Civilising Interventions? Race, War and International Law
Marxism in IR and the challenge of Realism
Speaker: Andrew Davenport
The Political Economy of Reconstituted Neoliberalism: Reflections on Bolivia and Latin American Neostructuralism
Civilization and the Poetics of Slavery
Speaker: Robbie Shilliam
Lessons from the field -- and why they are rarely learned
Iain King is Governance Advisor to the UK Stabilisation Unit.
This podcast was taken from the Post-Conflict State Building: Practitioners Perspective Seminar Series in Hilary Term 2012, convened by Professor Richard Caplan.
Modern Asian Studies Special Issues
China's long war against Japan from 1937 to 1945 has remained in the shadows of historiography until recently, both in China and abroad. In recent years, the opening of archives and a widening of the opportunity to discuss the more controversial aspects of the wartime period in China itself have restored World War II in China (‘the War of Resistance to Japan’) to a much more central place in historical interpretation.
Variation in the Durability of Semi-Presidential Democracies
Classifying Citizens in Nationalist China during World War II, 1937-1945
This paper argues that the first phase of the Sino-Japanese War of 1937–1945 saw a significant change in the relationship between state and society in China, leading to a greater use of techniques of classification of the citizenry for purposes of welfare provision and mobilization through propaganda, methods until recently more associated with the Communists than with their Nationalist rivals.
1911: The Unanchored Revolution
One hundred years after the 1911 Revolution (Xinhai Revolution) in China, its meaning continues to be highly contested. Paradoxically, the more time that passes, the less certain either political actors or scholars seem to be about the significance of 1911 for the path of Chinese revolutionary history.