.

“Strategy Takes a Holiday: Fraenkel and Grofman on the Alternative Vote,” Comparative Political Studies, Vol. 39, no. 5 (June 2006), pp. 652-62

“Constitutional Courts: A Primer for Decision Makers,” Journal of Democracy, Vol. 17, no. 4 (October 2006), pp. 125-37

“Three Ways to Make a Constitution,” in Chung Ii Wu and Yu-Shan Wu, eds., Constitutional Reform: Background, Process, and Impact (Taipei: Wunan Press, 2006), pp. 15-28 (in Chinese)

“Constitution-Making in Divided Societies: A Study in Constraint,” forthcoming in Review of Constitutional Studies, Vol. 12, no. 1 (2006), pp. 1-___

“Where Have All the Parties Gone? Fraenkel and Grofman on the Alternative Vote--Yet Again,” forthcoming in Public Choice, Vol. 124 (2007)

“The Many Uses of Federalism,” forthcoming in Drake Law Review, Vol. ___ (2007 or 2008)

“Conciliatory Institutions and Constitutional Process in Post-Conflict States,” forthcoming in William and Mary Law Review, Vol. ___ (2007 or 2008)

The Federalist Abroad in the World,” to accompany a new edition of The Federalist, edited by Ian Shapiro (New Haven: Yale University Press 2007 or 2008)

Jenne, Erin Kristin

“The Roads Not Taken: Alternatives to Ethnic Partition in Bosnia and Kosovo,” Regional and Federal Studies 18 (Special Issue): The Paradox of Federalism, 2008.

“Separatism as a Bargaining Posture: The Role of Leverage in Group Claim-making,” (with Stephen M. Saideman and Will Lowe), Journal of Peace Research 44(5): 537-556, September 2007.

"Dilemmas of Divorce: How Secessionist Identities Cut Both Ways," (with Stephen M. Saideman and Beth K. Dougherty), Security Studies 14(4): 607-636, Summer 2005.

Jolly, Richard

2007, “Inequality in Historical Perspective” in George Mavrotas and Anthony Shorrocks (eds), Advancing Development, (Palgrave-Macmillan, Basingstoke) pp 63-73

2006 “Global Inequalities” in The Elgar Companion to Development Studies, David Alexander Clark, Ed. pp 196-200

2006 “Income Distribution” in The Elgar Companion to Development Studies, David Alexander Clark, Ed. pp 272-5
2005 “The UN and Development Thinking and Practice” in Norwegian Institution of International Affairs Forum for Development Studies Vol. 32, Oslo, 2005, p. 49

2005 “Economic and Social Thinking at the UN in Historical Perspective” (Louis Emmerij, Richard Jolly and Thomas G. Weiss) in Development and Change Vol, Blackwell Publishing, March 2005

Lombardi, Clark

“Islamic Law in the Jurisprudence of the International Court of Justice: An Analysis”, Chicago Journal of International Law, Vol. 8 (Summer 2007)

Book Review of Intent in Islamic Law: Motive and Meaning in Medieval Sunni Fiqh, by Paul Powers. Review forthcoming in 22 Law and Religion (2007)

State Law as Islamic Law in Modern Egypt: The Incorporation of the Shari`a into Egyptian Constitutional Law (Leiden/Boston: E.J. Brill, 2006)
[With Nathan Brown] “Do Constitutions Requiring Adherence to Shari`a Threaten Human Rights? How Egypt’s Constitutional Court Reconciles Islamic Law with the Liberal Rule of Law,” American Univ. International Law Review 21 (2006), 379-435.

[With Nathan Brown] “The Supreme Constitutional Court of Egypt on Islamic Law, Veiling and Civil Rights: An Annotated Translation of Supreme Constitutional Court of Egypt Case No. 8 of Judicial Year 9 (May 18, 1996),” American Univ. International Law Review 21 (2006), 437-460.

Madhavi, Sunder

The Invention of Traditional Knowledge, 70 J. L. & CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS (2007).

Feminism in the Power/Knowledge Age, in GENDER AND FEMINIST THEORY IN LAW & SOCIETY (Madhavi Sunder, ed.) (2007).

Is Nozick Kicking Rawls’s Ass? Intellectual Property and Social Justice, 40 U.C. DAVIS L. REV. 563 (2007) (with Anupam Chander) (Symposium Introduction).

Everyone’s a Superhero: A Cultural Theory of “Mary Sue” Fan Fiction as Fair Use, 94 CALIFORNIA LAW REVIEW (2007) (with Anupam Chander).

IP3, 59 STANFORD LAW REVIEW 257 (2006).

The Right to Mary Sue, in SELF-ORGANIZATION/COUNTER-ECONOMIC STRATEGIES (2006) (with Anupam Chander).

Marwa, Elshakry

‘Darwinian Conversions: Science and Translation in Egypt and the Levant’, Modernité et modernisation de la médecine dans l’Empire ottoman et au Proche-Orient, du XIXe siècle à nos jours (Paris, Istanbul; 2007)

The Saint-Simonians in Egypt, Bidoun: Arts and Culture from the Middle East, Issue 10, Spring 2007

Menon, Rajan

Central Asia in the 21st Century,” in Boris Rumer, ed., Central Asia: The View from Washington, Moscow, and Beijing (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2007)

Why Russia is Really Weak. What happens to Russia when—not if—Oil and Gas Prices begin to Retreat? With Alexander Motyl. Newsweek International, Sept. 25, 2006.

The Myth of Russian Resurgence – with Alexander J. Motyl. The American Interest, Vol. 2, Number 4, Spring 2007.

Cool It, it’s not a Cold War – Los Angeles Times. June 6, 2007.

Michael, Kimmel

Racism as Adolescent Male Rite of Passage: Ex-Nazis in Scandinavia Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 2007 36: 202-218

Pape, Jr., Robert A.

Soft Balancing: A Theory of Security in a Unipolar World,@ International Security Vol 30, No. 1 (Summer 2005), pp. 7-45. Lead article in symposium on Soft Balancing with several articles in response; more in International Security Vol. 30, No 3 (Winter 2005/06).

The True Worth of Air Power,@ Foreign Affairs Vol 83, No. 2 (March/April, 2004), pp. 116-130. Response by former USAF Chief of Staff, Merrill A. McPeak, AA Neater Way to Win@ and my reply AThe Only Way to Win, Foreign Affairs Vol. 83, No. 5 (September/October 2004), pp. 160-164.

The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism, American Political Science Review Vol. 73, No. 3 (August 2003), pp. 343-361. #1 Most downloaded article in APSR 2002-2004 and 2003-2005. Winner of Institute of War and Peace Studies' paper competition on political violence, Columbia University, April 2003.

About the article, How to Defeat Suicide Terrorism, National Review (Sept 19, 2003); Focus (Germany's Newsweek; Nov 24, 2003); Economist (Jan 16, 2004). Article reprinted in David Rapoport, ed., Critical Concepts in Political Science (Routledge, 2005); Karen Mingst and Jack Snyder, Essential Readings in World Politics 2nd ed. (Norton, 2004); At Issue: What Motivates Suicide Bombers (Gale Group, November 2004); Russ Howard, et al.,

Homeland Security & Terrorism (McGraw-Hill, 2005); Dipak Gupta,

Readings on Terrorism (Thomson Higher Education, 2005); Robert Art and Robert Jervis, International Politics, 7th ed. (Longman, 2006); Social Movements (Routledge 2006).

Read, Jen’nan Ghazal
2006. Read, Jen’nan Ghazal. “The Gender Gap in Arab-American Political Engagement,” Pp.
79-92 in American Arabs and Political Participation, edited by Philippa Strum. Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

Reardon, Sean F.

Reardon, S.F. & C. Galindo. (in press) “Patterns of Hispanic Students’ Math Skill Proficiency in the Early Elementary Grades.” Journal of Latinos and Education.

Reardon, S.F., & Robinson, J.P. (in press). “Patterns and trends in racial/ethnic
and socioeconomic achievement gaps.” In Helen A. Ladd & Edward B. Fiske (Eds.), Handbook of Research in Education Finance and Policy.
Lawrence Erlbaum.

Reardon, S.F. & C. Galindo. (2006) “Patterns of Hispanic Students’ Math and English Literacy Test Scores in the Early Elementary Grades.” Report of the National Task Force on Early Childhood Education for Hispanics.

Galindo, C., & S.F. Reardon. (2006) “Hispanic Students’ Educational Experiences and Opportunities During Kindergarten.” Report of the National Task Force on
Early Childhood Education for Hispanics.

Rejali, Darius

“American Torture Debates” Human Rights Review (forthcoming Spring 2008).
"Containing Torture: How torture begets even more torture." (Slate, October 27, 2006)
"The Lesson of July 21" (The Huffington Post, July 20, 2006)
"From the Inside Looking In: Sickness, War and Remembrance in Iran," Reed Magazine, Winter 2007.

Roxborough, Ian

‘Counterinsurgency: The U.S. Military should have learned a lot about fighting rebels in Vietnam. So why is Iraq such a disaster?’ Contexts, Vol 6, Number 2, pp 15-21 © 2007 by the American Sociological Association.

2007: A Great White Fleet for the 21st Century,” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings

2006: The New American Warriors,” Theoria

“Learning and Diffusing the Lessons of Counterinsurgency: The U.S. Military From Vietnam to Iraq” Sociological Focus

2005: “Take the Principles With a Pinch of Salt,” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, October (Prizewinner in Principles of War Essay contest)

2004: “Iraq, Afghanistan, the global war on terrorism, and the Owl of Minerva,” Political Power and Social Theory, vol 16

“Rejoinder: What was the war really about?”

2003: War, American Hegemony, and the Politics of Globalization,” European Legacy, vol 8, No. 3

2002: “Globalization, Unreason, and the Dilemmas of U.S. Military Strategy” International Sociology

“From Revolution to Transformation: the State of the Field,” Joint Force Quarterly, #32

2007: “Weary Titan, Assertive Hegemon: Military Strategy, Globalization, and US Preponderance,” in Bruce Mazlish et al (eds), The Paradoxes of a Global USA (Stanford)

2004: “The Global War on Terrorism is a Real War,” in Alessandro Gobbicchi, (ed) Globalization, Armed Conflicts and Security, CeMiSS, Rome

2003: “War and Militarism,” in George Ritzer (ed), Handbook of Social Problems, Sage

2002: “The Ghost of Vietnam” in Diane Davis and Anthony Pereira (eds) Beyond Warmaking: Rethinking Armed Forces and Their Role in Politics and State Formation, Cambridge.

Sharkey, Heather J.

“Missionary Legacies: Muslim-Christian Encounters in Egypt and Sudan during the Colonial and Postcolonial Periods,” in Benjamin F. Soares (Ed.), Muslim-Christian Encounters in Africa (Brill: Leiden, 2006), pp. 57-88.

“American Mission, Egyptian Church: The Making of a Coptic Evangelical Presbyterian Community,” Journal of Presbyterian History, 84:2 (2006), pp. 170-80.

“Sudan”, Muslim Cultures Today: A Reference Guide, Ed. Kathryn Coughlin (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006), pp. 171-85.

“Women, Gender, and Missionary Education: Sudan,” The Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures, Vol. IV, Gen. Ed. Suad Joseph (Leiden: Brill, 2007), pp. 287-88.

“Umm Kulthum at the American University in Cairo: A Study in the Clash of Christianities,”article to appear in a volume of essays from a conference at Tel Aviv University on “Narrating the Nile – Cultures, Identities, Memories”, Ed. Israel Gershoni and Meir Hatina.

“Muslim Apostasy, Christian Conversion, and Religious Freedom in Egypt: A Study of American Missionaries, Western Imperialism, and Human Rights Agendas”, to appear in Rosalind I.J. Hackett (Ed.), Proselytization Revisited: Rights, Free Markets, and Culture Wars (London: Equinox, forthcoming).

“The American Mission in Egypt and the Arab-Israeli Conflict: A Study of Church Politics in the Middle East, 1948-2006,” to appear in a volume of essays from a conference on “Mission in the Middle East: NGO’s and the New Evangelism,” Ed. Eleanor Tejirian and Reeva Simon, The Middle East Institute, Columbia University.

“American Presbyterian Missionaries and the Egyptian Evangelical Church: The Colonial and Postcolonial History of a Christian Community,” Chronos: Revue d’Histoire de l’Université Balamand (Lebanon), forthcoming.

Shipps, Dorothy

Shipps, Dorothy, Elizabeth Fowlkes and Alissa Peltzman. (2006). “Journalism and Urban School Reform: Versions of Democratic Decision Making in Two American Cities,” American Journal of Education 112, no.3 (May): 363-391

“The Science and Politics of Urban Educational Leadership: Toward a Reorienting Narrative,” in Douglas E. Mitchell (ed) New Foundations of Knowledge for Education Policy Politics and Administration: Science and sensationalism, Lawrence Erlbaum, pp. 181-210 (2006).

Shipps, Dorothy. (2006, Online October 2005). “Civic Lessons” Review of Kate Rousmaniere, Citizen Teacher: The life and leadership of Margaret Haley in Teachers College Record 108, no.8 (August): 1668-1672.

Shweder, Richard

New York Times Op-Ed Essay Nov. 27, 2006 – “Atheists Agonistes” (Also published in the International Herald Tribune Nov. 27, 2006 under the title “The Anxiety of the Atheists”)

2007: The Revival of Cultural Psychology: Some Premonitions and Reflections. In Shinobu Kitayama and Dov Cohen (Eds.), Handbook of Cultural Psychology, Guilford Press.

2007: The Resolute Irresolution of Clifford Geertz. Common Knowledge, 13: 191-205

2006: “From Persons and Situations on Preferences and Constraints”, Psychologie Francaise (Special Issue on Personality Trait Psychology, June, 2006)

2006: “Protecting Human Subjects and Preserving Academic Freedom: Prospects at the University of Chicago, American Ethnologist.

2006: John Searle on a Witch Hunt”, Anthropological Theory, 6:89-111.

“Exposing Muslims to the News: Chicago’s Newspaper Stories and Their Impact on Muslims in Bridgeview, Illinois.” In Katherine Ewing and Stephanie Platz (Ed.), “Muslim Communities in the USA: An Ethnographic Perspective”, Russell Sage Foundation Press. (Charlotte van den Hout, Melissa Kenney and Richard Shweder)

“From Persons and Situations to Preferences and Constraints”. In D. Cervone et al (Eds.), Toward a Science of the Person: Paradigm Change in Psychological Models of Human Nature. Guilford Press.

In Press: Overstressing Islam: Bridgeview’s Muslim Community Since 9/11”. In Katherine Ewing and Stephanie Platz (Ed.), “Muslim Communities in the USA: An Ethnographic Perspective”, Russell Sage Foundation Press. (Craig Joseph, Melissa Kenny, Barnaby Riedel, Charlotte van den Hout and Richard Shweder)

In Press: “The Cultural Psychology of Suffering: The Many Meanings of Health in Orissa, India (And Elsewhere)”. Cheryl Mattingly (Eds) Essays in Honor of Jerome Bruner, Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology

2006: “Customs Control: Some Anthropological Reflections on the Human Rghts Crusades.” Virginia Journal of Public Policy and the Law in special issue titled “Welcome to America: Immigration, Family and the Law. 14:1-38.

2006: The Cultural Psychology of Development: One Mind, Many Mentalities.” (Revised and Updated) In William Damon (Ed.), Handbook of Child Psychology, 6th Edition, John Wiley and Sons. (R. Shweder, J. Goodnow, G. Hatano, R. LeVine, H. Markus, and P. Miller).

Smith, Rogers

“Law’s Races,” in Identities, Affiliations, and Allegiances, ed. Seyla Benhabib, Ian Shapiro, and Danilo Petranovic (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2007).

“Amar’s Constitution: A Biopsy,” Syracuse Law Review 57: 341-355 (2007).

“The Politics of Rights, Then and Now,” in The Nature of Rights at the American Founding and Beyond, ed. Barry Shain (Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press, forthcoming 2007).

“Alien Rights, Citizen Rights, and the Politics of Restriction,” in Debating Immigration, ed. Carol M. Swain. (Cambridge University Press, 2007), pp. 114-126.

“What if God Was One of Us? The Challenges of Studying Foundational Political Concepts,” in Nature and History in American Political Development: A Debate, James W. Ceaser with Jack N. Rakove, Nancy L. Rosenblum, and Rogers M. Smith (Harvard University Press, 2006), pp. 143-168.

“Which Comes First, the Ideas or the Institutions?” in Rethinking Political Institutions: The Art of the State, ed. Ian Shapiro, Stephen Skowronek, and Daniel Galvin (New York University Press, 2006), pp. 91-113.

“Review Essay: Studies in American Racial Development: An Interim Report.” Perspectives on Politics 5: 325-333 (2007).

Taylor, Brian D.

“Force and Federalism: Controlling Coercion in Federal Hybrid Regimes.” Comparative Politics, Vol. 39, No. 4 (July 2007)

“Power Surge?: Russia’s Power Ministries from Yeltsin to Putin and Beyond.” Program on New Approaches to Russian Security Policy Memo Series, Memo No. 414, November 2006.

“Moscow’s federalist policy adapts to a future after Putin.”. Jane’s Intelligence Review. Vol. 18, No. 8 (August 2006), pp. 52-53.

“Law Enforcement and Civil Society in Russia.” Europe-Asia Studies, Vol. 58, No. 2 (March 2006), pp. 193-213. [Abridged and translated as: “Pravookhranitel’nye organy I grazhdanskoye obshchestvo v Rossii.” Otechestvennye zapiski. No. 6, 2005.]

“Russia’s Regions and Law Enforcement,” in Peter Reddaway and Robert W. Orttung, eds., The Dynamics of Russian Politics: Putin’s Reform of Federal-Regional Relations, Volume II (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2005), pp. 65-90

Thompson, Elizabeth

“Pensee on the Study of Colonialism” International Journal of Middle East Studies (February 2007)

Vali, Nasr

The Shia Revival: How Conflicts within Islam will Shape the Future. W.W. Norton; editions 1-5, 2006; editions 6-7, 2007; paperback edition 2007.
--Translated into Italian as La rivincita sciita. Iran, Iraq, Libano. La nuova mezzaluna (Rome: Eega, Universita Bocconi, 2007)
--Forthcoming in: Arabic from Dar al-Kitab al-Arabi; French from Editions Demopolis; Indonesian from Diwan Publishing; Hebrew from Yediot Ahronoth

Democracy in Iran: History and the Quest for Liberty (Co-Author, Ali Gheissari). Oxford University Press; editions 1 and 2, 2006.

“When the Shiites Rise” Foreign Affairs, 85:4 (July/August 2006): 58-74.
--Translated into Persian as “Zamani ke Shia Bar Mikhizad”, in Baztab (Tehran), November 5, 2006.

“Iraq: The First Arab Shia State.” The Missouri Review. 29:2 (Summer 2006): 132-53.

“The Confessional Conflicts and the Rise of the Shiites” The Berlin Journal, 14 (Spring 2007), pp.10-13.

“The Shia Revival” The Military Review (May-June 2007) pp.9-13.

“What We Can Learn From Britain About Iran” (co-author Ray Takeyh) The New York Times April 5, 2007, p.A19.
--Reprinted as “What We Can Learn From Britain” International Herald Tribune April 5, 2007, Op-Ed Section.

--Reprinted as “West Must Engage Iran with Restraint, Patience” New Straits Times (Malaysia) April 7, 2007 Op-Ed section.

“La linea dura della Casa Bianca aumenta i rischi dell´escalation” (The White House Strategy Leads to Escalation) La Repubblica April 4, 2007, p.17.

“Who Wins in Iraq? Iran” Foreign Policy March/April 2007, pp.40-41.

“Epizentrum Irak” (also in English, “The Epicenter of Shia’s Rise”) Süddeutsche Zeitung, Thema Sickerheitskonferenz (Munich Security Conference Supplement), February 9, 2007, p.5.

“The Iran Option That Is’nt on the Table” (co-author Ray Takeyh) The Washington Post February 8, 2007, p.A21.

“Behind the Rise of the Shi’ites” Time December 19, 2006, online edition, http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1571368,00.html.

“The New Hegemon” The New Republic December 18, 2006, pp.32-37.

--Translated into Spanish as “La nueva potencia hegemónica” Vanguardia Dossier (Barcelona) July/September 2007, pp.18-26.

“The Problem is Still the Insurgency” Washington Post November 21, 2006, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/20/AR2006112000954.html.

“Old Blood Feud Drives Mideast’s New Power Play” Los Angeles Times August 27, 2006, pp.M1 and M6.

“After Lebanon, There is Iran” Christian Science Monitor August 9, 2006, p.9.
--Translated into Persian as “Sobat Mantaghe dar Gero-e Hamkari ba Iran Ast” Shargh (Tehran) August 10, 2006, p.4
--Translated into Persian as “Nofouz Mantaghe-ye Iran Ghodrat Emrika ra Tahlil Bordeh Ast” Kayhan (Tehran) August 10, 2006, p.1

“Don’t Hold Your Breadth: Democracy in Iran” The New Republic June 5-12, 2006, pp.27-32.

“Explaining Sectarianism in Iraq” Time March 6, 2006, p.26.

“Dalili Baraye Democracy Zamani Baraye Solh” (A Reason for Democracy, A Time for Peace) Shargh (Tehran) February 25, 2006, p.27.

“Sects and Violence” The New York Times February 23, 2006, p.A27.
--Reprinted as “Sects and Violence” International Herald Tribune February 24, 2206, Op-Ed Section.
--Translated into Portuguese as “EUA subestimaram rivalidade sectarian” Internacional (Sao Polo), February 24, 2006, p.A14.

Weiner, Sharon

“Preventing Nuclear Entrepreneurship in Russia’s Nuclear Cities,” International Security Vol. 27, No. 2, Fall 2002.

Reprinted in: New Global Dangers: Changing Dimensions of International Security (Cambridge, MIT Press, 2004).

Wickham, Carrie Rosefsky

The Muslim World Journal of Human Rights. “The Problem With Coercive Democratization: The Islamist Response to the U.S. Democracy Reform Initiative””. (Berkeley Electronic Press, June 2007.

Zaman, Muhammad Qasim

“Consensus and Religious Authority in Modern Islam: The Discourses of the ‘Ulama,” in Speaking for Islam: religious authorities in Muslim Societies, edited by Gudrun Krämer and Sabine Schmidtke (Leiden: Brill, 2006).

Zvi Ben-Dor Benite

Review: David Atwill, The Chinese Sultanate: Islam, Ethnicity, and the Panthay Rebellion in Southwest china 1856-1873, (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2005), for the American Historical Review, vol. 111, no. 5, December 2006, pp. 1483-1485.

 

Read Carnegie Scholar Ebrahim Moosa's personal history, "Inside the Madrasa" (Boston Review)
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