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Books published by Oxford University Press, USA

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  • by Teri Chettiar
    £97.99

    Featuring new archival research, The Intimate State traces the modern importance of intimate relationships alongside social reform in post-war Britain and the resultant political culture that continues to inform identity politics to this day.

  • by William R. Leben, Brett Kessler & Keith Denning
    £87.99

  • by Abdi Aidid
    £27.49

    Adopting a cautious and yet optimistic view of an uncertain legal future, The Legal Singularity presents a coherent account of the radically positive impact artificial intelligence may have in the coming decades on law and legal institutions.

  • by Philip S.S. Howard
    £24.49

  • by Igor Galynker
    £54.49

    The Suicidal Crisis has everything clinicians need to evaluate the risk of imminent suicide. What sets it apart is its clinical focus on those at the highest risk--the book includes individual case studies of acutely suicidal individuals, detailed instructions on how to conduct risk assessments, test cases with answer keys, and empirically validated Suicidal Crisis risk assessment scales.

  • by H A G Houghton
    £139.99

    The Oxford Handbook of the Latin Bible contains thirty-one chapters covering the history of the Latin Bible from its earliest translations (the Vetus Latina), the revisions leading to the Vulgate, the achievements and innovations of the Carolingian period and Middle Ages, the development of modern scholarship, and the twentieth-century innovation of the Nova Vulgata. It includes discussions of key figures and interpreters, the most important manuscripts, and the significance of the Latin Bible in multiple fields.

  • by NELSON
    £111.99

    The Oxford Handbook of Down Syndrome and Development comprises cutting-edge and provocative integrative reviews of essential theory and research about persons with Down syndrome at various stages of the lifespan. The volume opens with a brief section on historic and contemporary scientific approaches to understanding the development of persons with Down syndrome with subsequent sections on social development and family relations, cognition andneuropsychology, and comorbid conditions.

  • by Ingo (Presidential Professor of Biology Schlupp
    £40.99 - 80.99

    This novel text reviews our current understanding of male mate choice and female competition, highlighting the important connections between them. It places both concepts in the context of related fields such as female choice, mating systems, and sexual selection theory more broadly.

  • by Heather Peggs
    £20.99 - 49.49

  • by Edward J. Hedican
    £26.99 - 44.49

  • by Saba Safdar
    £50.99

    Cross-Cultural Psychology combines quantitative and qualitative research with anecdotal material to examine multicultural issues and capture the richness of diverse cultures in relation to psychology.

  • by Mikkel Gerken
    £94.99

    This book concerns the roles of scientific testimony in science and society. It argues that intra-scientific testimony is not in conflict with the spirit of science or an add-on to scientific practice, rather it is a vital part of science.

  • by Monica Mi Hee Hwang
    £47.99

    The most comprehensive and accessible exploration of inequality in Canada today from leading Canadian scholars

  • by Mattia Balbo
    £106.99

    The Roman Republic has become a huge interest among both specialized readers and the general public. This volume addresses the period in which the Republic reached its peak, and covers a number of key themes in the history of the Roman polity during the Middle Republic, such as: political competition, legal practice, and economic change. Its chapters are the result of a close and up-to-date discussion among established scholars from Europe, the UK, the USA, and Australia.

  • by Levke Harders
    £83.99

    Belonging Across Borders argues that borders were not just made by the nation state; they also influenced social inclusion and exclusion. Focusing on practices between empires, nations, and regions and on historical subjects, it re-evaluates historical sources and explores both territorial and social boundaries.

  • by Selen A Ercan
    £155.49

    This book provides a unique collection of over 30 methods to study deliberative democracy. Written in an accessible style, it provides guidance for scholars and students on how to conduct rigorous and creative research on the public sphere, structured forums, and political institutions.

  • by Hallie Liberto
    £89.99

    This book is about permissive consent--the moral tool we use to give another person permission to do what would otherwise be forbidden. It studies normative power and the moral features of consent to explain what it takes to render consent.

  • by Roberto Kolb-Neuhaus
    £97.99

    Silvestre Revueltas: Sounds of a Political Passion shows how Revueltas, strongly inspired by the Mexican and Russian Revolutions, sought ways to sound the voice of the commoners wandering the Mexican streets, as well as that of gypsy miners in Spain, Black women in the U.S. South, and slaves in Cuba in colonial times.

  • by Kim Potowski
    £30.49 - 71.49

  • by Brooke L Blower
    £27.49

    Americans in a World at War tells the panoramic and often surprising story of seven worldly Americans, their personal histories, their politics, and the paths that led them to board a Pan American Airways seaplane bound for Lisbon in February 1943. When the Yankee Clipper crashed in the Tagus River, it took numerous lives but left a paper trail that leads to a richer, deeper understanding of Americans' diverse global commitments during the first half of the twentieth century as well as how the Second World War would transform those engagements.

  • by Reinhard Bork
    £208.99

    This book analyses Regulation (EU) 2015/848 on Insolvency Proceedings (EIR), recasting Regulation (EU) 1346/2000, and related sources of law regulating intra-member state cross-border insolvency. The new edition analyses the application of the Recast Regulation, Brexit, and the Directive (EU) 2019/1023 on preventive restructuring and insolvency.

  • by Mark Raymond
    £28.99

    This book seeks to explain how political actors know how to change, interpret, and apply the rules that comprise rule-based global order. It argues that actors in world politics are simultaneously engaged in an ongoing social practice of rule-making, interpretation and application.

  • by Lindsey Kingston
    £29.49

    Lindsey N. Kingston critically considers how inequalities related to citizenship and recognition impact one's ability to claim fundamental human rights. As a remedy, she proposes the ideal of "functioning citizenship," which requires an active and mutually-beneficial relationship between the state and the individual and necessitates the opening of political space for those who cannot be neatly categorized. Ultimately, Fully Human contends that we uncover limitations built into our current international system--but also begin to envision a path toward the realization of human rights norms founded on universality and inalienability.

  • by Elizabeth Donnelly Carney
    £29.49

    Eurydice (the wife of Amyntas III, the mother of Philip II, and grandmother of Alexander the Great) was the first royal Macedonian woman who played a role in the public life of ancient Macedonia. This study examines the nature of her role and the factors that contributed to its expansion.

  • by Joseph A Marchal
    £37.49

    The letters of Paul are among the most commonly cited biblical texts in ongoing cultural and religious disputes about gender, sexuality, and embodiment. Joseph Marchal addresses Paul's letters from the perspective of queer theory and juxtaposes figures from the letters who vary in their gender, sexuality, and embodiment with modern examples in order to defamiliarize and reorient what can be known about both.

  • by Justin E H Smith
    £27.99

    This book provides the original Latin texts with new explanatory annotated translations of two philosophical works by Anton Wilhelm Amo (c.1703-after 1752), the first African philosopher in early modern Europe. It also includes an extensive introduction intended to help readers contextualize and engage with his philosophical ideas and their historical and intellectual background and significance.

  • by Andrew M Riggsby
    £30.99

    In the Roman world, technologies were limited to small, scattered social groups, whereas today's information technology often seems to take on a life of its own, spreading into every part of our lives. Mosaics of Knowledge combines detailed readings of a wide variety of evidence such as inscriptions and artworks, with theoretical consideration of the social, cognitive, and material contexts for their use to present a unique portrait of Roman IT capabilities, limitations, and habits.

  • by Robert Cooter
    £44.99

    The economic analysis of law has revolutionized legal scholarship and teaching in the last half-century, but it has focused mostly on private law, business law, and criminal law. This comprehensive textbook applies economic analysis to public law. Featuring lucid, accessible writing and engaging examples, Public Law and Economics addresses enduring topics in public law as well as modern controversies, including gerrymandering, voter identification laws, and qualified immunity for police.

  • by Stephanie Ann Frampton
    £37.49

    Uniting close readings of major authors of the late Republic and early Empire with the careful analysis of the material forms that Roman writing took--papyrus scrolls, waxed tablets, and monumental inscriptions in stone and bronze--Empire of Letters provides new ways of imagining the history of the book in the pre-modern world, showing how writing was essential to ancient Roman beliefs and practice.

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