SPOTLIGHT
The Judicial Process: Law, Courts, and Judicial Politics
Christopher P. Banks and David M. O’Brien
Sage/CQ Press
From the Publisher: The Judicial Process: Law, Courts, and Judicial Politics is an all-new, concise yet comprehensive core text that introduces students to the nature and significance of the judicial process in the United States and across the globe. It is social scientific in its approach, situating the role of the courts and their impact on public policy within a strong foundation in legal theory, or political jurisprudence, as well as legal scholarship. Authors Christopher P. Banks and David M. O’Brien do not shy away from the politics of the judicial process, and offer unique insight into cutting-edge and highly relevant issues.
Christopher P. Banks, professor, Kent State University, combines his research and teaching interests by studying the political behavior of the judiciary, constitutional law, the courts, and civil rights and liberties.
David M. O’Brien, Leone Reaves and George W. Spicer Professor, University of Virginia, has published extensively on the courts and held multiple fellowships and visiting professorships.
SPOTLIGHT
Democracy Reinvented: Participatory Budgeting and Civic Innovation in America
Hollie Russon Gilman
Brookings Institution Press
From the Author: Millions of Americans feel distrust and anger toward government. Few seem to have realistic ideas for addressing the causes of that dissatisfaction. Participatory budgeting originated in Brazil in 1989, but arrived only recently in the United States. Today, a wave of participatory policy reform has emerged in several of America’s largest cities, including Chicago and New York. Capitalizing on new technology, these reform efforts engage policymakers, citizens, and civic organizations and have reenergized grassroots democracy. This book is the first comprehensive treatment of participatory budgeting in the United States, based on in-depth case studies and interviews. Participatory budgeting empowers citizens to identify community needs, work with elected officials to craft budget proposals, and vote on how to spend public funds.
Hollie Russon Gilman is a postdoctoral research scholar at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs. She recently served as policy adviser on open government and innovation in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.
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Adorno and Democracy: The American Years
Shannon L. Mariotti
University Press of Kentucky
Assessing War: The Challenge of Measuring Success and Failure
Leo J. Blanken, Hy Rothstein, and Jason J. Lepore, eds.
Big Oil in the United States: Industry Influence on Institutions, Policy, and Politics
Jerry McBeath
Praeger
Bargaining for Women’s Rights: Activism in an Aspiring Muslim Democracy
Alice J. Kang
University of Minnesota Press
The Biopolitics of Gender
Jemima Repo
Oxford University Press
Changing Referents: Learning Across Space and Time in China and the West
Leigh Jenco
Oxford University Press
China Dreams: 20 Visions of the Future
William A. Callahan
Oxford University Press
Coalition Challenges in Afghanistan: The Politics of Alliance
Gale A. Mattox and Stephen M. Genier, eds.
Stanford University Press
Collaborative Governance Regimes
Kirk Emerson and Tina Nabatchi
Georgetown University Press
Dangerous Doctrine: How Obama’s Grand Strategy Weakened America
Robert G. Kaufman
University Press of Kentucky
Desis Divided: The Political Lives of South Asian Americans
Sangay K. Mishra
University of Minnesota Press
The End of the Experiment: The Rise of Cultural Elites and the Decline of America’s Civic Culture
Stanley Rothman, Robert Maranto, Matthew C. Woessner, and David J. Rothman, eds.
Transaction Publishers
Intersectionality: An Intellectual History
Ange-Marie Hancock
Oxford University Press
Intergovernmental Relations in Federal Systems: Comparative Structures and Dynamics
Johanne Poirier, Cheryl Saunders, and John Kincaid
Oxford University Press
Just Married: Same-Sex Couples, Monogamy, and the Future of Marriage
Stephen Macedo
Princeton University Press
Making Foreign Policy Decisions
Christopher J. Fettweis
Transaction Publishers
The Oxford Handbook of the US Constitution
Mark Tushnet, Mark A. Graber, and Sanford Levinson, eds.
Oxford University Press
Picking Judges
Nancy Maveety
Transaction Publishers
Plutocrats United: Campaign Money, the Supreme Court, and the Distortion of American Elections
Richard L. Hasen
Yale University Press
Political and Military Sociology: Political Attitudes, Perceptions, and Culture, Vol. 43
Neovi M. Karakatsanis and Jonathan Swarts, eds.
Transaction Publishers
Political Parties and Civil Society in Federal Countries
Johanne Poirier, Cheryl Saunders, and John Kincaid
Oxford University Press
The Politics of Gender Justice at the International Criminal Court
Louise Chappell
Oxford University Press
The Polythink Syndrome: US Foreign Policy Decisions on 9/11, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Syria, and ISIS
Alex Mintz and Carly Wayne
Stanford University Press
Presidential Leadership in an Age of Change
Michael A. Genovese
Transaction Publishers
Primary Politics: Everything You Need to Know about How America Nominates Its Presidential Candidates, 2nd Ed.
Elaine C. Kamarck
Brookings Institution Press
The Rise of Corporate Religious Liberty
Micah Schwartzman, Chad Flanders, and Zoë Robinson, eds.
Oxford University Press
Sailing the Water’s Edge: The Domestic Politics of American Foreign Policy
Helen V. Milner and Dustin Tingley
Princeton University Press
Speaking Freely: Whitney v. California and American Speech Law
Philippa Strum
University of Kansas Press
State Failure in the Modern World
Zaryab Iqbal and Harvey Starr
Stanford University Press
US Federal Lobbying Legislation
Sergei Kostiaev
Financial University Publishing House
White World Order, Black Power Politics: The Birth of American International Relations
Robert Vitalis
Cornell University Press
Who Governs the Internet? A Political Architecture
Robert J. Domanski
Rowman & Littlefield
SPOTLIGHT
As Ohio Goes: Life in the Post-Recession Nation
Rana B. Khoury
Kent State University Press
From the Publisher: As Ohio Goes is a journey through cities, suburbs, and remote rural towns in this quintessential American state, with bracing implications for American politics. From student debt and health care costs to female breadwinners and hydraulic fracturing, Rana B. Khoury situates each story in a context that relates it to wider trends in Ohio and across the United States. Where economic experts deal in the abstract, Khoury pumps life into otherwise cold facts and figures, putting a human face on economic issues. If the old adage “as Ohio goes, so goes the nation” is right, then these stories should tell us where the nation is headed.
Rana B. Khoury is pursuing a PhD in political science from Northwestern University. She earned an MA from Georgetown University and a BA from American University. She has received writing awards from Northwestern and Georgetown Universities and research support from the Social Science Research Council, the Mellon Foundation, and the Buffett Institute.
SPOTLIGHT
Why Don’t You Just Talk to Him? The Politics of Domestic Abuse
Kathleen R. Arnold
Oxford University Press
From the Publisher: Why Don’t You Just Talk to Him? looks at the broad political contexts in which violence, specifically domestic violence, occurs. Kathleen Arnold argues that liberal and Enlightenment notions of the social contract, rationality and egalitarianism—the ideas that constitute norms of good citizenship—have an inextricable relationship to violence. The book argues that a key to understanding how to prevent domestic violence is seeing it as a political rather than a personal issue, with political consequences. It seeks to challenge Enlightenment ideas about intimacy that conceive of personal relationships as mutual, equal, and contractual. Exposing major injustices from the point of view of domestic violence targets, this book promises to generate further debate, if not consensus.
Kathleen R. Arnold is visiting assistant professor of political science at DePaul University, and she teaches political theory, immigration law, and feminist theory.