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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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“The Islamic Republic’s Staying Power: Politics and Institutions in Iran”

What are the sources of state strength in the Islamic Republic of Iran? This is the central question that animates this book. The current Iranian state, established in the aftermath of the 1978-1979 revolution,...

Mehran Kamrava | 6 Jun 2023

Guardrailing Retirement Choices for Investor Success

It’s hard to believe, but an increasing number of retirement plans are allowing employees to invest their 401(k) saving in non-conventional assets – including crypto currency funds and meme stocks. ...

Quinn Curtis, Ian Ayres | 6 Jun 2023

The First World War and the Middle Eastern Front

The First World War was a war of empires that started in the Balkans and ended in the Middle East. Yet, some historians still see this war as a mostly European story. Mapping the different fronts of the...

Michelle Tusan | 5 Jun 2023

That “Olde” Story: Faith and Reason

Blog #2 in the, Psychology and its Antecedents, series In the previous blog about the emergence of psychology at the expense of the traditional intellectual provinces of the older disciplines of...

James F. Brennan | 31 May 2023

When War Knocks on the Door: What Do Civilians Do?

WW2 Comparative History from BelowWritten by Claire Andrieu Unlike the objects of its title, the subject of this book did not fall from the sky. I did not set out to write a comparative history of...

Claire Andrieu | 31 May 2023

Reframing Rome and Italy during the early Roman expansion

What are the effects of empire-building, and how can we study them? With Making the Middle Republic, my two co-editors and I present a collection of papers emphasizing the importance of the fourth and...

Seth Bernard | 29 May 2023

No double game but a double bind for Vichy

In the many books, articles, debates and polemics about the Vichy French regime during the Second World War, one question remains curiously absent: why didn’t Vichy collaborate with Fascist Italy? Perhaps...

Karine Varley | 26 May 2023

Our Oceans are in Jeopardy! Can we trust the Rule of Law to fix it?

Several important legal events have happened to the ocean environment lately. The 29th of March 2023 was a historical day for the international rule of law to prevail. On this day, the United Nations...

Froukje Maria Platjouw, Alla Pozdnakova | 25 May 2023

The Vanished Settlers of Greenland: In Search of a Legend and Its Legacy

In Vikings: Valhalla, the drama television series created for Netflix, one of the central characters is Leif Eriksson, who comes from the outer fringes of the known world, along with other Norse Greenlanders....

Robert William Rix | 24 May 2023

The specialist register in psychiatry- finding a route that is right for you

Specialist registration with the General Medical Council of the United Kingdom is recognition of the higher specialist competencies of a doctor. Before attaining a substantive consultant post in the UK,...

Nandini Chakraborty | 24 May 2023

The Scandalous Nature of Things

From the beginning of his poem, Lucretius is decidedly unsubtle. In quick succession the audience encounters the language of pleasure, verdant flora, lusty fauna, sexual reproduction, and an erotic scene...

Michael Pope | 24 May 2023

Christianity, Philosophy, and Roman Power:Constantine, Julian and the Bishops on Exegesis and Empire

The young Augustine was repelled by the Gospels. Or so he says, at least, in a passage from the Confessions (3.5.9) in which he reflects on his former, ‘inflated pride’. The student of rhetoric in...

Lea Niccolai | 24 May 2023