Foreign Affairs, the magazine published by the New-York based Council on Foreign Relations has just published its lists of the "best books of 2011", reviewed by leading academics and classified according to regions (Europe, Asia, etc) and themes (military, economy, etc.)
The selections are of course subjective but quite a few refer to issues close to the "mandate" of this blog. Among these "human rights" books, Bloodlands (on the Nazi and Stalinist massacres in Central Europe between 1930 and 1945), Europe and Genocide or A Predictable Tragedy (on Robert Mugabe and the collapse of Zimbabwe).
Bonne lecture!
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/features/collections/best-international-relations-books-of-2011?cid=nlc-this_week_on_foreignaffairs_co-122911-best_international_relations_b_3-122911
The selections are of course subjective but quite a few refer to issues close to the "mandate" of this blog. Among these "human rights" books, Bloodlands (on the Nazi and Stalinist massacres in Central Europe between 1930 and 1945), Europe and Genocide or A Predictable Tragedy (on Robert Mugabe and the collapse of Zimbabwe).
Bonne lecture!
http://www.foreignaffairs.com/features/collections/best-international-relations-books-of-2011?cid=nlc-this_week_on_foreignaffairs_co-122911-best_international_relations_b_3-122911

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