Europe Alone explores the prospects of European security in a future when the United States may no longer be a reliable partner. Leading security scholars offer a multifaceted approach to the changing role and meaning of national security into the future from the perspective of small states.
The book explores how images register the relation between societies and theirs and others' health epistemic ecosystems. The author focuses on presumably trivial objects, such as vlogs, a toy, or a facial cream, to show how nature is presumed and represented as part of the care and cure of the body.
By looking at the macroeconomic frameworks and experiences of countries such as Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland, Restoring Sustainable Macroeconomic Policies in the U.S. presents a way for the United States to normalize fiscal and monetary policy in order to achieve sustainable debt in the post-COVID-19 era.
Fulkerson provides a contemporary, in-depth understanding of communities that is useful for research, planning, and development purposes. His approach incorporates and builds on the urban-rural dynamics approach centered on the urban-rural system concept, making it relevant to urban and rural scholars.
This book is a study of the conflicts between the quest for power and the bonding of human friendship and love in Paradise Lost, Moby-Dick and The Brothers Karamazov, with a focus on the role of the vengeful spirits of Satan, Captain Ahab and Ivan Karamazov.
This book deals with the broader theoretical and philosophical context of performance art in former Yugoslavia. It focuses on the politically engaged performance activity of the Montazstroj group, putting it in the context of terrorism, globalism, radical democratic regimes, and identity politics.
The author explains why entertainment celebrities win and lose elections in the United States. Celebrities have the talent, fame, and resources to succeed in politics, but they often lose when the political environment is not favorable to their candidacy.
This book analyses Kant's assumptions about happiness and the implications they have for his moral, political, and legal thought. It provides a "map" of the different areas in which the concept of happiness appears in his practical philosophy and examines how it relates to the main themes of his practical philosophy.
The Paradoxes of Indian American Complicity: On the Racial Sidelines is a provocative and lively book about Indian immigrant racialization, emerging racial subjectivity, and the potential for decolonial, anti-racist work.