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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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The Book I Wish Had on My Desk

My first week of doctoral coursework at Johns Hopkins in 2017 came with four hundred pages of reading. The second week came with five hundred. I had been reading science for a living for a decade —...

Genevive Bjorn | 11 Jun 2026

Translanguaging: A practical theory for learning in English language classrooms

In our work with English language educators across the globe, we are frequently asked questions such as: How should different languages be used in the English classroom? How do we assess students fairly?...

Jason Anderson, Suyog Dixit | 11 Jun 2026

Promises Made, Promises Kept?

Politicians are notorious promise breakers. A British prime minister vows to cut net migration to the “tens of thousands,” only to discover that EU free‑movement rules, domestic demand for migrant...

Christina J. Schneider, Robert Thomson | 8 Jun 2026

A Liturgy in the Making: Revising Medieval Dominican Chant

Alleluia Pie pater dominice in the Dominican exemplar manuscript Rome, Santa Sabina, XIV L 1, f. 353v A new chant had been composed for St Dominic’s feast day. The scribe was stumped. He had...

Eleanor J. Giraud | 4 Jun 2026

Moving Away from Extreme Views of Religion and Politics: A Dynamic Civil Religion

Extreme voices dominate the national public debate in America over the proper role of religion and politics. Christian nationalists call for Christianity to dominate politics and culture. At the other...

Amy E. Black, Douglas L. Koopman | 3 Jun 2026

Who Was Allen Ginsberg and Why Does He Still Matter?

When someone says the name “Allen Ginsberg”, any number of things immediately come to mind. Ginsberg was a celebrated US poet, and his work “Howl” is world famous. But he was also a noted activist....

Erik Mortenson | 2 Jun 2026

Fixing Our Economy

Our economy doesn’t work for us and it hasn’t for a long time. Not only is it prone to periodic crises and breakdowns, but it is failing us in terms of addressing longer-term issues such as climate,...

John T. Harvey | 26 May 2026

The History of the Declaration of Independence

This year marks the 250th anniversary of the American Declaration of Independence. Few documents in world history have been as extensively studied and analyzed, and it is fair to ask if there is anything...

Carlton F. W. Larson | 18 May 2026

The Coup Trap in Latin America

Why do governments get overthrown?  Why are many political systems chronically unstable?  The Coup Trap in Latin America answers these questions by explaining why political systems fall prey...

Fabrice Lehoucq | 16 May 2026

Two types of division of labour in Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations: teasing out the implications

The conduct of empirical exercises and comparative case studies and the invoking of theoretical analyses are common to almost all economic debates as participants seek to support/undercut different positions....

P. Sai-wing Ho | 15 May 2026

Hyperreal Love: Post-Soviet Brides and the Making of China’s Transnational Romance

In Post-Soviet Brides in China Dream, I look at marriages between Chinese men and post-Soviet Slavic women and how they have come to be seen in China as an ideal type of transnational love and a pathway...

Elena Barabantseva | 15 May 2026

The Logic of Corruption: Why It Persists and Why Reforms Fail

Corruption is everywhere. From senior politicians and bureaucrats to street-level bureaucrats, and from the richest countries to the poorest, corruption remains widespread, and efforts to fight it keep...

Chandra Shekhar | 15 May 2026