Book Review: The Art of War in an Asymmetric World: Strategy for the Post-Cold War Era | LSE Review of Books
Demobilizing Irregular Forces is one of the first comprehensive introductions to the process of disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) in the contemporary world. Examining regions as v…
Book Review: Talking Donald Trump: A Sociolinguistic Study of Style, Metadiscourse and Political Identity by Jennifer Sclafani | LSE Review of Books
In The State: Past, Present, Future, Bob Jessop offers an insightful engagement with one of the enduring issues in political theory – how to define and approach the state and its complexities…
This book considers the opportunities that peace research and the teaching of conflict resolution can offer academic diplomacy. Aiming to offer a comprehensive analysis of the conflict in West Kali…
In Beyond South Asia: India’s Strategic Evolution and the Reintegration of the Subcontinent, Neil Padukone explores India’s strategic thought and culture since independence, and the domestic and re…
Laurence C. Smith shows how, by 2050, Canada, Scandinavia, Russia and the northern United States may be flourishing as formidable economic powers and migration magnets, but countries closer to the …
What mechanisms serve to maintain the gender pay gap and what other forms of discrimination persist in the labour market? In Unexplored Dimensions of Discrimination, editors Tito Boeri, Eleonora Pa…
Collating commentaries produced over the past two decades, Mission Accomplished?: The Crisis of International Intervention presents Simon Jenkins’s impassioned interrogation of the ‘new inter…
Although a country may find itself in a situation where there exists no war, it still may not experience sustainable peace. Read the review of When War Ends: Building Peace in Divided Communities at http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/lsereviewofbooks/2012/08/25/book-review-when-war-ends-building-peace-in-divided-communities/