The professor of politics and international affairs at Princeton University selects the most important books on Western Europe published during the last year.
The James Clarke Chace Professor of Foreign Affairs and the Humanities at Bard College selects the most important books on the United States published during the last year.
The Maurits C. Boas professor of international economics at Harvard University selects the most important books on Economic, Social, and Environmental Subjects published during the last year.
The Albert G. Milbank Professor of Politics and International Affairs at Princeton University selects the most important books on political and legal topics published during the last year.
Rachel Kleinfeld's "Advancing the Rule of Law Abroad," Adair Turner's "Economics After the Crisis," Fredrik Logevall's "Embers of War," John Turner's "Brigham Young," and more.
Francis Fukuyama on the future of history, Andrew J. Nathan and Andrew Scobell on how China sees America, Ned Parker on the Iraq we left behind, Ruchir Sharma on why the rest stopped rising, and more.
Yochai Benkler on why Anonymous isn't a threat to national security, Charli Carpenter on "The Game of Thrones" as international relations theory, Seth Jones on al Qaeda regrouping in Iran, Marina Ottaway on Egypt's secularists, and more.
The professor in the Department of Government at Cornell University selects the most important books on Africa published during the last year.
The Class of 1919 Professor of Political Science at Columbia University selects the most important books on Asia published during the last year.
L. Carl Brown, the professor emeritus of history at Princeton University, was Middle East reviewer for Foreign Affairs for the January/February through May/June issues this year. John Waterbury, the William Stewart Tod professor of Politics and International Affairs emeritus at Princeton became Middle East reviewer with the September/October issue.
