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The Protection of Religious Minorities
in Eastern Europe Paperback: Forthcoming, October 2002 / 384 pages / $28 Peter G. Danchin is director of the Human Rights Program and a lecturer at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University. Elizabeth A. Cole is senior program officer for education and studies programs at the Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs. read more about this book at Amazon.com |
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World Poverty and Human Rights: Cosmopolitan
Responsibilities and Reforms Paperback: Forthcoming, September 2002 / 296 pages / $28 Thomas W. Pogge, associate professor of philosophy at Columbia University, is a specialist in global justice, social and political philosophy, ethics, and moral philosophy. He is also the author of Realizing Rawls, among other books and articles. read more about this book at Amazon.com |
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The Tiananmen Papers : The Chinese Leadership's
Decision to Use Force Against Their Own People In Their Own Words Paperback: June 2002 / 560 pages / $18 Andrew J. Nathan is professor of political science at Columbia University. A China specialist, Prof. Nathan has also written Chinese Democracy (Alfred A.. Knopf, 1985) and co-authored Human Rights in Contemporary China (Columbia University Press, 1986) with Columbia professors R. Randle Edwards and Louis Henkin. read more about this book at Amazon.com |
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Amazing Grace: An Anthology of Poems About
Slavery, 1660-1810 Hardcover: Forthcoming, November 2001 / 784 pages / $35 James G. Basker is professor of English at Barnard College. A specialist of slavery in English literature from the 17th through the 19th centuries, as well as the history and socio-cultural impact of journalism during that time, Prof. Basker has also written Tradition in Transition: Women Writers, Marginal Texts, and the 18th-Century Canon (Oxford, 1996) and Tobias Smollett: Critic and Journalist (1988). read more about this book at Amazon.com |
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The Graves Are Not Yet Full: Race, Tribe,
and Power in the Heart of Africa Paperback: March 2002 / 320 pages / $16 Bill Berkeley is adjunct professor of international and public affairs at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs. Prof. Berkeley is also a journalist whose writing have appeared in, among others, The Atlantic Monthly; The New Republic; The New York Times Magazine; and The Washington Post. He is currently at work on his next book, The Color of Darkness: Portraits of Race, Tribe, and Power. read more about this book at Amazon.com |