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Academic Journals
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- 1From:New England Review (Vol. 43, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedInsurgent prisoners guarded by American soldiers bearing insurgent dead. North of Malinta, Bulacan Province--1899. In an unplanted rice field, each insurgent prisoner holds a shovel. One soldier holds nothing, another...
- 2From:Alaska Law Review (Vol. 39, Issue 1)The federal government's scattershot treatment of Alaska Natives has long created confusion over the legal status and rights of Alaska Natives and Alaska Native entities. This confusion was center stage in the recent...
- 3From:Journal of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association (NAIS) (Vol. 9, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe Pacific history of the food product SPAM is driven by what CHamoru poet Craig Santos Perez characterizes as its invasive and imperial entanglements, which facilitate U.S. territoriality. A literary analysis shows how...
- 4From:Verge: Studies in Global Asias (Vol. 8, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIN THE 1920S, steamship passengers arriving in Honolulu might have encountered an unusual building a few blocks from the pier. The building, with pillars molded as coconut trees and an archway flanked by surfer statues,...
- 5From:Journal of World History (Vol. 33, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe article focuses on non-Russians who participated in the Russian conquest of eastern Siberia in the seventeenth century. As a result of recurrent wars fought by seventeenth-century Russia against Poland-Lithuania and...
- 6From:German Politics and Society (Vol. 40, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedFollowing the surge of the Black Lives Matter movement in the wake of George Floyd's murder on 25 May 2020, memorials in remembrance of individuals implicated in colonialism or slavery have come under increasing attack....
- 7From:Theory and Practice in Language Studies (Vol. 13, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis study explores the use of white verbal colour metaphors in the Algerian context. It seeks to unravel how the use of conceptual metaphors symbolises white colour. Data informants were eight native speakers of the...
- 8From:Novos Estudos Jurídicos (Vol. 24, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedActions of domination by the different countries that colonized the territory that later came to be known as Latin America carried, from the very beginning, an anti-interventionist action and sentiment, which would...
- 9From:Apollo (Vol. 195, Issue 704)THE HUMBOLDT FORUM If there's one thing that sums up the awkwardness of the Humboldt Forum, Berlin's new flagship museum complex, it's the black flagpole that rises up through the building's central stairwell. Statue...
- 10From:Journal of Ethnic and Cultural Studies (Vol. 9, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThis study presents the historical concept of Islamic culture and Islamic teachings/education in the Malay Archipelagos of Indonesia while reviewing Islamic culture and teachings/education research. It also describes...
- 11From:Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (Vol. 50, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe European rivals for colonial domination on the island of Timor in the eighteenth century relied on alliances with the many Timorese principalities for influence outside their own small settlements; the Dutch at...
- 12From:Apollo (Vol. 196, Issue 711)The Garden of Tropical Agronomy in Paris was a test bed for the French empire. Today its grounds are neglected and, as activists call for their preservation, the City of Paris seems thoroughly uncertain what to do On a...
- 13From:Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (Vol. 53, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedThis article examines the first decade of Pasar Gambir as an annual week-long festival held in the Dutch East Indies in conjunction with Queen Wilhelmina's birthday. As a study of colonial spectacles, it seeks to address...
- 14From:Journal of the American Musicological Society (Vol. 74, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedShellac was essential to the gramophone industry throughout the first half of the twentieth century, yet the material has long kept a low profile. At once inaudible and urgently required, shellac was a plastic and...
- 15From:Africa (Vol. 91, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedAbstract 'Chronicles of Bailundo' is a fragmentary account of life in Bailundo, Central Angola. The manuscript, whose authorship and exact date are unknown, is available at the archives of the American Board of...
- 16From:Journal of Political & Military Sociology (Vol. 49, Issue 1)This article discusses the origin and nature of a novel type of revolutionary organization that emerged in the years between 1890 and 1914: the "party in arms." A party in arms can be defined as a political party that...
- 17From:Oceania (Vol. 92, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe character of sovereignty in its constitution, expression, and experience across Pacific Islands has come into renewed focus over recent years. Decades after the onset of the post-war period of decolonization and...
- 18From:Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (Vol. 53, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedSwidden cultivation has long been seen as incompatible with state goals for development, modernisation and environmental protection in Vietnam. This article provides a history of anti-swidden programmes since the French...
- 19From:Oceania (Vol. 92, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedFollowing the end of lndiginat rule (1946), Kanaka as the Indigenous people of New Caledonia entered the political world to claim their rights as full French citizens, demand recognition of their identity, and...
- 20From:Oceania (Vol. 92, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe Marquesas Islands were added to UNESCO's Tentative World Heritage List (WHL) in 1996. Twenty-Jive years later, the project to join the coveted WHL continues, plagued by volatile politics and, more subtly, an...