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1

Isaac, Jeffrey C. "Analyzing Democracy." Perspectives on Politics 9, no. 2 (2011): 241–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537592711000879.

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Perspectives on Politics is a unique political science journal. Approaching its tenth year of existence, its broad mission is to publish excellent political science, and in so doing to contribute to the enlivening of scholarly communication within the discipline and thus to the broader relevance of the discipline in the world. With this in mind, our editorial team decided to “brand” the journal A Political Science Public Sphere. Readers of this journal know that we publish work in a number of formats that mirror the ways that political scientists actually write: self-contained scholarly research articles, more freewheeling and reflective essays, scholarly symposia and critical dialogues, book review essays, and of course the conventional book review.
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2

Sandelands, Eric. "Which journal? The politics of where to publish." Collection Building 15, no. 1 (1996): 27–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/01604959610105940.

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3

Smith, Steven Rathgeb. "Executive Director's Report." PS: Political Science & Politics 47, no. 01 (2013): 224–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049096513001868.

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This essay is my first report as executive director of APSA. I am honored to be succeeding Michael Brintnall. APSA is one of the leading academic associations in the world. It is more than 110 years old with more than 13,000 members, representing a wide variety of universities and nonacademic settings including think tanks, research institutions, advocacy organizations, and government agencies. Our membership is increasingly international from many different countries. In conjunction with our partner, Cambridge University Press, we publish three highly respected journals, theAmerican Political Science Review,Perspectives on Politics,andPS:Political Science and Politics.
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4

Cox, Michaelene, and Jaimie M. Kent. "Political Science Student Journals: What Students Publish and Why Student Publishing Matters." PS: Political Science & Politics 51, no. 4 (2018): 804–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049096518000057.

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ABSTRACTWhereas there is a substantial body of scholarship assessing the merits of student journals, and an equally sizable amount of how-to-publish advice for students in higher education, there is little empirical research exploring the content of disciplinary student publications. To gain a sense of what political science students are publishing, this study examines articles in three peer-reviewed student journals of politics between 2005 and 2015: The Pi Sigma Alpha Undergraduate Journal of Politics, Critique, and Politikon. Content analysis reveals the nature of published student work by subfield, methodology, and topic, with findings discussed in the context of research trends in the profession and the debate about advantages and disadvantages of student journal publishing.
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Isaac, Jeffrey C. "A Perspective on Perspectives." Perspectives on Politics 10, no. 3 (2012): 561–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537592712001612.

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The most important thing any scholarly journal can do is to publish scholarly research and writing that is both excellent and intellectually engaging. Since it hit the ground running in 2002, Perspectives on Politics has been committed to the highest standards of scholarly publication. At the same time, from its inception Perspectives has been a journal with a difference, seeking to combine scholarly excellence with relevance and readability, and to feature a wide range of formats for and perspectives on the serious study of politics. For the past ten years Perspectives has thus served as an important public sphere for political science in general and especially for the American Political Science Association.
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6

Kasza, Gregory J. "Perestroika and the Journals." PS: Political Science & Politics 43, no. 04 (2010): 733–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049096510001186.

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It is fitting to measure Perestroika's impact through the contents of the leading political science association journals. The original Perestroika manifesto railed at theAmerican Political Science Review(APSR), and many subsequent Perestroika protests condemned the skewed contents of theAPSR, theAmerican Journal of Political Science(AJPS), and theJournal of Politics. Large national and regional associations publish and pay for these journals. The position of Perestroika has been that their contents should represent the many types of research that political scientists are doing, which was not the case when the movement began.
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7

Bozic, Sofija. "Historiografy on the stroke of politics: Case of Antony Farcic." Prilozi za knjizevnost, jezik, istoriju i folklor, no. 83 (2017): 75–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/pkjif1783075b.

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The paper discusses the response of Antoni Farcic to the attempt of Croatian students in the ?Slobodna Dalmacija? newspaper to discard as unscientific and chauvinistic his article Serbs and Navy, previously published in the ?Republic? newspaper (1953). Farcic?s answer, which the press did not publish, denying him the right to defense, contains extensive material that shows that he wrote on the basis of the original material and relevant scientific literature, in no way departing from the principles of historical methodology.
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8

Metcalfe, Amy Scott. "Thinking in place: Picturing the Knowledge University as a politics of refusal." Research in Education 104, no. 1 (2018): 43–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0034523718806932.

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In a research context marked by performance evaluation and knowledge commodification, attempts to visualize a future Knowledge University might be understood as a “politics of refusal” in that an emphasis on multimodality (image/text) confronts assumptions about the form of academic critique, calling into question the “publish-ability” of such engagements. This essay asserts a different way of thinking about the Knowledge University in both form and function.
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9

Steed, Robert P., and Laurence W. Moreland. "Introduction: About This Special Issue (The Continuing Transformation of Southern Politics)." American Review of Politics 23 (July 1, 2002): 89–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.15763/issn.2374-7781.2002.23.0.89-91.

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This special issue of The American Review of Politics consists of five papers presented at the 2002 Citadel Symposium on Southern Politics, the thirteenth such conference held in Charleston since 1978. The Symposium, codirected by Robert P. Steed, Laurence W. Moreland, and John C. Kuzenski (all of the political science faculty of The Citadel), has become a vital part of the network of scholars who research, write, and publish in the area of southern politics. Over forty papers were presented and discussed at the 2002 Symposium, and they represented a broad range of topics. Special features of the Symposium included a retrospective look at The Transformation of Southern Politics (published a little more than a quarter century ago), conducted by that important volume’s authors, Jack Bass and Walter DeVries, as well as a luncheon address by Merle Black (Asa G. Candler Professor of Politics at Emory University), who discussed “The Rise of Southern Republicans,” drawing on the recently published volume of the same title coauthored by Merle and his brother Earl Black.
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10

Laborde, Cécile. "The Danish Cartoon Controversy and the Challenges of Multicultural Politics." Perspectives on Politics 9, no. 3 (2011): 603–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537592711002817.

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Jytte Klausen's The Cartoons That Shook the World offers an interesting political science account of the Danish cartoon controversy and of a broader set of tensions between multiculturalism, civility, and freedom of expression. The book is also a fascinating case study of how political science can itself become the object of dispute, due to Yale University Press' decision to publish the book without any reproductions of the controversial cartoons.We have thus asked a range of political scientists to comment on the Danish cartoon imbroglio, the book's analysis of it, and the controversy over the book itself.—Jeffrey C. Isaac, Editor
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Norton, Anne. "The Danish Cartoon Controversy and the Challenges of Multicultural Politics." Perspectives on Politics 9, no. 3 (2011): 606–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537592711002829.

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Jytte Klausen's The Cartoons That Shook the World offers an interesting political science account of the Danish cartoon controversy and of a broader set of tensions between multiculturalism, civility, and freedom of expression. The book is also a fascinating case study of how political science can itself become the object of dispute, due to Yale University Press' decision to publish the book without any reproductions of the controversial cartoons.We have thus asked a range of political scientists to comment on the Danish cartoon imbroglio, the book's analysis of it, and the controversy over the book itself.—Jeffrey C. Isaac, Editor
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12

Downs, Donald. "The Danish Cartoon Controversy and the Challenges of Multicultural Politics." Perspectives on Politics 9, no. 3 (2011): 609–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537592711002830.

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Jytte Klausen's The Cartoons That Shook the World offers an interesting political science account of the Danish cartoon controversy and of a broader set of tensions between multiculturalism, civility, and freedom of expression. The book is also a fascinating case study of how political science can itself become the object of dispute, due to Yale University Press' decision to publish the book without any reproductions of the controversial cartoons.We have thus asked a range of political scientists to comment on the Danish cartoon imbroglio, the book's analysis of it, and the controversy over the book itself.—Jeffrey C. Isaac, Editor
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Sinno, Abdulkader. "The Danish Cartoon Controversy and the Challenges of Multicultural Politics." Perspectives on Politics 9, no. 3 (2011): 612–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537592711002842.

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Jytte Klausen's The Cartoons That Shook the World offers an interesting political science account of the Danish cartoon controversy and of a broader set of tensions between multiculturalism, civility, and freedom of expression. The book is also a fascinating case study of how political science can itself become the object of dispute, due to Yale University Press' decision to publish the book without any reproductions of the controversial cartoons.We have thus asked a range of political scientists to comment on the Danish cartoon imbroglio, the book's analysis of it, and the controversy over the book itself.—Jeffrey C. Isaac, Editor
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14

Warner, Carolyn M. "The Danish Cartoon Controversy and the Challenges of Multicultural Politics." Perspectives on Politics 9, no. 3 (2011): 615–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537592711002854.

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Jytte Klausen's The Cartoons That Shook the World offers an interesting political science account of the Danish cartoon controversy and of a broader set of tensions between multiculturalism, civility, and freedom of expression. The book is also a fascinating case study of how political science can itself become the object of dispute, due to Yale University Press' decision to publish the book without any reproductions of the controversial cartoons.We have thus asked a range of political scientists to comment on the Danish cartoon imbroglio, the book's analysis of it, and the controversy over the book itself.—Jeffrey C. Isaac, Editor
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15

Callan, Brian, and Giovanni A. Travaglino. "Editorial." Contention 9, no. 1 (2021): v—vi. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/cont.2021.090101.

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In this first issue of 2021, we find ourselves still in this strange space of a viral pandemic that first emerged in 2019. Yet contentious politics persists in public places, and the present issue reflects Contention’s continued efforts to publish interdisciplinary research-based articles from around the world.
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16

Hong, Ying, and Benson Honig. "Publish and Politics: An Examination of Business School Faculty Salaries in Ontario." Academy of Management Learning & Education 15, no. 4 (2016): 665–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.5465/amle.2015.0273.

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17

Tachau, Frank. "ERGUN ÖZBUDUN, Contemporary Turkish Politics: Challenges to Democratic Consolidation (Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner, 2000). Pp. 181. $49.95 cloth." International Journal of Middle East Studies 33, no. 4 (2001): 657–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743801454079.

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Based on Professor Özbudun's lectures at Bilkent University, this book is at once compact, highly readable, and very insightful. Unlike much current literature on Turkey, the analysis is set in a broad and informed comparative context. Turkey, the author points out, has been left out of comparative political studies, particularly those encompassing the Middle East and southern Europe, in which arguably it could (or should) have been included. Scholarly neglect thus reflects real-world politics: Turkey falls between two worlds, one of which it once largely controlled, the other to which it currently aspires to belong. This lacuna is one of the factors that persuaded Özbudun to publish this volume.
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18

FLAY, CATHERINE. "After the Counterculture: American Capitalism, Power, and Opposition in Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon." Journal of American Studies 51, no. 3 (2016): 779–804. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875816001961.

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Although Thomas Pynchon has continued to publish long after the postwar American countercultural era, his politics are critically characterized in relation to that movement's values. The dominant critical positions associate power with rationalism and functionality, and political opposition with creativity and pleasure, positioning Pynchon's novels at a politicized intersection between postmodernism and the counterculture. This article problematizes this dominant critical position, taking Mason & Dixon (1997) as exemplary of Pynchon's reconsideration of the nature of power and potential opposition to it in response to the countercultural movement's failures and successes, and to developments in capitalist social organization in the 1980s.
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19

Tymowski, Andrzej W. "Interview with Karol Modzelewski, 1991." East European Politics and Societies: and Cultures 33, no. 4 (2019): 806–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0888325419874384.

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This is an edited version of an interview conducted in 1991 and first published in New Politics 4, no. 2 (1993): 155–72. The editors of EEPS publish this version after the recent death of Karol Modzelewski, 1937–2019. In the 1991 interview, Modzelewski reflected on the difference between Solidarność 1980–1981 as a mass social movement and the very much changed Solidarność that in 1989 formed the first non-Communist government in the Soviet bloc. His comments have a premonitory relevance for Polish politics today.
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20

Mann, Jatinder. "Introduction." Journal of Australian, Canadian, and Aotearoa New Zealand Studies 1, no. 1 (2021): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.52230/vqgx5133.

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The aim and scope of the Journal of Australian, Canadian and Aotearoa New Zealand Studies (JACANZS) is to publish articles in various disciplines (history, politics, literature, law, anthropology, and Indigenous studies) on one or more of the following countries; Australia, Canada, and Aotearoa New Zealand, with a core focus on articles that are comparative in their geographic remit for example Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand, or Australia and Canada. The creation of the journal responds to a lack of journals that collectively publish across the fields of Australian, Canadian, and Aotearoa New Zealand studies from multi and interdisciplinary perspectives. It also followed the creation of the Australian, Canadian and New Zealand Studies Network (ACNZSN) to reflect the work and membership of the network.
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21

Buckwalter-Arias, James. "Reinscribing the Aesthetic: Cuban Narrative and Post-Soviet Cultural Politics." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 120, no. 2 (2005): 362–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/003081205x52437.

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With the collapse of the Soviet Union, Cuba's revolutionary paradigm encounters its greatest crisis to date. As the state's cultural institutions struggle to cope with severe material limitations and strive to square socialist ideology with world events, Cuban writers increasingly publish their work with foreign companies. Not uncommonly these authors reassert the aesthetic priorities that state institutions are said to have repressed or subordinated to political imperatives. It may appear, superficially, that Cuban writers are out to revive some notion of an autonomous literary art. In situating aesthetic discourse in profoundly dialogic, historically specific, and politically charged narrative contexts, however, these writings challenge traditional universalizing formulations of the aesthetic category. Such historico-narrative rearticulation of social practices and theories of art is prerequisite to a more progressive cultural politics than the socialist state has managed to implement and than an uncritical reengagement with the global market can bring about.
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22

Ernst, Daniel R. "Willard Hurst and the Administrative State: From Williams to Wisconsin." Law and History Review 18, no. 1 (2000): 1–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/744347.

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Perhaps because Willard Hurst did not publish his first book, The Growth of American Law, until 1950, more than a decade after he entered law teaching, his readers have often found it hard to imagine him as other than a fully formed scholar. The pluralist politics of his major writings, their functionalist sociology, and their attentiveness to consensus in history have made Hurst seem so much a product of the 1950s that one can easily overlook the ways in which developments in law and politics in the preceding decades shaped his perspective on the American past.
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Shannon, Patrick. "Poverty, Literacy, and Politics: Living in the USA." Journal of Literacy Research 28, no. 3 (1996): 429–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10862969609547933.

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The following article by Patrick Shannon is the second installment of a three-part series on literacy and educational policy in jlr's Critical Issues section. Previously (Volume 23, Number 2), Judith Green with Carol Dixon, David Pearson, and Sharon Quint commented respectively on the ideas they believed to be crucial for policymakers to know about literacy, from their view as literacy researchers. At the same time, we published Donna Alvermann's reaction to the views of the three researchers. Patrick Shannon now addresses how poverty and social disadvantages relate to literacy research and policy issues. In the next issue of jlr (Volume 23, Number 4), we will publish the comments of several high-ranking policymakers who have been asked to respond to the literacy researchers' views on literacy and educational policy. We hope that this series of “Critical Issues” pieces will stimulate increased dialogue about educational policy among researchers interested in literacy and between researchers and policymakers. Toward that end, we encourage readers to ponder the perspectives and ideas presented in this series and to consider adding their own insights by submitting letters to the editor, which will be considered for publication.
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Nagel, Jack H. "State of Independence: Explaining and Maintaining the Distinctive Competence of the British Journal of Political Science." British Journal of Political Science 40, no. 4 (2010): 711–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007123410000256.

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Uniquely among leading generalist journals in political science, the BJPolS is independent of any professional association. Although organizational sponsorship confers great advantages, the BJPolS has thrived during its first forty years because able editors exploited their independence to adopt policies that were less feasible for official journals subject to membership pressures – a distinctive focus on contemporary theory, receptivity to overseas contributors, flexibility about longer articles and dual submissions, and active editorial discretion. These practices should continue to serve the journal well despite challenges posed by technological change. In responding to specialized competitors, the BJPolS should maintain its aspiration to publish papers that address ‘problems of general significance to students of politics’ by connecting analytical models to empirical evidence and enduring normative goals.
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KEMMERER, ALEXANDRA. "Kelsen, Schmitt, Arendt, and the Possibilities of Constitutionalization in (International) Law: Introduction." Leiden Journal of International Law 23, no. 4 (2010): 717–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0922156510000324.

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It is tempting to introduce this special section in an apologetic tone. Has not enough been written, in recent years, on constitutionalization, that new phenomenon and term which has recently entered the world of politics and law, closely related to global constitutionalism, to constitutionalism in international law? And is there really a need to publish another three articles on Hans Kelsen, Carl Schmitt, and Hannah Arendt, instead of highlighting new faces and frames of thought in international law and its theory?
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Nelson, Adam R. "The Elementary and Secondary Education Act at Fifty: A Changing Federal Role in American Education." History of Education Quarterly 56, no. 2 (2016): 358–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hoeq.12186.

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For this first History of Education Quarterly Policy Forum, we invited participants in the special Plenary Session at the 2015 Annual Meeting of the History of Education Society (HES) in St Louis to publish their remarks on the historical significance of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) at fifty. Organized and introduced by HES vice-president and program chair Adam R. Nelson, the session consisted of presentations by three expert panelists from the fields of History and African American Studies, American Law and Politics, and Political Science and Public Policy: Crystal Sanders of Penn State University, Doug Reed of Georgetown University, and Susan Moffitt of Brawn University, respectively. What follows are the texts of Adam Nelson's introductory remarks—including his introduction of the three panelists—followed by the panelists' remarks.
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Umar Al Faruq. "POLITIK DAN KEBIJAKAN TENTANG MAJELIS TAKLIM DI INDONESIA (Analisis Kebijakan Peraturan Menteri Agama No. 29 Tahun 2019)." AL MURABBI 5, no. 2 (2020): 41–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.35891/amb.v5i2.2138.

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Politics and education cannot be separated, although it is a non-formal educational institution in this case is Majelis Taklim. As an educational institution of non-formal of Diniyah in Indonesia Majelis Taklim is vulnerable to political interests and is also vulnerable to serve as a place to grow radicalism understanding. As a form of government effort in tackling radicalism in Indonesia the government publish regulation of the Minister of Religious Affairs (PMA) No. 29 year 2019 about Majelis Taklim. This article wants to discuss about the politics and policy on Majelis Taklim in Indonesia by analyzing the policy of the Minister of Religious Affairs (PMA) No. 29 year 2019. The method used is the Discourse analysis. The result of this research is 1) The issuance of PMA No 29 years 2019 is backed by the issue of Radicalisation (deradicalisation), 2) The essence of PMA issuance No. 29 year 2019 is to record Majelis Taklim in Indonesia ang the end of this recording is the issuance of registered certificate (SKT), 3) Government efforts in order to countermeasure the radicalism by targeting Majelis Taklim by means of mapping is not effective yet.
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Rzepa, Joanna. "Publishing ‘Paper Bullets’: Politics, Propaganda and Polish-English Translation in Wartime London." Comparative Critical Studies 16, no. 2-3 (2019): 217–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/ccs.2019.0328.

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During World War II, publishing was an important element of the war effort for both the Allies and the Axis powers. Wartime propaganda and cultural diplomacy relied primarily on books, magazines and the daily press. The exiled governments in London, including the Polish government, undertook a major effort to translate, publish and promote numerous books and pamphlets that would appeal to British readers and thereby help to sway public opinion. This paper focuses on translation as an important aspect of wartime publishing that has not yet received much scholarly attention. It offers a contribution to research into the role and place of translations in wartime publishing by discussing the Polish government-in-exile's translation and publishing campaign. Drawing on various archival sources, it demonstrates that publishing translations was an important part of wartime cultural diplomacy and led to the development of extensive state-private networks that brought together exiled governments and British publishers. By analysing this material in a broad cultural context, the paper highlights the historical, ideological and political relevance of translation studies research to wartime publishing and censorship.
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Savchuk, Natal'ya, Maksim Velichko, and Roman Istratov. "CURRENT DIRECTIONS OF PROBLEM RESEARCH RELATIONS BETWEEN THE STATES OF THE USSR, POLAND AND GERMANY IN THE 1930TH. TAKING INTO ACCOUNT THE NEW DOCUMENTARY BASE." Bulletin of the Angarsk State Technical University 1, no. 14 (2020): 243–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.36629/2686-777x-2020-1-14-243-247.

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The article deals with the events of international politics in Europe in the 1930th. The article analyzes the position of the States of the USSR, Poland and Germany on the issues of conclud-ing non-aggression treaties on the eve of world war II. The research is based on the analysis of pub-lished secret materials of Russian archives. It is concluded that in the modern period, in order to pre-serve historical memory, strengthen cooperation and mutual understanding between peoples, it is nec-essary to further publish archival documents of all States, discuss controversial issues, and avoid ideological stereotypes.
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Blackman, Lisa. "Social Media and the Politics of Small Data: Post Publication Peer Review and Academic Value." Theory, Culture & Society 33, no. 4 (2015): 3–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263276415590002.

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Academics across the sciences and humanities are increasingly being encouraged to use social media as a post-publication strategy to enhance and extend the impact of their articles and books. As well as various measures of social media impact, the turn towards publication outlets which are open access and free to use is contributing to anxieties over where, what and how to publish. This is all the more pernicious given the increasing measures of academic value that govern the academy, and the stresses, strains and hidden injuries that structure academic life. This article will debate these issues and their consequences for the humanities and social sciences by analysing the contours of a recent controversy in academic science publishing, which follows the after-lives of a highly cited journal article. This includes a discussion of the value and status of post-publication peer review, and the politics of open access publishing, of citation and the public communication of science within digital environments and archives.
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Fisher, Caroline, David Marshall, and Kerry McCallum. "Bypassing the press gallery: from Howard to Hanson." Media International Australia 167, no. 1 (2018): 57–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x18766077.

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Traditionally politicians have been dependent on political news media to get their message across to the public. The rise of social media means that politicians can bypass the Press Gallery and publish directly to their target audiences via Facebook, Twitter and other social media platforms. This article argues that Prime Minister John Howard’s (1996–2007) use of talk back radio and early forays on YouTube were pivotal in the trend towards ‘disintermediation’ in Australian politics. It draws on two studies. One involving interviews with 87 key media actors from the Howard era including journalists, broadcasters, politicians and media advisers; and a second, which includes fresh interviews with contemporary press secretaries. This article examines the shift from a ‘mass media logic’ to a ‘hybrid logic’, considered from a mediatization theoretical position. We also ask important questions about the press gallery’s ongoing relevance in the digital era, when politicians preside over their own social media empires.
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SMITH, STEVE. "Wendt's world." Review of International Studies 26, no. 1 (2000): 151–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0260210500001510.

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Alexander Wendt's book, Social Theory of International Politics, is published twenty years after Kenneth Waltz's enormously influential Theory of International Politics. The similarity in their titles is no coincidence, since Wendt wants to build on the insights of Waltz's realism and construct an idealist and holist account of international politics (not, note, international relations). In my view, Wendt's book is likely to be as influential as Waltz's. It is a superbly written and sophisticated book, one that has clearly been drafted and redrafted so as to refine the argument and anticipate many of the likely objections. I think that although I can anticipate the objections of both his rationalist and his reflectivist critics. I am also aware that he makes life difficult for them by defining his ground very precisely, and by trying to define the terms of any debate in which he might be engaged. Criticism of the book is not an easy task. The book is likely to become the standard account for those working within the social constructivist literature of International Politics. It is a book that has been eagerly awaited, and it will not disappoint those who have been waiting for Wendt to publish his definitive statement on constructivism.
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Johnson, James. "Introduction and Comments." Perspectives on Politics 7, no. 1 (2009): 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s153759270909001x.

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We devote the bulk of this issue to papers in the field of International Relations. We start, however, as we do each March, with the Address delivered by the immediate past president of the APSA at the immediately prior Annual Meetings. This year our author is Dianne Pinderhughes who, tacking back and forth between personal reflection and academic observation, advances a forceful argument in which she identifies our failure to adequately address and understand racial politics in the United States and challenges us to remedy that failure. I am honored to publish her address. I urge you not simply to read it, but to engage the intellectual agenda Dianne Pinderhughes lays before us.
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NICHOLLS, PETER. "Of Being Ethical: Reflections on George Oppen." Journal of American Studies 31, no. 2 (1997): 153–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875897005616.

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The poems of George Oppen continue to occupy a marginal place in most literary histories, even though his work encapsulates some of the major shifts in American writing between high modernism and contemporary Language poetry. In part this marginalization is due to the habit of tying Oppen to Louis Zukofsky's shortlived “Objectivist” tendency of the thirties. Oppen did indeed publish his first collection, Discrete Series, in 1934, and with a strong endorsement from Ezra Pound (“I salute a serious craftsman, a sensibility which is not every man's sensibility and which has not been got out of any other man's books”). Yet after this propitious start Oppen fell silent for twenty-five years, jettisoning poetry for politics. He and his wife Mary were members of the Communist Party between 1936 and 1941, their activities eventually attracting close scrutiny from the FBI. In 1949, Oppen and his family opted for political exile in Mexico to avoid harrassment. They would not return until 1958; only then did Oppen begin writing poetry again, initiating a sequence of major volumes, from The Materials (1962) to Primitive (1978).
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35

ROSE, EDWIN D. "PUBLISHING NATURE IN THE AGE OF REVOLUTIONS: JOSEPH BANKS, GEORG FORSTER, AND THE PLANTS OF THE PACIFIC." Historical Journal 63, no. 5 (2020): 1132–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x20000011.

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AbstractThe construction and distribution of books containing large copperplate images was of great importance to practitioners of natural history during the eighteenth century. This article examines the case of the botanist and president of the Royal Society Sir Joseph Banks (1743–1820), who attempted to publish a series of images based on the botanical illustrations produced by Georg Forster (1754–94) on Cook's second voyage of exploration (1772–5) during the 1790s. The analysis reveals how the French Revolution influenced approaches to constructing and distributing works of natural history in Britain, moving beyond commercial studies of book production to show how Banks's political agenda shaped the taxonomic content and distribution of this publication. Matters were complicated by Forster's association with radical politics and the revolutionary ideologies attached to materials collected in the Pacific by the 1790s. Banks's response to the Revolution influenced the distribution of this great work, showing how British loyalist agendas interacted with scientific practice and shaped the diffusion of natural knowledge in the revolutionary age.
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36

King, Gary, Benjamin Schneer, and Ariel White. "How the news media activate public expression and influence national agendas." Science 358, no. 6364 (2017): 776–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aao1100.

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We demonstrate that exposure to the news media causes Americans to take public stands on specific issues, join national policy conversations, and express themselves publicly—all key components of democratic politics—more often than they would otherwise. After recruiting 48 mostly small media outlets, we chose groups of these outlets to write and publish articles on subjects we approved, on dates we randomly assigned. We estimated the causal effect on proximal measures, such as website pageviews and Twitter discussion of the articles’ specific subjects, and distal ones, such as national Twitter conversation in broad policy areas. Our intervention increased discussion in each broad policy area by ~62.7% (relative to a day’s volume), accounting for 13,166 additional posts over the treatment week, with similar effects across population subgroups.
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37

Madeira, Viviane Souza. "Women writing and writings on women in the goan magazine o acadêmico (1940 – 1943)." Via Atlântica, no. 36 (November 28, 2019): 142–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.11606/va.v0i36.160336.

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This article discusses some of the texts written about women by men as well as those written by women in the Goan magazine O Académico (1940-1943). Even though O Académico is not particularly aimed at women’s readership, but at a broader audience – the “Goan youth” – it contains articles that deal with the question of women in the spheres of science, politics and literature. As one of the magazine’s objectives was to “emancipate Goan youth intellectually”, we understand that young women’s education was also within the their scope, placing the question of gender as central. The Goan intelligentsia that made up the editorial board of the publication revealed their desire for modernization by showing their preoccupation with forward-looking ideas and by providing the space for women to publish their texts.
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38

BULMAN, WILLIAM J. "HOBBES'S PUBLISHER AND THE POLITICAL BUSINESS OF ENLIGHTENMENT." Historical Journal 59, no. 2 (2016): 339–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x15000345.

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ABSTRACTThis article argues for an ideologically neutral understanding of the early Enlightenment, the Enlightenment public, and later Stuart religious politics. It approaches these topics from the perspective of the book trade. Thomas Hobbes's publisher and man of business in the 1670s, William Crooke, set up his London bookshop as a public forum on ‘Hobbism’ that showcased the confrontation between the Anglican clergy and their most formidable foe. In his shop, Crooke set scribal copies of illicit Hobbes tracts alongside the works of his second prized author, an Enlightened Anglican apologist named Lancelot Addison. The stationer's projects included two separate schemes to publish a controversial Hobbes tract and a bishop's response to it in a single volume. The shop was frequented not only by some of the period's foremost republicans, tolerationists, and freethinkers, but also by powerful members of the political and religious establishment, many of whom condoned and actively supported Crooke's schemes. This case-study shows from the ground up why the early Enlightenment is most profitably understood as a site of struggle between competing schemes for making internecine bloodshed a thing of the past.
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39

Kreuzer, Marcus. "Response to Ledford and Sperber." Central European History 36, no. 3 (2003): 375–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156916103771006061.

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Over the last decade, historians have made steady inroads into the frequently static social sciences as they are trying to understand the changing post-Cold War order and the even more rapidly changing global and domestic political economies. Such softening of disciplinary boundaries is also observable in the other direction. Jonathan Sperber's work on nineteenth-century electoral politics and Kenneth Ledford's study on German lawyers offer two examples among many of historians borrowing concepts and methods from the social sciences. Yet, these encouraging signs of disciplinary trespassing cannot mask the fact that these two disciplines continue only infrequently to publish in each others' journals, intelligently review each others' works, or jointly reflect on the payoffs of interdisciplinary scholarship. Given this limited dialogue, it is a particular pleasure to reply to two such thoughtful and constructive respondents. In subtly tackling the problems inherent in comparing, Kenneth Ledford ventures into the disciplinary borderlands of history and the social sciences while Jonathan Sperber stays more closely in the historical corner and — to use Ledford's apt characterization of his colleagues — “picks cautionary holes in the applicability” of comparisons.
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40

Hu (胡博林), Bolin. "Reporting China." Journal of Chinese Overseas 17, no. 1 (2021): 84–116. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/17932548-12341435.

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Abstract This article explores how Chinese-language newspapers in Australia reported on China in the period 1931–37. These newspapers made efforts to build support for the Sino-Japanese war and influence Chinese residents in Australia. However, they offered contrasting views of the Chinese government ruled by the Kuomintang. The Tung Wah Times, along with the Chinese World’s News, continued to publish anti-Chiang Kai-shek propaganda, arguing for a strong anti-Japanese resistance. But the Chinese Republic News and the Chinese Times demonstrated support for and understanding of the Chiang government’s dilemma, though the political position of the former was much more fluid. The divergent views revealed the multiple loyalties of Chinese residents in Australia and their active community politics when their population in Australia was declining, and it was a reminder that the diasporic community cannot be homogenized with a collective concept of a “country.” It also reflected their shared identification with the Chinese nation, showing different approaches to building up a strong home country. By shaping their readerships’ Chinese patriotism and nationalism, these Chinese-language newspapers strengthened the connection and allegiances between Chinese in Australia and their homeland.
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41

Dock, Julie Bates, Daphne Ryan Allen, Jennifer Palais, and Kristen Tracy. "“But One Expects That”: Charlotte Perkins Gilman's “The Yellow Wallpaper” and the Shifting Light of Scholarship." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 111, no. 1 (1996): 52–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/463133.

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When feminist critics of the 1970s rediscovered “The Yellow Wallpaper,” they constructed an interpretation of the story and the history of its publication and reception. Subsequent critics lent authority to an emerging set of accepted “facts”: nineteenth-century audiences read the tale as a ghost story rather than as a critique of the sexual politics of marriage; Gilman fought valiantly against hostility from the entrenched hierarchy of male editors who refused to publish her work; and irate male physicians censured the story once it appeared. By reexamining the documentary evidence on which those “facts” are based, we examine the role that ideology plays in gathering and interpreting evidence. Gilman's story serves as a fine but certainly not a unique example of how scholarship is as grounded in historical biases as the literature it seeks to illuminate.
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42

Scheidel, Walter. "Roman wealth and wealth inequality in comparative perspective." Journal of Roman Archaeology 33 (2020): 341–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s104775942000104x.

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In 2013, Barack Obama called rising inequality “the defining challenge of our time”. Since the Financial Crisis and Great Recession of 2007-9, the gap between the haves and have-nots has attracted unprecedented attention in politics, the media and academia.1 Students of the more distant past have also begun to embrace this trend. Economists are once again looking back in time, inspired in no small measure by the broad impact of the work of Thomas Piketty.2 Historians are laboring hard to unearth and publish relevant data. Thanks to their efforts, we are now able to glimpse the contours of changes in the concentration of income and wealth over the very long run, at least in some parts of the world.3 Archaeologists have been joining the fray, gathering and analyzing plausible proxies of inequality such as house sizes.4
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43

Kazarinova, Darya B. "Vectors of Evolution of Political Reflection and Рolitainment". Socialʹnye i gumanitarnye znania 6, № 2 (2020): 134. http://dx.doi.org/10.18255/2412-6519-2020-2-134-141.

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The development of political science in Russia largely reflects global trends. The transition to the methodology of quantitative analysis, the increasing role of large interdisciplinary projects with large transnational research teams, the increase in the number of co-authors, the avalanche of publication activity, and the extreme democratization of scientific life are among them. The principle of publish-or-perish, which dominates the education and scientific policies, provokes an exponential growth of publications and a number of negative effects: "salami publications", "guest authorship" , etc. In response to these effects, the ideas of "slow science" in the West and active public discussion in the Russian scientific environment develop. At the same time, the generation of meanings and narratives takes place in journalism and politainment - a sphere where politics and entertainment interact and intertwine, creating a new reality. At this point, political theory is becoming more and more elitist. At the same time, metaphor as a tool of theoretical knowledge is becoming increasingly important. Today, political knowledge is a system of hierarchically constructed interacting and interrelated metaphorical concepts. In this context, the abilities of metaphor are important: not only to describe reality more or less accurately, but also to model it. There are two ways to reflect on the political: the professional community, in the context of mass education and science, moves towards detailing knowledge about a narrow subject, while broader political contexts are reflected by society and its intellectual and creative elites through the narratives of mass culture expressed in metaphorical language.
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44

Bolsen, Toby, James N. Druckman, and Fay Lomax Cook. "Citizens’, Scientists’, and Policy Advisors’ Beliefs about Global Warming." ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 658, no. 1 (2015): 271–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0002716214558393.

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Numerous factors shape citizens’ beliefs about global warming, but there is very little research that compares the views of the public with key actors in the policymaking process. We analyze data from simultaneous and parallel surveys of (1) the U.S. public, (2) scientists who actively publish research on energy technologies in the United States, and (3) congressional policy advisors and find that beliefs about global warming vary markedly among them. Scientists and policy advisors are more likely than the public to express a belief in the existence and anthropogenic nature of global warming. We also find ideological polarization about global warming in all three groups, although scientists are less polarized than the public and policy advisors over whether global warming is actually occurring. Alarmingly, there is evidence that the ideological divide about global warming gets significantly larger according to respondents’ knowledge about politics, energy, and science.
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45

Travaglino, Giovanni A., and Benjamin Abrams. "Editorial." Contention 8, no. 1 (2020): v—vii. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/cont.2020.080101.

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Contention has now reached its eighth volume and fifteenth issue, and we have been delighted to see the journal move from attainment to attainment over the past eight years. Contention has developed a reputation for publishing high-quality research, articles, and analyses in the fields of social protest, collective action, and contentious politics, soliciting contributions from world-leading scholars and early career academics alike. Its articles are strongly interdisciplinary and global in nature, with the journal offering a platform for research that crosses old-fashioned national and theoretical boundaries. We were delighted to see such merits recognized by the recent inclusion of Contention in the SCOPUS database. Together with the European Reference Index for the Humanities and Social Sciences, where the journal is already indexed, the inclusion of Contention in SCOPUS will bring further visibility to the scholarly work we publish, facilitating its diffusion by providing an even stronger opportunity to contribute to international scholarly dialogue.
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46

Brgles, Miriam Mary, and Dora Škender. "Operna publika u digitalnom okruženju i operni online sadržaji tijekom karantene uzrokovane pandemijom bolesti COVID-19." Medijska istraživanja 26, no. 2 (2021): 125–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.22572/mi.26.2.6.

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Rad je usmjeren na afirmaciju kvalitativnih istraživanja u grani sociologije medija i sociologije kulture, a glavni cilj rada jest opisati kako operna publika prati recentnu opernu produkciju, putem kojih digitalnih medija te koja joj je motivacija i koja joj značenja pridaje. Iako trendovi socioloških istraživanja kazališne publike u zapadnom svijetu podrazumijevaju proširivanje fokusa istraživanja i na „ne-publiku“ (Tröndle, 2019), u Hrvatskoj nikada do sada nije provedeno istraživanje operne i/ili koncertne publike, koja se u Austriji i Njemačkoj zasebno istražuje. Sukladno promjeni paradigme, koja je potvrđena u istraživanjima u SAD-u, istraživačka pitanja rada su: mogu li se prijenosi opera uživo u kinima podrazumijevati kao kulturno događanje te može li se Dollaseova (1998) kategorizacija publike proširiti novom kategorijom, u koju pripada publika koja opere i operne sadržaje prati u kinima i(li) online, što je bila jedina mogućnost tijekom karantene uzrokovane pandemijom bolesti COVID-19. Primijenjen je fenomenološki pristup i kvalitativna metodologija (metoda opažanja sa sudjelovanjem, četiri strukturirana intervjua i analiza sadržaja). Istraživanje je pokazalo kako je uloga virtualnog prostora, iako drugačija i obilježena specifičnim manjkavostima, gotovo jednako važna kao i fizički prostor u kojem se odvija socijalna interakcija operne publike. Publika stvarnost izvedbe opere, preseljene u virtualni prostor, shvaća i opisuje uglavnom s visokim interesima, motivacijom i očekivanjima. Također, besplatni online operni sadržaji, koji su intenzivno zaživjeli u 2020. godini tijekom karantene uzrokovane pandemijom bolesti COVID-19, približavaju opernu umjetnost široj populaciji te se predlaže proširenje Dollaseove kategorizacije kategorijom digitalne operne publike.
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47

Glazunova, Sofya. "‘Four Populisms’ of Alexey Navalny: An Analysis of Russian Non-Systemic Opposition Discourse on YouTube." Media and Communication 8, no. 4 (2020): 121–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/mac.v8i4.3169.

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The rise of populist movements across the globe has instigated considerable research interest into populism, predominantly in Western democracies. Non-democratic Russia, however, is not exempt from this populist trend, and distinguishable populist rhetoric can be observed both inside and outside the establishment. Alexey Navalny, who regularly organises mass protests in Russia, is considered to be an outsider of systemic politics. Despite several unsuccessful attempts to be elected, his popularity continues to grow, largely due to digital instruments such as YouTube. In light of limited press freedom, YouTube has become one of the most trustworthy platforms for Navalny to publish his investigative documentaries about Russian corruption. In his videos, Navalny adopts a populist communication style to oppose himself to Putin’s ‘corrupt’ elite. Different investigative journalism practices help Navalny to discredit the establishment, whereas his activist appeals may motivate his supporters to engage in political action. In this article, I explore how Navalny combines the practices of investigative journalism and civic activism in his populist communication on YouTube. Using the method of content analysis, I explore a case study of Navalny’s YouTube communication and reveal four types of populism which play a special role in his narration. These are ‘superficial,’ ‘investigative,’ ‘radical,’ and ‘advocacy’ populisms. Advocacy<em> </em>populism, for instance, provides evidence of corruption elite crimes through journalism practices and in calling people to political action. The most visible concentration of these parts of narration was observed in YouTube videos released by the activist before and during anti-corruption protests of 2017.
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48

Ibrahimi, Vjollca Dibra, and Sejdi Sejdiu. "Contemporary Albanian Literature in Kosovo (Now and Here)." Balkanistic Forum 30, no. 2 (2021): 292–306. http://dx.doi.org/10.37708/bf.swu.v30i2.17.

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Albanian literature written from the 1940s to the present day can be called contempo-rary Albanian literature, or in other words, World Literature after the Second World War. The allowed literature was the only method of socialist realism, which was ideol-ogized and politicized, i.e. subject to communist ideology and politics. It was not free literature, but entirely engaged in the service of socialism and communism. The meth-od of socialist realism had some very narrow and binding criteria for all those who thought of publishing their works. Such were the communist members, the positive hero and the struggle against foreign middle-class influences. In such a situation, we can say that it was purely subject to ideology and communist politics. Due to its very narrow scheme, most of the literary work written during this period had its own value and function during the period of the communist system. This type of literature form some writers was accepted with conviction, while others were used to compromise to publish their works. Although under very strict censure, many important works were published which could have been contrary to socialist realism. Such works were with an indirect expression or with a subtext, often in symbolic and allegorical forms. These works consist of some of the greatest values of contemporary Albanian literature, the first and the foremost authors of this kind of literature, their best works, publishers, and their echoes in the language of translation.
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49

Baxter, Ian, Christopher Chippindale, Kate Fielden, Wayland Kennet, and Elizabeth Young. "Responses to Geoffrey Wainwright's report ‘The Stonehenge we deserve’, Antiquity 74 (2000): 334–42." Antiquity 74, no. 286 (2000): 944–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00060567.

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In June this year, we published Geoffrey Wainwright's paper on ‘The Stonehenge we deserve'. This paper aimed to provide a review of progress towards sorting out the many problems of management, presentation and conservation of this World Heritage site and its landscape. As readers of ANTIQUITY are well aware, the fortunes of Stonehenge are intimately linked with politics, money and public opinion, and the long saga of possible solutions to make the site a better place for the future rest on these changing variables. Dr Wainwright outlined past strategies and the hope of future solutions as they were early this year. Already things have changed and the invited responses which we publish here discuss the recent changes of plan for Stonehenge. Baxter & Chippindale review the difficulties of the ‘current’ scheme and its incompatibility with visitor numbers. Fielden exposes the incompatibility of the A303 proposals for Stonehenge with legislation and planning; and Kennet & Young raise the problems of the various Plans and politics.We sent these responses to Dr Wainwright for his current view of the situation.
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Holbraad, Martin, Yang Liu, Thomas Malaby, Daniel Miller, Sevasti-Melissa Nolas, and Christos Varvantakis. "Think Pieces in Analytics." Social Analysis 63, no. 3 (2019): 114–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/sa.2019.630306.

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Experimenting with the many potentials of anthropological analysis—that shifting interface between the empirical and the conceptual, the space and perhaps the time between ethnography and theory—is at the heart of our journal’s intellectual mission. Our aim is to publish articles that display a spirit of analytical exploration by dealing in fresh ways with their empirical materials and showing in the action of their analytical treatment new paths for anthropological thinking to pursue. Alongside full-length research articles, in this issue we inaugurate Think Pieces in Analytics, a forum devoted to slightly shorter and more speculative texts, in which particular aspects of the scope, process, or aims of anthropological analysis are explored for their own sake. Mirroring the ambiguous and shifting character of both the concept and the practice of analysis, we give free rein to contributors to broach matters of methodology, theoretical approach, research ethics and politics, interdisciplinary interface, and institutional infrastructure, as long as their bearing on questions of analytical practice in anthropology is identified.
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