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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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The Three Economic Enlightenments

What is the right thing to do? You probably find yourself asking this question quite often. Philosophers, both inside and outside academia, have pondered it by exploring its meaning and considering potential...

Paolo Santori | 11 Dec 2025

Blog for Historical Trauma Book

What will become of those currently experiencing the wars we see in the media? Take the wars in Ukraine, Gaza/Israel and Sudan, for example. Will the children be permanently scarred into adulthood, and...

Professor Andreas Maercker | 11 Dec 2025

Beyond late antiquity – the World

Roman historians habitually think of the Empire as a precursor of Europe and the West. But most historians of Europe see it differently. They see Europe as a result of the failure of attempts to create...

Peter Fibiger Bang | 11 Dec 2025

Funding White Supremacy

Most Americans (and economists) are clueless regarding the racial wealth gap A recent study asked over a thousand people their perceptions of the wealth gap between White and Black Americans. Respondents...

Robert B. Williams | 9 Dec 2025

What Corporate Words Teach Us About Race

In the summer of 2020, corporate America found its voice on race. Across every sector, from finance to retail to tech, corporations and their executives issued public statements proclaiming solidarity...

Atinuke O. Adediran | 4 Dec 2025

Church and Liberal Democratic Institutions in Africa

Let me describe the activities of an organization leading advocacy for liberal democracy in Zambia in recent years. When politicians spoke of changing the country’s constitution to end presidential...

Kate Baldwin | 3 Dec 2025

Negotiating Values

In the 1990s I had a “driveway moment.” Public radio had a story about conflict within the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network (OPTN) over the geographic allocation of livers for transplantation....

David L. Weimer | 3 Dec 2025

Animal Economics 

Animals are all around us. They give us food, clothing, and companionship. We use them for entertainment and research. And they are countless in the wild. Human activities affect them, often without us...

Nicolas Treich | 2 Dec 2025

Europe’s History of Colonialism and the European Union’s legal order

How has Europe’s century-spanning history of colonialism shaped the development of the European Union (EU) legal order? The book Colonialism and the EU Legal Order edited by Hanna Eklund explore this...

Hanna Eklund | 2 Dec 2025

The Great Indian Land Grab: the early years

The interests of historians have been formed by many factors. Politics, identity and personal grievances, for example, have all played a part. For me and many others, it was marriage that shaped my trajectory...

John Marriott | 2 Dec 2025

Language Contact in the Colonial Pacific

How did Polynesians and other Pacific Islanders interact verbally with Europeans during early colonial times? In turn, how did Cook and those who followed in his footsteps talk with Islanders on their...

Emanuel J. Drechsel | 2 Dec 2025

Giambattista Vico and the philosophical counter-canons

Our current understanding of philosophy is a relatively recent invention. It took shape in late eighteenth-century Germany, when a small group of scholars redefined what philosophy was and how its history...

Maurizio Esposito | 2 Dec 2025