Andrew Buchanan talks exclusively to fifteeneightyfour about his new book, American Grand Strategy in the Mediterranean during World War II, which offers a thorough reinterpretation of the US engagement in this region during the Second World War. Far from being reluctant players, Dr. Buchanan argues instead that Washington had a grand-strategic interest in the region.
For companies looking to maximize corporate responsibility and long-term success, Leveraging Corporate Responsibility: The Stakeholder Route to Maximizing Business and Social Value offers the latest research building strong stockholder relationships and creating a successful business environment.
Hew Strachan, the author of The Direction of War, discusses contemporary military strategy and the way war has shaped society in this interview. Read More ?
Benjamin Powell, author of Out of Poverty, explains why sweatshops play an indispensable role in a country's economic development.
In the final post of this three-part series, Steven Luper, the editor of The Cambridge Companion to Life and Death, discusses the powerful topic of meaning, happiness, and the brevity of life.
Nicholas Vazsonyi, the editor of The Cambridge Wagner Encyclopedia, explores the way Disney's Frozen hearkens back to the great operas of Wagner—with personal and universal themes, intensity, and a great soundtrack. Long live Wagner! Warning: contains spoilers.
Post your submission in the comments below; remember, the most creative entry for each Mad Lib will win Cambridge swag! Also, don’t forget to check out the recently launched The Cambridge Edition...
Robert McLeman, the author of Climate and Human Migration, participated in a panel on the relationship between human migration and climate change. McLeman’s remarks begin at 4:30, then hear him...
Megan Ming Francis, author of Civil Rights and the Making of the Modern American State, discusses how the NAACP created opportunities for black civil society to challenge Jim Crow.
This week, Steven Luper, the editor of The Cambridge Companion to Life and Death, analyzes the controversial question of euthanasia. Should the decision to die be left in the hands of the suffering? And should we help them to carry out their wishes?
Marloes Janson, the author of Islam, Youth, and Modernity in the Gambia, answers our questions about her unique study of the Islamic missionary movement Tablighi Jamaʻat in western Africa.
Post your submission in the comments below; remember, the most creative entry for each Mad Lib will win Cambridge swag! Also, don’t forget to check out the recently launched The Cambridge Edition...