Why do some democracies self-destruct?
The first book-length examination of immigrant admissions from a feminist philosophical perspective. Higgins argues that a different set of immigration policies will be just for each country and concludes with concrete recommendations for policymaking.
A unique inventory of contemporary English and Scots dialect, slang and colloquial expression.
Explores ways to create more just and sustainable futures for people and nature through lessons from a community-governed Biosphere in the Scottish Highlands.
Presents an 18th-century Ottoman-language history of Athens, shedding light on attitudes towards the Classical Greek past
Explores the relationship between estate management, agricultural improvement and the country house in eighteenth century Scotland.
Reclaims newspaper poetry as a crucial lens on literary culture and British imperialism at the turn of the nineteenth century.
Illuminates hitherto-understudied aspects of Iran’s socio-political and socio-cultural history.
Investigates how Arab novelists have represented the experiences of migrants in the Gulf States.
Offers an ethnographic exploration of Iranian diasporic identities through the lens of food.
The first book of its kind to offer a new materialist framework for the study of power.
Daniel Ferrer’s stimulating introduction to genetic criticism, translated into English by Rachel Bowlby.