Read More Mass Death Sentences Reflect Egypt’s Eliminationist StrategyApril 1, 2014 Guest post by Mohamad Elmasry Last Monday’s mass death sentences against 529 Egyptian civilians accused of killing a single… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Bosnia and Herzegovina: Evolution, not RevolutionMarch 18, 2014 Guest post by Margherita Belgioioso After almost twenty years of its transition to democracy, Bosnia and Herzegovina still… Read More 0 0 0
Read More The Annexation VexationMarch 12, 2014 Guest post by Boaz Atzili To annex or not to annex? That is Putin’s question. Such a question, of… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Questions and Answers About Crimea and SecessionMarch 11, 2014 By Bridget Coggins After asking if commenters had questions about Crimea’s potential separation from Ukraine under its occupation by Russian military… Read More 0 0 0
Secession, Recognition, and Ukrainian Politics, ContinuedMarch 8, 2014 By Bridget Coggins Yesterday we asked if anyone had questions about the issue of Crimean separation from Ukraine, under the Russian… Read More 0 0 0
Friday Reverse Puzzler: Secession, Recognition, and Ukrainian PoliticsMarch 7, 2014 By Bridget Coggins Many Fridays we take a single puzzling question on contemporary political violence and take a… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Power, Violence, and the Outcomes of National and Insurgent MovementsMarch 5, 2014 Guest post by Peter Krause Two of the most puzzling news stories to emerge from the Syrian uprising… Read More 0 0 0
Read More The Problem With Ukraine’s Transition to DemocracyMarch 3, 2014 Guest post by Julia Gray Research on the connection between prosperity and democracy suggests that democracy is unlikely to… Read More 0 0 0
Read More What’s Putin Up To?March 2, 2014 By Andrew Kydd Russian troops have moved into the Crimean peninsula, but Vladimir Putin is running silent as Clarence… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Let’s Play the NATO GameMarch 1, 2014 By Steve Saideman Lots of folks are hoping for NATO to do something to stop Putin in Crimea. As… Read More 0 0 0