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Fifteen Eighty Four

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Vanishing Legal Justice: The Changing Role of Judges in an Era of Settlements and Plea Bargains

London: Judge: I offer congratulations. No one can be more pleased than me. It’s always better that the parties settle themselves. Do you want a Tomlin order [a form for a confidential written...

Dr. Nofit Amir, Michal Alberstein | 27 Jan 2025

Creating Better Universities for Everyone

“Improving”, “getting better”,” making a difference”, all are common refrains when university leaders talk about the goals of their institution. We hear versions of these phrases in conversation...

Alan Ruby, Matthew Hartley | 24 Jan 2025

The Science behind Writing with Clarity

To become a better writer, stop imitating published writing—and follow the science If only writers knew the unnecessary effort their texts inflict on hapless readers, they would change the way they...

Yellowlees Douglas | 23 Jan 2025

Unwritten Chapters in Queer American Literature

The Cambridge History of Queer American Literature brings together more than 50 scholars to provide a literary history of the queerness of American literature from its earliest beginnings to 2023. It...

Benjamin Kahan | 23 Jan 2025

The N-body problem is alive and well!

Despite having been alive for more than three centuries the classical N-body problem remainsalive and well! In this book I demonstrate its vibrancy by exploring four open questions within the problem. The...

Richard Montgomery | 22 Jan 2025

The Invention of Ethnicity

Ethnicity is everywhere. From the delights of ‘ethnic cuisine’ to the grim realities of ‘ethnic cleansing’, this concept helps us make sense of the world around us. In many countries, including...

Jaakko Heiskanen | 22 Jan 2025

Can Democracy Recover? The Roots of A Crisis

Imagine a deluge of scholarly works, all describing the symptoms of a disease—but offering no discussion of the deep-rooted factors that caused the outbreak. In recent years, as democracies have faced...

Dana Blander, Yaron Ezrahi | 22 Jan 2025

Britain’s cities are multilingual, but utopian visions of equality are being cancelled

It’s a cliché that Britain’s power as a nation is linked to the English language, so much so that prime minister Theresa May assured the public that Brexit would be a success because “our language...

Yaron Matras | 22 Jan 2025

Nationalism from the Outside In

Most historians of the formative generations of the United States have focused (and still do) on a story of nation building that is centered on the creation of domestic institutions, identity, and westward...

Lawrence A. Peskin | 21 Jan 2025

Understanding the American South: Slavery, Race, Identity, and the American South

As the United States recently completed a bitter and divisive national election, Americans find themselves in the middle of the third decade of the twenty-first century searching for new understandings...

Lacy K. Ford | 20 Jan 2025

Free Internet Access as a Human Right

For you reading this text on the Cambridge University Press blog, life without access to the internet has probably become unthinkable. We have become dependent on it for many things we do. But online...

Merten Reglitz | 17 Jan 2025

The Mo Clan, Hà Tiên, and Eighteenth-Century Maritime East Asia

Hà Tiên, situated in the western Mekong River Delta and Gulf of Siam littoral not far from Vietnam’s present border with Cambodia, thrived as an entrepôt over much of the eighteenth century. The...

Xing Hang | 16 Jan 2025