Course Bibliography

 

Barber, B.  1992.  Jihad vs. McWorld. The Atlantic Monthly 269(3): 53-65.

 

Barnett, T.  2003.  The Pentagon’s new map. Esquire, March.

 

Baxter, J.  2003.  Cotton Subsidies Squeeze Mali. The BBC, May 19.

 

Collier, et al.  2003.  What Fuels Civil War?  In: Breaking the Conflict Trap by P. Collier, L. Elliott, H. Hegre, A. Hoeffler, M. Reynal-Querol, and N. Sambanis,  2003.  Washington D.C.: The World Bank.

 

Cordesman, A.  2001.  The Changing Geopolitics of Energy.  Washington D.C.: Center for Strategic and International Studies.

 

Donnelly, T.  2000.  Rebuilding America’s Defenses.  Washington D.C.: The Project for a New American Century.

 

Economist.  1997.  Expelled from Eden.  December 20.

 

Economist.  1999.  The Road to 2050: A Survey of the New Geopolitics.  July 29.

 

Economist.  2001.  Addicted to Oil.  December 13.

 

Economist.  2002a.  Militant Islam: The difficult future of holy struggle.  January 31.

 

Economist.  2002b.  America and the Arabs.  March 21.

 

Economist.  2002c.  Arab Development: Self doomed to failure.  July 4.

 

Economist.  2004a.  America and the Middle East: Fumbling the moment.  May 27.

 

Economist.  2004b.  Perils on the Sea.  June 25.

 

Haushofer, K.  1942.  Why Geopolitik?  In G. O’Tuathail, S. Dalby, and P. Routledge (eds.) The Geopolitics Reader.  London and New York: Routledge Press, 1998.

 

Huntington, S.  1993.  The clash of civilizations? Foreign Affairs, Summer.

 

Hutchinson, J. and A. Smith.  1994.  Nationalism.  New York: Oxford University Press.

Hutchinson, J. and A. Smith. 1994.  Introduction, pp. 4-13.

Brass, P.  1979.  Elite competition and nation-formation, pp. 83-9.

Nairn, T.  1977.  The maladies of development, pp. 70-6.

 

Jehl, D.  2004.  Book by CIA Officer Says U.S. is Losing Fight Against Terror.  The New York Times, June 23, pp. A12.

 

Kaplan, R.  1997.  Was democracy just a moment? Atlantic Monthly, December 1997.

 

Kennan, G.  1947.  The Sources of Soviet Conduct.  Foreign Affairs.

 

Kramer, G.  1993.  Islamist notions of democracy.  Middle East Report, July/August: 2-8.

 

Kolossov, V. and J. O’Loughlin.  1998.  New borders for new world orders: Territorialities at the fin-de-siecle.  Geojournal, 44: 259-73.

 

National Security Council.  1950.  NSC 68: United States Objectives and Programs for National Security.

 

Nutt, D.  2003.  Cottoning on to unfair trade.  The Guardian, July 15.

 

Nye, J.  2002.  The new Rome meets the new barbarians.  The Economist, March 21.

 

Ohmae, K.  1995.  The Cartographic Illusion. In K. Ohmae The End of the Nation-State: The Rise of Regional Economies.  New York: Free Press.

 

O’Loughlin, J.  2000.  Ordering the ‘Crush Zone’: Geopolitical Games in Post-Cold War Eastern Europe.  In Nurit Kliot and David Newman (eds.), Geopolitics and Globalization: The Changing World Political Map. London: Frank Cass: 34-55.

 

O’Loughlin, J.  2004.  The political geography of conflict: Civil wars in the hegemonic shadow. In Colin Flint (ed.) The Geographies of War. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.

 

O’Tuathail, G., S. Dalby and P. Routledge (eds.).  1998.  The Geopolitics Reader.  New York: Routledge Press.

Mackinder, H.  1904.  The geographical pivot of history, pp. 27-31.

Haushofer, K.  1942.   Why Geopolitik? pp. 33-5.

O’Tuathail, G.  1998.  Cold war geopolitics: Introduction, pp. 47-57.

 

Selfa, L.  2001.  Beyond the fog of deception: Washington’s real war aims. International Socialist Review, Nov/Dec.

 

Stratfor.  2004.  U.S. Geopolitics.  March 4.

 

Taylor, P.J. and P. Osei-Kwame.  1984.  A politics of failure: The political geography of Ghanaian elections, 1954-1979. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 74(4): 574-89.

 

Thomas, R.  1999.  NATO and International Law.

 

Wade, R.  2001.  Winners and losers. The Economist, April 26.

 

Watts, M.  1987.  Conjunctures and crisis:  Food, ecology and population and the internationalization of capital.  Journal of Geography, 86: 292-9.

 

Zakaria, F.  1997.  The rise of illiberal democracy: The next wave. Foreign Affairs, Nov/Dec.