Reference Works Catalogue July-December 2020

Page 1

Library Highlights Kit July - December 2020

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Contents ISBN

FULL TITLE

GBP PRICE

USD PRICE

UK PUB DATE

PAGE

A History of American Puritan Literature

£85.00

US$110.00

October 2020

1

A History of Egyptology

£135.00

US$175.00

October 2020

2

978-1-107-14245-9

Women and Society in the Roman World

£100.00

US$130.00

July 2020

3

978-1-107-15504-6

A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12)

£80.00

US$130.00

July 2020

4

978-1-107-01515-9

Historia Animalium Book X

£110.00

US$145.00

August 2020

5

978-1-107-02602-5

The Rhesus Attributed to Euripides

£130.00

US$170.00

August 2020

6

978-1-108-48419-0

The Tabula Lugdunensis

£79.99

US$105.00

August 2020

7

978-0-521-88335-1

Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers

£150.00

US$195.00

November 2020

8

The Cambridge Handbook of the Capability Approach

£125.00

US$160.00

September 2020

9

Jacob’s Room

£105.00

US$135.00

August 2020

10

978-1-108-69070-6

Hell in the Byzantine World

£200.00

US$260.00

July 2020

11

978-0-521-87715-2

The Cambridge History of War

£120.00

US$156.00

September 2020

12

978-1-316-61783-0

The Cambridge History of Ireland

£100.00

US$130.00

March 2020

13

978-1-108-49542-4

GATT Dispute Settlement Reports

£600.00

US$780.00

July 2020

14

978-1-107-01358-2

International Protection of Investments

£220.00

US$285.00

July 2020

15

American Literature 978-1-108-84003-3

Archaeology 978-1-107-06283-2

Classics

Economics 978-1-107-11528-6

English Literature 978-0-521-84674-5

History

Law

978-1-108-42309-0

The Cambridge Handbook of International and Comparative Trademark Law

£190.00

US$250.00

September 2020

16

978-1-108-48381-0

The UN Friendly Relations Declaration at 50

£120.00

US$160.00

September 2020

17 18

978-1-108-48861-7

The Cambridge Handbook of Judicial Control of Arbitral Awards

£195.00

US$255.00

September 2020

978-1-108-47000-1

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Justice and Sustainable Development

£150.00

US$195.00

October 2020

19

978-1-108-48196-0

The Cambridge Handbook of the Law of Algorithms

£200.00

US$260.00

November 2020

20

978-1-108-48304-9

The Cambridge Handbook of Copyright Limitations and Exceptions

£160.00

US$200.00

November 2020

21

Bears of the World

£110.00

US$145.00

November 2020

22

The Cambridge Handbook of Discourse Studies

£120.00

US$155.00

September 2020

23

Life Sciences 978-1-108-48352-0

Linguistics 978-1-108-42514-8

Mathematics 978-1-108-71318-4

Analysis and Geometry on Graphs and Manifolds

£65.00

US$115.00

July 2020

24

978-1-107-02065-8

The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy

£199.00

US$299.00

August 2020

25

978-1-108-47871-7

Matrix Positivity

£95.00

US$125.00

October 2020

26

Geriatric Forensic Medicine and Pathology

£140.00

US$215.00

July 2020

27

Medicine 978-1-316-82304-0

Music 978-1-108-79048-2

A Huge Revolution of Theatrical Commerce

£15.00

US$20.00

July 2020

28

978-1-108-42219-2

Stravinsky in Context

£85.00

US$110.00

July 2020

29

978-1-107-14087-5

The Cambridge Stravinsky Encyclopedia

£120.00

US$155.00

October 2020

30

Medication-Resistant Epilepsy

£84.99

US$110.00

September 2020

31

Neurology 978-1-107-13988-6


ISBN

FULL TITLE

GBP PRICE

USD PRICE

UK PUB DATE

PAGE

Politics 978-1-108-42930-6

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology

£288.00

US$360.00

August 2020

32

978-1-108-42932-0

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology

£160.00

US$200.00

September 2020

33

978-1-108-42933-7

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology

£160.00

US$200.00

September 2020

34

978-1-107-13170-5

The Cambridge Handbook of Social Theory

£225.00

US$365.00

October 2020

35

The Handbook of Behavior Change

£140.00

US$180.00

June 2020

36

Psychology 978-1-108-49639-1 978-1-108-47303-3

The Cambridge Handbook of the International Psychology of Women

£150.00

US$195.00

July 2020

37

978-1-108-42563-6

The Cambridge Handbook of Psychology and Human Rights

£155.00

US$200.00

July 2020

38

978-1-108-41596-5

The Cambridge Handbook of Applied School Psychology

£140.00

US$180.00

July 2020

39

978-1-108-41709-9

The Cambridge Handbook of Personality Psychology

£150.00

US$195.00

July 2020

40

978-1-108-42603-9

The Cambridge Handbook of Infant Development

£160.00

US$210.00

August 2020

41

978-1-108-42716-6

The Cambridge Handbook of Substance and Behavioral Addictions

£160.00

US$195.00

August 2020

42

978-1-108-49056-6

The Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Training

£145.00

US$190.00

September 2020

43

978-1-108-48414-5

Culture, Mind, and Brain

£89.99

US$120.00

September 2020

44

978-0-521-19622-2

The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea

£200.00

US$260.00

September 2020

45

978-1-108-41616-0

Shakespeare and Emotion

£74.99

US$99.99

October 2020

46

Theatre


American Literature

1

A History of American Puritan Literature Edited by Kristina Bross Washington University, St Louis

and Abram Van Engen Purdue University, Indiana

Description For generations, scholars have imagined American puritans as religious enthusiasts, fleeing persecution, finding refuge in Massachusetts, and founding “America.” The puritans have been read as a product of New England and the origin of American exceptionalism. This History challenges the usual understanding of American puritans, offering new ways of reading their history and their literary culture. Together, an international team of authors make clear that puritan America cannot be thought of apart from Native America, and that its literature is also grounded in Britain, Europe, North America, the Caribbean, and networks that spanned the globe. Each chapter focuses on a single place, method, idea, or context to read familiar texts anew and to introduce forgotten or neglected voices and writings. A History of American Puritan Literature is a collaborative effort to create not a singular literary history, but a series of interlocked new histories of American puritan literature.

Key Features • Resituates puritan New England in in the context of a much more interconnected Atlantic and global world • Introduces readers to the changed understanding of American exceptionalism and puritan origin stories • Captures the renaissance in puritan studies and presents the reconfigured understanding to readers at multiple levels of expertise

Contents Introduction; Prologue. Pilgrims, puritans, and the origin of America; Part I. Places: 1. Native America; 2. British Isles; 3. Europe; 4. Colonial North America; 5. Caribbean; 6. Global; Part II. Approaches: 7. Theology;

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.375pp 978-1-108-84003-3 Hardback £85.00 / US$110.00 978-1-108-81398-3 Paperback TBA / TBA

8. Aesthetics; 9. Gender; 10. Race; 11. Print culture; 12: Ritual; 13. Manuscript culture; 14. Environment; 15. Science; 16. Millennialism; 17. Postsecularism; Afterword. The puritan imaginary and the puritans’ world.


2

Archaeology

A History of Egyptology From the Antiquity to the Present

Salima Ikram

American University in Cairo

Aidan Dodson University of Bristol

Peter Lacovara

Emory University, Atlanta

Andrew Bednarski

American University in Cairo

Description A History of Egyptology is a ground-breaking reference work that traces the study of ancient Egypt. Spanning 150 years and global in purview, it enlarges our understanding of how and why people have looked, and continue to look, into humankind’s distant past through the lens of the enduring allure of ancient Egypt. Written by an international team of scholars, the volume investigates how territories around the world have engaged with and have been inspired by Egyptology, and how that engagement has evolved over time. Each essay presents a specific territory from an institutional and national perspective, while examining a range of transnational links as well. The volume thus touches on multiple strands of scholarship, embracing not only Egyptology, but also social history, the history of science, and reception studies. It will appeal to amateurs and professionals alike.

Key Features • Provides a holistic study of the study of ancient Egypt • Gives individual territories involved with Egyptology’s development their own voice • Includes socio-cultural in addition to academic interactions with ancient Egypt

Contents Preface; Abbreviations and conventions used in the text; A note on academic titles; The contributors; Maps; Introduction; 1. The prehistory of Egyptology; 2. Egypt; 3. France; 4. The British Isles; 5. The Netherlands; 6. Belgium; 7. The Nordic countries; 8. Prussia and Germany; 9. Austria;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students October 2020 253 x 177 mm 450pp 3 maps 978-1-107-06283-2 Hardback £135.00 / US$175.00 978-1-107-63406-0 Paperback TBA / TBA

10. Switzerland; 11. Hungary; 12. Czechoslovakia; 13. Poland; 14. Russia; 15. Italy; 16. Spain; 17. United States of America; 18. Canada; 19. Japan; 20. Australasia; 21. Ancient Egypt in the cinema; 22. Past and future; Bibliography; Index.


Classics

3

Women and Society in the Roman World A Sourcebook of Inscriptions from the Roman West

Emily A. Hemelrijk

Universiteit van Amsterdam

Description By their social and material context as markers of graves, dedications and public signs of honour, inscriptions offer a distinct perspective on the social lives, occupations, family belonging, mobility, ethnicity, religious affiliations, public honour and legal status of Roman women ranging from slaves and freedwomen to women of the elite and the imperial family, both in Rome and in Italian and provincial towns. They thus shed light on women who are largely overlooked by the literary sources. The wide range of inscriptions and graffiti included in this book show women participating not only in their families and households but also in the social and professional life of their cities. Moreover, they offer us a glimpse of women’s own voices. Marital ideals and problems, love and hate, friendship, birth and bereavement, joy and hardship all figure in inscriptions, revealing some of the richness and variety of life in the ancient world.

Key Features • The most wide-ranging and comprehensive sourcebook of inscriptions relating to the lives of women published to date • Presents a representative sample of inscriptions by, for and about women, with brief introductions, accessible translations and references to further reading • The accompanying webpage provides the original texts in the same order as in the book with added layout and punctuation

Contents Introduction; 1. Family Life; 2. Legal Status, Citizenship and Ethnicity; 3. Occupations; 4. Social Relations, Travel and Migration; 5. Religion; 6. Public Life; 7. Imperial Women

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students July 2020 244 x 170 mm 450pp 72 b/w illus. 3 maps 978-1-107-14245-9 Hardback c. £100.00 / c. US$130.00 978-1-316-50905-0 Paperback TBA / TBA


4

Classics

A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12) An Oration Delivered by Pacatus Drepanius before the Emperor Theodosius II in the Senate at Rome, AD 389

Edited and translated by Roger Rees University of St Andrews, Scotland

Description The renowned Gallic poet Pacatus Drepanius journeyed to Rome in the summer of AD 389 to deliver a speech to the Emperor Theodosius; both men stood for the first time before the Roman Senators. It was a moment of high political charge. The Latin speech survives and is here presented both in the original and with facing English translation; the introduction and commentary capture the groundbreaking character of the work and set it in its historical, rhetorical and literary contexts.

Key Features • Makes an important but neglected speech available to classicists and ancient historians • Considers the place of the speech in the rhetorical tradition • Argues that epideictic oratory deserves to be taken seriously as a literary form

Contents Preface; Abbreviations; Introduction; Panegyrici Latini II(12); Commentary; Bibliography; Index locorum; General Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students July 2020 216 x 138 mm 400pp 978-1-107-15504-6 Hardback c. £80.00 / c. US$130.00 978-1-316-60710-7 Paperback TBA / TBA


Classics

Historia Animalium Book X Aristotle’s Endoxon, Topos and Dialectic on On Failure to Reproduce

Edited and translated by Lesley Dean-Jones University of Texas, Austin

Description This is the first modern edition of Book X of the Historia Animalium. It argues that the first five chapters are a summary, from the hand of Aristotle, of a medical treatise by a physician practicing in the fourth-century BCE. This gives short shrift to Hippocratic staples such as trapped menses and the wandering womb, and describes a woman’s climax during sex in terms that can be easily mapped onto modern accounts. In summarizing the treatise and examining its claims in the last two chapters, Aristotle follows the method described in the Topics for a philosopher embarking on a new field of study. Here we see Aristotle’s ruminations over the conundrum of a woman’s contribution to conception at an early stage in the development of his theory of reproduction. Far from being an insignificant pseudepigraphon, this is a central text for understanding the development of ancient gynaecology and Aristotelian methodology.

Key Features • Demonstrates that the text exemplifies the method of philosophic investigation outlined by Aristotle in the Topics • Argues that the medical theories in the text have progressed beyond those of Hippocratic gynaecology • Illustrates that there was some genuine interest in female sexual pleasure and satisfaction

Contents Introduction; Sigla; Outline of plan of HA X; Text; Translation; Commentary

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, 61 August 2020 216 x 138 mm 376pp 978-1-107-01515-9 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00

5


6

Classics

The Rhesus Attributed to Euripides Edited by Marco Fantuzzi Roehampton University, London

Description The tragedy Rhesus has come down to us among the plays of Euripides but was probably the work either of fourth-century BC actors or producers heavily rewriting his original play or of a fourth-century author writing in competition. This edition explores the play as a ‘postclassical’ tragedy, composed when the plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides had become the ‘classical’ canon. Its stylistic mannerisms, cerebral re-use of the motifs and language of fifth-century tragedy, and endemic experimentalism with various models of intertextuality exemplify the anxiety of influence of the Rhesus as a text that ‘comes after’ fifth-century drama and Book 10 of the Iliad. The anachronistic adaptations of the world of the epic heroes to the new reality of the polis and the irresistible rise of Macedonian power also reveal the Rhesus attempting to be both seriously intertextual with its models and seriously different from them.

Key Features • Explores the play in the context of the drama and culture of the fourth century BC • Discusses the full significance of the many comic scenes and situations, especially in relation to similar scenes in Menander • Demonstrates how the play’s use of intertextuality foreshadows the Hellenistic practice of allusion and imitation and the refinement of philological scholarship

Contents Introduction; Text; Commentary; Bibliography;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries, 63 August 2020 216 x 138 mm 900pp 978-1-107-02602-5 Hardback £130.00 / US$170.00 978-1-107-62934-9 Paperback TBA / TBA


Classics

The Tabula Lugdunensis A Critical Edition with Translation and Commentary

Edited and translated by S. J. V. Malloch University of Nottingham

Description Unearthed in 1528 at Lyon, the Tabula Lugdunensis preserves the longest speech of a Roman emperor to survive in epigraphic form. In AD 48 Claudius addressed the senate to press a petition by elites of north-western Gaul to hold senatorial rank and office. In support he demonstrated Rome’s history of constitutional innovation, particularly in integrating outsiders, and asserted a commitment to recruiting worthy provincial senators such as he claims the Gauls to be. The speech offers important evidence for the history and rhetoric of Roman political integration, unparalleled Etruscan testimony about Regal Rome, and insight into the Latin language and oratory of the early Principate. Uniquely, the Tabula can be set beside Tacitus’ version of Claudius’ speech in Annals 11 to provide a case-study of ancient historiographical practice. This edition contains a newly-edited text of the Tabula, an English translation, and a comprehensive introduction and commentary.

Key Features • The fullest scholarly treatment of the Tabula Lugdunensis in English • Presents a newly edited Latin text of the speech of Claudius preserved on the Tabula and a translation into English • Includes a comprehensive introduction and commentary addressing relevant historical, archaeological, and philological issues arising from the speech of Claudius and its epigraphic medium

Contents Introduction: I. The Tabula Lugdunensi; II. Contexts; III. Style; IV. Intertexts; V. The structure of Claudius’ speech; Text and Translation: A note on the text and translation; The Tabula Lugdunensis; Diplomatic text; Edited text and translation; Commentary; Appendices: 1. New provincial senators from Augustus to Nero; 2. Tacitus Annals 11.23-25.1: text and translation.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students August 2020 228 x 152 mm c.224pp 7 b/w illus. 2 maps 978-1-108-48419-0 Hardback £79.99 / US$105.00 978-1-108-70607-0 Paperback TBA / TBA

7


8

Classics

Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers An Edited Translation

Edited and translated by Stephen White University of Texas, Austin

Description A pioneering work in the history of philosophy, the ancient text of the Lives presents engaging portraits of nearly a hundred Greek philosophers. It blends biography with bibliography and surveys of leading theories, peppered with punchy anecdotes, pithy maxims, and even snatches of poetry, much of it by the philosophers themselves. The work presents a systematic genealogy of Greek philosophy from its origins in the sixth century BCE to its flowering in Plato’s Academy and the Hellenistic schools. In this fully up-to-date and accessible translation, based on the most accurate texts and the latest advances in scholarship, Stephen White provides a valuable resource for students and scholars of ancient philosophy. Highlights include extended treatment of the ‘Seven Sages’ (Book 1), Socrates and his Socratic followers (Book 2), Plato (Book 3), Aristotle and his school (Book 5), Diogenes the Cynic (Book 6), Stoicism (Book 7), Pythagoreans (Book 8), Pyrrhonian skepticism (Book 9), and Epicureanism (Book 10).

Key Features • Offers an accessible translation of a key third-century work which stands as the preeminent surviving ancient history of Greek philosophy • Informed by huge progress in recent philosophical and historical scholarship, making it fully up to date • Presents ancient philosophy as a way of life for leading figures including Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and Epicurus, as well as leading Atomists, Cynics, Stoics, and Skeptics

Contents Acknowledgements; Introduction; Outline of the Lives; Lives of Eminent Philosophers; Book 1. Origins and sages; Book 2. Ionians, Socrates and Socratics; Book 3. Plato; Book 4. Academics; Book 5. Aristotle and Peripatetics;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students November 2020 228 x 152 mm 700pp 978-0-521-88335-1 Hardback c. £150.00 / c. US$195.00

Book 6. Antisthenes and Cynics; Book 7. Zeno and Stoics; Book 8. Pythagoras and Pythagoreans; Book 9. Italians and others, Pyrrho and Pyrrhonians; Book 10. Epicurus and Epicureans; Appendix: conspectus of changes to the text; Glossary of philosophical terms; Bibliography; Index of biographies; Index of citations; Index of persons.


Economics

9

The Cambridge Handbook of the Capability Approach Edited by Enrica Chiappero-Martinetti University of Pavia

Siddiqur Osmani Ulster University

and Mozaffar Qizilbash University of York

Description This landmark handbook collects in a single volume the current state of cutting-edge research on the capability approach. It includes a comprehensive introduction to the approach as well as new research from leading scholars in this increasingly influential multi-disciplinary field, including the pioneers of capability research, Martha C. Nussbaum and Amartya Sen. Incorporating both approachable introductory chapters and more in-depth analysis relating to the central philosophical, conceptual and theoretical issues of capability research, this handbook also includes analytical and measurement tools, as well as policy approaches which have emerged in the recent literature. The handbook will be an invaluable resource for students approaching the capability approach for the first time as well as for researchers engaged in advanced research in a wide range of disciplines, including development studies, economics, gender studies, political science and political philosophy.

Key Features • Brings together in a single volume most of the diverse areas/strands of research within the large field of capability research • Provides surveys of specific sub-fields and offers new contributions that extend the existing literature in important ways • Includes contributions by leading scholars working on the Capability Approach, including the pioneers of the field, Martha C. Nussbaum and Amartya Sen

Contents Foreword; General introduction; Part I. Historical Antecedents and Philosophical Debates: Introduction to Part I; 1. The capabilities approach and the history of philosophy; 2. Karl Marx and the capabilities approach; 3. Utility and capability: J. S. Mill and Amartya Sen; 4. Intellectual history and defending the capabilities approach; 5. Sen, Smith and the Cambridge tradition; 6. The capability approach to well-being and freedom from the viewpoint of welfare economics and social choice theory; 7. Resources or capabilities? An introduction to the debate; 8. Taking multidimensionality seriously: capabilities, Rawls’s primary goods, and guiding action; 9. The capabilities approach and political liberalism; 10. Selecting a list: the capability approach’s Achilles heel; 11. Individualism and the capability approach: the role of collectivities in expanding human capabilities; 12. The politics of wonder: the capabilities approach in the context of mass extinction; Part II. Methods, Measurement and Empirical Evidence: Introduction to Part II;

13. Social choice and the capability approach; 14. On capability and its measurement; 15. Analyzing capabilities: games, groups and effectivity; 16. Implementing the capability approach with respect for individual valuations: an illustration with Colombian data; 17. Capability, opportunity, outcome – and equality; 18. The distribution of capabilities: up, down, sideways and along; 19. Inter-group disparities in the distribution of human development: two apparent conundrums and how we might address them; 20. Multidimensional inequality and human development; 21. The research agenda on multidimensional poverty measurement: Important and as-yet unanswered questions; 22. Measuring gender inequality using the capability approach: issues and challenges; 23. Econometric and statistical models for operationalising the capability approach; 24. Expanding capabilities through participatory action research; Part III. Issues in Public Policy: Introduction to Part III; 25. On education and capabilities expansion;

26. Capability approach to children’s well-being and well-becoming; 27. Capability and disability; 28. Social exclusion and capability development; 29. Human security; 30. Income inequality and human capabilities; 31. The capability approach and human rights; 32. Capabilities and the law; 33. Capabilities, public reason and democratic deliberation; 34. Entitlements and capabilities; 35. Religion and the capability approach.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students September 2020 247 x 174 mm 750pp 978-1-107-11528-6 Hardback £125.00 / US$160.00 978-1-107-53562-6 Paperback TBA / TBA


10

English Literature

Jacob’s Room Virginia Woolf Edited by Stuart N. Clarke

Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain

and David Bradshaw University of Oxford

Description Jacob’s Room, Virginia Woolf’s third novel, is short compared with its predecessor Night and Day. She said herself that she learnt what to leave out by putting it all in. Jacob’s Room may be read as the simple story of a young man’s life from childhood until his death in the First World War, but it is much more than that: it subtly indicts a society that instils obedience and celebrates militarism. Consequently, Jacob’s death seems random yet inevitable. Extensive explanatory notes clarify the myriad passing allusions, which should lead to a reassessment of Jacob’s Room as one of the great modernist masterpieces, taking its place with Ulysses and The Waste Land in the iconic year of 1922. The substantial introduction includes a detailed account of the novel’s composition, publication, and early critical reception, together with chronologies of composition and of Woolf’s life.

Key Features • Provides hundreds of explanatory notes, helping readers understand the historical and literary resonances of objects, phrases, and scenes • The introduction gives a detailed account of the composition of the novel, together with a separate timeline • Details the critical reception of the novel from publication to Woolf’s death (1922–41)

Contents List of illustrations and list of maps; General editors’ preface; Notes on the edition; Acknowledgements; Chronology; List of abbreviations; List of archival sources for manuscript, typescript and proof material relating to Jacob’s Room; List of editorial symbols;

Additional Information Departments: Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Virginia Woolf August 2020 216 x 138 mm 500pp 978-0-521-84674-5 Hardback £105.00 / US$135.00

Introduction; Chronology of the composition of Jacob’s Room; Maps; Jacob’s Room; Explanatory notes; Textual apparatus; Textual notes; Appendix I; Appendix II; Bibliography.


History

11

Hell in the Byzantine World A History of Art and Religion in Venetian Crete and the Eastern Mediterranean

Edited by Angeliki Lymberopoulou The Open University, Milton Keynes

Description The imagery of Hell, the Christian account of the permanent destinations of the human soul after death, has fascinated people over the centuries since the emergence of the Christian faith. These landmark volumes provide the first large-scale investigation of this imagery found across the Byzantine and post-Byzantine world. Particular emphasis is placed on images from churches across Venetian Crete, which are comprehensively collected and published for the first time. Crete was at the centre of artistic production in the late Byzantine world and beyond and its imagery was highly influential on traditions in other regions. The Cretan examples accompany rich comparative material from the wider Mediterranean – Cappadocia, Macedonia, the Peloponnese and Cyprus. The large amount of data presented in this publication highlight Hell’s emergence in monumental painting not as a concrete array of images, but as a diversified mirroring of social perceptions of sin.

Key Features • Adopts an interdisciplinary approach to a cultural and religious subject of high relevance to the history of Christianity • Includes a large amount of unpublished material and material which is very difficult to access • Testifies to the richness and diversity of Byzantine art and presents new aspects of the society that commissioned and created it

Contents Volume 1: Introduction; Part I: Crete; 1. From Crete to Hell: The Textual Tradition on Punishments in the Afterlife and the Writings of Joseph Bryennios on Crete; 2. Venetian Crete: The Historical Context ; 3. Hell on Crete ; 4. Hell from West to East: Western Resonances in Cretan Wall Painting ; Part II: Eastern Mediterranean; 5. ‘When the visual order was established’: The Last Judgement and Punishments in Hell in Byzantine Cappadocia ; 6. Damned in Hell, damned in the Church: Imagery and Space in Byzantium ; 7. Images of Hell and the Afterlife in the Churches of Laconia ; 8. Hell in the Sweet Land: Hell’s Place in the Last Judgements of Byzantine and Medieval Cyprus. Volume 2: Introduction; I. Chania (nos 1-47); II. Rethymnon (nos 48-73); III. Herakleion (nos 74-92); IV; Lassithi (nos 93-107); V. Chronological Arrangement of Cretan Churches.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students July 2020 247 x 174 mm c.936pp 119 b/w illus. 137 colour illus. 7 maps 978-1-108-69070-6 2 Volume Hardback Set £200.00 / US$260.00 978-1-108-69708-8 2 Volume Paperback Set TBA / TBA


12

History

The Cambridge History of War Volume 2: War and the Medieval World

Anne Curry

University of Southampton

David A. Graff

Kansas State University

Description Volume II of The Cambridge History of War covers what in Europe is commonly called ‘the Middle Ages’. It includes all of the wellknown themes of European warfare, from the migrations of the Germanic peoples and the Vikings through the Reconquista, the Crusades and the age of chivalry, to the development of state-controlled gunpowder-wielding armies and the urban militias of the later middle ages; yet its scope is world-wide, ranging across Eurasia and the Americas to trace the interregional connections formed by the great Arab conquests and the expansion of Islam, the migrations of horse nomads such as the Avars and the Turks, the formation of the vast Mongol Empire, and the spread of new technologies – including gunpowder and the earliest firearms – by land and sea.

Key Features • Each chapter is written by experts in the field to provide up-to-date scholarship across a wide range of topics and a large number of geographical areas. • Takes war in its broadest definition to offer informative synthesis as well as much fascinating detail. • Readers can trace the relationships between strategy, tactics, weapons technology, logistics, military institutions and financing, social structures, and cultural influences.

Contents List of illustrations; List of maps; Notes on contributors; Introduction to volume II; Part I. Foundations, c. 600 to 1000 CE; 1. The Early Islamic Empire and the Introduction of Military Slavery; 2. The Western European Kingdoms, 600-1000; 3. The Scandinavian World; 4. Byzantium to the Twelfth Century; 5. The Slavs, Avars and Hungarians; 6. The Turks and the Other Peoples of the Eurasian Steppes, to 1175; 7. China: The Tang, 600–900; 8. Japan to 1200; Part II. Interactions, c. 1000–1300 CE; 9. Europe 1000–1300; 10. Crusaders and Settlers in the East 1096–1291: Christian Attack, Muslim Response; 11. The Mongol Empire;

Additional Information Departments: Level: academic researchers, amateurs/enthusiasts Series: Cambridge History of War September 2020 228 x 152 mm 650pp 22 b/w illus. 16 maps 978-0-521-87715-2 Hardback £120.00 / US$156.00

12. China 900–1400; Part III. Nations and Formations, c. 1300–1500 CE; 13. Western Europe 1300–1500; 14. Warfare and Italian states, 1300–1500; 15. The Reconquest and the Spanish monarchies; 16. The Byzantine Empire and the Balkans, 1204–1453; 17. Ottoman Expansion and Military Power, 1300–1453; 18. India, c.1200 – c. 1500; 19. Southeast Asia, 1300–1540 CE; 20. Japan 1200–1550; 21. The Americas; Part IV. Comparisons, Cross-Cultural Analysis; 22. Justifications, Theories and Customs of War; 23. Technologies: Land Technologies and Technologies: Maritime Technologies; Select bibliography; Index


History

13

The Cambridge History of Ireland 4 Paperback Volume Set

Edited by Thomas Bartlett University of Aberdeen

Brendan Smith University of Bristol

Jane Ohlmeyer

Trinity College Dublin

James Kelly

Dublin City University

Description This authoritative, accessible and engaging four-volume history vividly presents the Irish story - or stories - from c.600 to the present, within its broader Atlantic, European, imperial and global contexts. While the volumes benefit from a strong political narrative framework, they are distinctive also in including essays that address the full range of social, economic, religious, linguistic, military, cultural, artistic and gender history, and in challenging traditional chronological boundaries in a manner that offers new perspectives and insights. Each volume examines Ireland’s development within a distinct period, and offers a complete and rounded picture of Irish life, while remaining sensitive to the unique Irish experience. Bringing together an international team of experts, this landmark history both reflects recent developments in the field and sets the agenda for future study.

Key Features • A landmark survey of Irish history from c.600 to the present day, which will be an essential reference set for anyone seeking to understand Ireland’s tangled history • Written by a team of more than 120 leading historians from around the world, this is the most comprehensive and authoritative history of Ireland yet attempted • Combines narrative and thematic chapters to provide a fresh and up-to-date view of 1500 years of Irish history

Contents Volume I Part I. Christianity, Invasion and Conquest; Part II. English Lordship in Ireland; Part III. Religion, Economy and Culture, 1000–1550; Volume II Part I. Introduction; Part II. Politics; Part III. Religion and War; Part IV. Society; Part V. Culture; Part VI. Economy and Environment; Part VII. Afterword;

Volume III Part I. Politics c.1730–c.1845; Part II. Economy and Demography; Part III. Religion; Part IV. Shaping Society; Part V. The Irish Abroad; Part VI. The Great Famine and its Aftermath; Volume IV Part I. Ireland 1880–1923; Part II. War, Revolution and the Two Irelands, 1914–1945.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: The Cambridge History of Ireland March 2020 228 x 152 x 155mm 2800 pages 978-1-316-61783-0 4 Paperback books £100.00 / $130.00

New in Paperback


14

Law

GATT Dispute Settlement Reports Disputes Initiated in 1948–1993

World Trade Organization World Trade Organization

Description GATT Dispute Settlement Reports compiles all dispute settlement reports issued under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT 1947), including its Tokyo Round plurilateral codes, from 1948 to 1995. This compilation includes both adopted and unadopted reports. The GATT documents containing the reports are reproduced in English in their original form and without any modifications. They are presented in chronological order based on the initiation date of the dispute, with each case identified by a unique GATT dispute (GD) number. A cover page for each dispute provides the report’s adoption status, the date it was issued and any GATT or WTO disputes directly related to the dispute in question. At the end of each volume, there is a list of all GATT dispute settlement reports contained within the series, with references to the relevant volume and page numbers.

Key Features • Provides a complete set of all GATT Dispute Settlement Reports issued during the lifetime of the GATT (1948-1995) • Each volume consists of scans of the original reports • This is the only complete set of GATT dispute settlement reports, including some reports that have only recently been discovered

Contents GATT Dispute Settlement Reports: Volume I: Disputes Initiated in 1948-1979; GATT Dispute Settlement Reports: Volume II: Disputes Initiated in 1980-1986; GATT Dispute Settlement Reports: Volume III: Disputes Initiated in 1986-1988; GATT Dispute Settlement Reports: Volume IV: Disputes Initiated in 1988-1991; GATT Dispute Settlement Reports: Volume V:Disputes Initiated in 1991: GATT Dispute Settlement Reports: Volume VI: Disputes Initiated in 1992-1993

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, legal practitioners, graduate students July 2020 240 x 160 mm c.4800pp 978-1-108-49542-4 6 Volume Hardback Set £600.00 / US$780.00 978-1-108-84981-4 Cambridge Core £140.00 / US$215.00


Law

15

International Protection of Investments The Substantive Standards

August Reinisch University of Vienna

and Christoph Schreuer Zeiler Partners, Vienna

Description This book outlines the protection standards typically contained in international investment agreements as they are actually applied and interpreted by investment tribunals. It thus provides a basis for analysis, criticism, and stocktaking of the existing system of investment arbitration. It covers all main protection standards, such as expropriation, fair and equitable treatment, full protection and security, the non-discrimination standards of national treatment and MFN, the prohibition of unreasonable and discriminatory measures, umbrella clauses and transfer guarantees. These standards are covered in separate chapters providing an overview of textual variations, explaining the origin of the standards and analysing the main conceptual issues as developed by investment tribunals. Relevant cases with quotations that illustrate how tribunals have relied upon the standards are presented in depth. An extensive bibliography guides the reader to more specific aspects of each investment standard permitting the book’s use as a commentary of the main investment protection standards.

Key Features • Provides a broad overview of the jurisprudence of investment tribunals and enables a more thorough understanding of the actual interpretation of core concepts of investment protection • Analyses the application and interpretation of the main protection standards contained in international investment agreements and examines how tribunals have addressed arguments and interests of parties and stakeholders in the area of investment arbitration • Thoroughly discusses expropriation, fair and equitable treatment, full protection and security, the non-discrimination standards of national treatment and MFN, the prohibition of unreasonable and discriminatory measures, umbrella clauses and transfer guarantees

Contents 1. Expropriation; 2. Fair and equitable treatment; 3. Full protection and security; 4. National treatment; 5. Most-favoured-nation treatment; 6. Protection against arbitrary or discriminatory measures; 7. Umbrella clause; 8. Transfer clauses.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, legal practitioners July 2020 247 x 174 mm 1170pp 978-1-107-01358-2 Hardback £220.00 / US$285.00


16

Law

The Cambridge Handbook of International and Comparative Trademark Law Irene Calboli

Texas A&M School of Law

Jane C. Ginsburg

Columbia University School of Law

Description Trade in goods and services has historically resisted territorial confinement, but trademark protection remains territorial, albeit within an increasingly important framework of multilateral treaties. Trademark law therefore demands that practitioners, policy-makers and academics understand principles of international and comparative law. This handbook assists in that endeavour, with chapters describing and critically analyzing international and regional frameworks, and providing comparative perspectives on the substantive issues in trademark law and related fields, such as geographic indications, advertising law, and domain names. Chapters contrast common law and civil law approaches while focusing on the US and EU trademark systems in light of the role these systems have played in the development of trademark laws. Additionally, this handbook covers other jurisdictions, both common law and civil law, on the AsiaPacific, African, and South American continents. This work should be read by anyone seeking a better understanding of trademark law around the world.

Key Features • The first book to systematically address the legal protection of trademarks from a comparative perspective across multiple jurisdictions • Offers a comprehensive review of the history and development of trademark law from the first multilateral treaties to today’s free trade agreements • Presents national examples of trademark law and reviews these in a comparative context

Contents Part One. International Aspects of Trademark Protection: Historical Perspectives and Current Developments: Part Two. Comparative Perspectives on Trademark Protection: Convergence and (Remaining) Divergence;

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, legal practitioners, graduate students Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks September 2020 253 x 177 mm c.700pp 14 b/w illus. 1 table 978-1-108-42309-0 Hardback £190.00 / US$250.00


Law

The UN Friendly Relations Declaration at 50 An Assessment of the Fundamental Principles of International Law

Edited by Jorge E. Viñuales University of Cambridge

Description The year 2020 marks the 75th anniversary of the United Nations Organisation, and the 50th anniversary of the United Nations Friendly Relations Declaration, which states the fundamental principles of the international legal order. In commemoration, some of the world’s most prominent international law scholars from all continents have come together to offer a comprehensive study of the fundamental principles of international law. Each chapter in this volume reflects decades of experience, work and reflection by the most authoritative voices of the field. At the same time, the book is an invitation to end narrow specialisation and re-engage with the wider body of rules and processes that lie at the foundations of the international legal order.

Key Features • Includes works by some of the world’s most prominent international law scholars • A commemorative volume celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the United Nations Friendly Relations Declaration • Offers a comprehensive study of the fundamental principles of international law

Contents Foreword; 1. Introduction: the fundamental principles of international law – an enduring ideal?; 2. The historical origins and setting of the Friendly Relations Declaration; Part I. The Principles of the Friendly Relations Declaration: 3. The prohibition of the use of force; 4. Peaceful settlement of international disputes; 5. The duty not to intervene in matters within domestic jurisdiction; 6. Co-operation; 7. Self-determination; 8. Sovereign equality; 9. Good faith; Part II. Fundamental Principles of International Law Beyond the Friendly Relations Declaration: 10. Human rights protection as a principle; 11. The fundamental principles of international humanitarian law; 12. Prevention of environmental harm; 13. Freedoms in common areas; 14. Principles governing the global economy; 15. The Friendly Relations Declaration at 50.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students September 2020 253 x 177 mm c.630pp 978-1-108-48381-0 Hardback £120.00 / US$160.00

17


18

Law

The Cambridge Handbook of Judicial Control of Arbitral Awards Edited by Larry A. DiMatteo University of Florida

Marta Infantino University of Trieste

and Nathalie M-P Potin Lyon Catholic University

Description A unique collaboration between academic scholars, legal practitioners, and arbitrators, this handbook focuses on the intersection of arbitration – as an alternative to litigation – and the court systems to which arbitration is ultimately beholden. The first three parts analyze issues relating to the interpretation of the scope of arbitration agreements, arbitrator bias and conflicts of interest, arbitrator misconduct during the proceedings, enforceability of arbitral awards, and the grounds for vacating awards. The next section features fifteen country-specific reviews, which demonstrate that, despite the commonality of principles at the international level, there is a significant amount of differences in the application of those principles at the national level. This work should be read by anyone interested in the general rules and principles of the enforceability of foreign arbitral awards and the grounds for courts to vacate or annul such awards.

Key Features • Discusses important issues in international commercial arbitration theory and practice • Provides a comprehensive reference to rules and issues relating to arbitrator misconduct • Reviews areas of non-arbitrability under national laws by highlighting the differences in the meaning of public policy across countries

Contents Part I. Vacating Commercial Arbitration Awards: 1. Introduction: Intersection of courts and arbitration; 2. Independence and impartiality of arbitrators; 3. Exploring the parameters of conflicts of interest; 4. Procedural irregularities and misconduct during proceedings; Part II. Enforcing Commercial Arbitration Awards: 5. Inter-arbitration association conflict; 6. Requirements for enforceability; Part III. Scope and Interpretation of Arbitration Clauses: 7. Judicial interpretation of standard clauses; 8. Industry-specific clauses and their interpretation; 9. Drafting, interpretation, and enforcement of arbitration clauses: a practitioner’s perspective; Part IV. Judicial Control over Arbitral Awards: Country Reports: 10. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Argentina; 11. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Australia;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, legal practitioners, graduate students Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks September 2020 253 x 177 mm c.400pp 1 b/w illus. 2 tables 978-1-108-48861-7 Hardback £195.00 / US$255.00

12. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Bulgaria; 13. Judicial control of arbitral awards in China; 14. Judicial control of arbitral awards in France; 15. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Germany; 16. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Italy; 17 Judicial control of arbitral awards in Nigeria; 18. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Poland; 19. Judicial control of arbitral awards in the Russian Federation; 20. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Spain; 21. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Switzerland; 22. Judicial control of arbitral awards in Ukraine; 23. Judicial control of arbitral awards in United Kingdom; 24. Judicial control of arbitral awards in the United States; Part V. Summary and Findings: 25. Divergence, themes, and trends in national arbitration laws; 26. Shared control system over arbitral proceedings.


Law

19

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Justice and Sustainable Development Sumudu A. Atapattu

University of Wisconsin School of Law

Carmen G. Gonzalez

University of Seattle School of Law

Sara L. Seck

Dalhousie University (Nova Scotia) Schulich School of Law

Description Despite the global endorsement of the Sustainable Development Goals, environmental justice struggles are growing all over the world. These struggles are not isolated injustices, but symptoms of interlocking forms of oppression that privilege the few while inflicting misery on the many and threatening ecological collapse. This handbook offers critical perspectives on the multi-dimensional, intersectional nature of environmental injustice and the cross-cutting forms of oppression that unite and divide these struggles, including gender, race, poverty, and indigeneity. The work sheds new light on the often-neglected social dimension of sustainability and its relationship to human rights and environmental justice. Using a variety of legal frameworks and case studies from around the world, this volume illustrates the importance of overcoming the fragmentation of these legal frameworks and social movements in order to develop holistic solutions that promote justice and protect the planet’s ecosystems at a time of intensifying economic and ecological crisis.

Key Features • Introduces diverse, multidisciplinary theoretical frameworks for understanding the relationship between environmental justice and the social pillar of sustainable development • Provides legal scholars and practitioners with a deeper understanding of the strategies and challenges for overcoming environmental injustice • Illustrates practical applications of intersectional analyses of environmental injustice

Contents Foreword by Boaventura de Sousa Santos; Part I. Frameworks Part II. Case studies

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students, legal practitioners October 2020 253 x 177 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-47000-1 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00


20

Law

The Cambridge Handbook of the Law of Algorithms Edited by Woodrow Barfield University of Washington

Description Algorithms are a fundamental building block of artificial intelligence – and, increasingly, society – but our legal institutions have largely failed to recognize or respond to this reality. The Cambridge Handbook of the Law of Algorithms, which features contributions from US, EU, and Asian legal scholars, discusses the specific challenges algorithms pose not only to only current law, but also – as algorithms replace people as decision makers – to the foundations of society itself. The work includes wide coverage of the law as it relates to algorithms, with chapters analyzing how human biases have crept into algorithmic decision-making about who receives housing or credit, the length of sentences for defendants convicted of crimes, and many other decisions that impact constitutionally protected groups. Other issues covered in the work include the impact of algorithms on the law of free speech, intellectual property, and commercial and human rights law.

Key Features • Presents case law, statutes, and legislative discussion in one comprehensive format • Discusses how algorithms are affecting all aspects of society, from criminal law issues to free speech and discrimination law • Offers up-to-date solutions on how to address the challenges stemming from the use of artificial intelligence and algorithms

Contents Part I. Introduction and Setting the Stage for a Law of Algorithms: 1. An introduction to law and algorithms; 2. The opinion of machines; 3. Private accountability in an age of artificial intelligence; 4. Algorithmic legitimacy; 5. Understanding transparency in algorithmic accountability; Part II. Business, Regulations, and Decision Making with Algorithms: 6. Algorithms and contract law; 7. Algorithms, agreements, and agency; 8. Algorithmic governance and administrative law; 9. Discrimination in the age of algorithms; 10. Algorithmic competition, collusion and price discrimination; 11. The rule of law and algorithmic governance; 12. Governance of algorithms: rethinking public sector use of algorithms for predictive purposes; 13. From rule of law to statute drafting: legal issues for algorithms in government decision-making; 14. Algorithmic decision systems: using automation and machine learning in the public administration; 15. From legal sources to programming code: automatic individual decisions in public administration and computers under the law; Part III. Intellectual Property and Algorithms: 16. Inventive algorithms and the evolving nature of innovation;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students November 2020 253 x 177 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-48196-0 Hardback £200.00 / US$260.00

17. Software patenting and Section 101’s gatekeeping function; 18. Intellectual property as a crossroad: awarding IP protection for algorithms; Part IV. Criminal Law, Tort Issues and Algorithms: 19. The use of algorithms in criminal adjudication; 20. Assessing risk of offending through algorithms; 21. Injury by algorithms; 22. When do algorithmic tortfeasors that caused damage warrant unique legal treatment?; Part V. Constitutional Law, Human Rights, and Algorithms: 23. Tort-law applying a ‘reasonableness’ standard to algorithms; 24. Human rights-based approach to AI and algorithms: concerning welfare technologies; 25. Four modes of speech protection for algorithms; 26. Algorithms and freedom of expression; 27. Artificial minds in first amendments borderlands; 28. The first amendment and algorithms; 29. Algorithmic analysis of social behavior for profiling, ranking, and assessment; 30. Algorithmic stages in privacy data analytics: process and probabilities; Part VI. Applications and Future Directions of Law and Algorithms: 31. Moral machines: the emerging EU policy on ‘Trustworthy AI’ ; 32. Law in the Turing’s Cathedral; 33. Arguing over algorithms: mapping the dilemmas in operationalizing ‘ethical’ artificial intelligence; 34. Embodiment and algorithms for human robot interaction; 35. On being trans-human: commercial BCIs and the quest for autonomy.


Law

21

The Cambridge Handbook of Copyright Limitations and Exceptions Shyamkrishna Balganesh

University of Pennsylvania Law School

Ng-Loy Wee Loon

National University of Singapore School of Law

Haochen Sun

University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law

Description While copyright law is ordinarily thought to consist primarily of exclusive rights, the regime’s various exemptions and immunities from liability for copyright infringement form an integral part of its functioning, and serve to balance copyright’s grant of a private benefit to authors/ creators with the broader public interest. With contributors from all over the world, this handbook offers a systematic, thorough study of copyright limitations and exceptions adopted in major jurisdictions, including the United States, the European Union, and China. In addition to providing justifications for these limitations, the chapters compare differences and similarities that exist in major jurisdictions and offer suggestions about how to improve the enforcement of copyright limitations domestically and globally. This work should appeal to scholars, policymakers, attorneys, teachers, judges, and students with an interest in the theories, policies, and doctrines of copyright law.

Key Features • Analyzes how copyright law interacts with other aspects of countries’ legal and regulatory landscapes • Provides readers with an understanding of the theoretical foundation of copyright limitations • Examines how global discussions of copyright exceptions can address recent technological developments

Contents Part I. The Theoretical Foundation of Copyright Limitations: 1. The economics of copyright exemptions: a comparative analysis; 2. Self-actualization and the need to create as a limit on copyright; Part II. Internationalizing Copyright Exceptions: 3. Displacing the dominance of the three-step test: the role of global, mandatory use; 4. An international instrument for permitted uses in copyright law; 5. A copyright limitations treaty based on the Marrakesh model: nightmare or dream come true?; 6. Protection of limitations and exceptions in the international copyright framework; Part III. Models of Copyright Exceptions: 7. Debunking the fair use vs fair dealing myth: have we had fair use all along?; 8. Fair use as an advance on fair dealing? Depolarising the debate; 9. The changing judicial politics of copyright exceptions in the UK; 10. ‘Fair use’ through fundamental rights in Europe: when freedom of artistic expression allows creative appropriations and opens up statutory copyright limitations;

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students, legal practitioners Series: Cambridge Law Handbooks November 2020 253 x 177 mm c.550pp 978-1-108-48304-9 Hardback c. £160.00 / c. US$200.00

11. Limitations and exceptions in copyright law across the Taiwan Strait; 12. A general clause on copyright limitations in civil law countries: recent discussion on Japanese-style fair use clause; 13. Bridging fair dealing and fair use concepts: Malaysia’s transition to a hybrid system; Part IV. Obvious and Hidden Values in the Working of Copyright Exceptions: 14. Creating a public interest principle for the adjudication of fair use and fair dealing cases; 15. An empirical review of the copyright limitations and exceptions in educational activities; 16. Copyright and academic photocopying: the University of Delhi case; 17. Parody, satire, caricature and pastiche: fair dealing is no laughing matter; 18. Cultural impact on copyright exceptions: parody in Germany and Japan; 19. From fair dealing to user-generated content: legal la la land in Hong Kong; 20. Rights, exceptions, and the ‘work’ of news; 21. Copyright and religion: an exemption for the use of music and songs in worship?; 22. Security measures and the future of fair use.


22

Life Sciences

Bears of the World Ecology, Conservation and Management

Edited by Vincenzo Penteriani

Spanish Council of Scientific Research (CSIC)

and Mario Melletti

AfBIG (African Buffalo Initiative Group), IUCN SSC ASG

Description Bears have fascinated people since ancient times. The relationship between bears and humans dates back thousands of years, during which time we have also competed with bears for shelter and food. In modern times, bears have come under pressure through encroachment on their habitats, climate change, and illegal trade in their body parts, including the Asian bile bear market. The IUCN lists six bears as vulnerable or endangered, and even the least concern species, such as the brown bear, are at risk of extirpation in certain countries. The poaching and international trade of these most threatened populations are prohibited, but still ongoing. Covering all bears species worldwide, this beautifully illustrated volume brings together the contributions of 200 international bear experts on the ecology, conservation status, and management of the Ursidae family. It reveals the fascinating long history of interactions between humans and bears and the threats affecting these charismatic species.

Key Features • Presents the most extensive synthesis of information on bear species ever collected in a single volume • First comprehensive work on ecology, conservation and management of bears worldwide • Provides new information about all the eight bear species in the world, including taxonomy, ecology, behaviour, distribution, genetic and conservation status

Contents Part I. Systematic, Ecology and Behaviour: 1. Systematic, evolution and genetic of bears; 2. Mating strategies; 3. Interspecific interactions between brown bears, ungulates and other large carnivores; 4. Interspecific competition among bears in the tropics; 5. Remarkable adaptations of the American black bear help explain why it is the most common bear: Long-term study from the centre of its range; Part II. Species accounts: 6. Giant Panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca); 7. Andean Bear (Tremarctos ornatus); 8. Sun Bear (Helarctos malayanus); 9. Sloth Bear (Melursus ursinus); 10. Asiatic Black Bear (Ursus thibetanus); 11. American Black Bear (Ursus americanus); 12. Brown Bear (Ursus arctos; Eurasia); 13. Brown Bear (Ursus arctos; North America); 14. Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus);

Part III. Human – Bear Coexistence: 15. Conflicts related to bear conservation at the beginning of the XXI century: Patterns, determinants and mitigation measures; 16. How to manage human-bear conflicts in less developed countries; 17. Patterns of bear attacks on humans, factors triggering risky scenarios and how to reduce them; 18. Effects of human disturbance on brown bear behavior; 19. Bears in human-dominated landscapes: The case studies of the Cantabrian, Apennine and Pindos Mountains; Part IV. Conservation and Management: 20. Conservation and management of bears; 21. How is climate change affecting polar bears and giant pandas?; 22. Managing for inter-population connectivity of the world’s bear species; 23. Ex-situ conservation of bears: Roles, status and management; 24. Brown bear biology and management in the human biosphere: A challenge in Hokkaido, Japan; 25. Potential ecological corridors for remnant Asiatic black bear populations and its subpopulations linked to management units in Japan; 26. Captive bears in Asia: Implications for animal welfare and conservation; 27. Human dimensions of Asiatic black bear management in Japan; 28. Ecological and social dimensions of sloth bear conservation in Sri Lanka.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students November 2020 276 x 219 mm c.500pp 978-1-108-48352-0 Hardback £110.00 / US$145.00


Linguistics

23

The Cambridge Handbook of Discourse Studies Anna De Fina

Georgetown University, Washington DC

Alexandra Georgakopoulou King’s College London

Description Discourse studies, the study of the ways in which language is used in texts and contexts, is a fast-moving and increasingly diverse field. With contributions from leading and upcoming scholars from across the world, and covering cutting-edge research, this Handbook offers an up-to-date survey of Discourse Studies. It is organized according to perspectives and areas of engagement, with each chapter providing an overview of the historical development of its topic, the main current issues, debates and synergies, and future directions. The Handbook presents new perspectives on well-established themes such as narrative, conversationanalytic and cognitive approaches to discourse, while also embracing a range of up-to-theminute topics from post-humanism to digital surveillance, recent methodological orientations such as linguistic landscapes and multimodal discourse analysis, and new fields of engagement such as discourses on race, religion and money.

Key Features • New state-of-the-field survey of conceptual and methodological work in Discourse Studies • Organized by concepts and areas, making it easier to see how Discourse Studies are evolving in new directions that defy received boundaries • Brings together comprehensive yet accessible introductions to the most important topics within the field

Contents Part I. (Con)Textualizing Discourses: 1. Registers, Styles, Indexicality; 2. Situating Discourse Analysis in Ethnographic and Sociopolitical Context; 3. Context and its Complications; 4. Re-Thinking Narrative: Tellers, Tales and Identities in Contemporary Worlds; 5. Historicity, Interdiscursivity and Intertextuality in Discourse Studies; Part II. Perspectives and Modes of Analysis: 6. Sequence Organization: Understanding What Drives Talk; 7. Doing Micro-Analysis of Discourse: The Case of Ageing and Wellbeing; 8. Corpus-Assisted Discourse Studies; 9. Cognitive Linguistic and Experimental Methods in Critical Discourse Studies; 10. Metaphor, Metonymy and Framing in Discourse; 11. Poststructuralist Discourse Studies: From Structure to Practice; Part III: Discourse Materialities and Embodiment: 12. Multimodality; 13. Sign Theory and Themateriality of Discourse; 14. Discourse and Thelinguistic Landscape; 15. Discourse, Emotions, and Embodiment; 16. Posthumanism and its Implications for Discourse Studies; Part IV. Translocations and Intersections: 17. Transnationalism, Globalization, and Superdiversity; 18. Translanguaging and Momentarity in Social Interaction; 19. Intersectionality, Affect and Discourse; 20. Expanding Academic Discourses: Diverse Englishes, Modalities, and Spatial Repertoires;

Part V. Ethics, Inequality and Inclusion: 21. Ethics and the Study of Discourse; 22. Migrants, Citizenship and Language Rights; 23. Diversity and Inclusion in Education; 24. Discourse and Racialization; 25. Discourse and Narrative in Legal Settings: The Political Asylum Process; 26. Discourse and Religion in Educational Practice; Part VI. Discourses, Publics and Mediatization: 27. The Critical Analysis of Genre and Social Action; 28. Rhetorics, Discourse and Populist Politics; 29. The Discourses of Money and the Economy; 30. Corporate Discourse; 31. Mediatized Communication and Linguistic Reflexivity in Contemporary Public and Political Life; 32. Discourse Analysis and Digital Surveillance.

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics September 2020 247 x 174 mm c.700pp 21 b/w illus. 5 tables 978-1-108-42514-8 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 978-1-108-44122-3 Paperback TBA / TBA


24

Mathematics

Analysis and Geometry on Graphs and Manifolds Edited by Matthias Keller Universität Potsdam, Germany

Daniel Lenz

Universität Potsdam, Germany

and Radoslaw K. Wojciechowski

York College of the City University of New York

Description The interplay of geometry, spectral theory and stochastics has a long and fruitful history, and is the driving force behind many developments in modern mathematics. Bringing together contributions from a 2017 conference at the University of Potsdam, this volume focuses on global effects of local properties. Exploring the similarities and differences between the discrete and the continuous settings is of great interest to both researchers and graduate students in geometric analysis. The range of survey articles presented in this volume give an expository overview of various topics, including curvature, the effects of geometry on the spectrum, geometric group theory, and spectral theory of Laplacian and Schrödinger operators. Also included are shorter articles focusing on specific techniques and problems, allowing the reader to get to the heart of several key topics.

Key Features • Displays interactions between various areas of mathematics (geometry, spectral theory and stochastics) so readers from different backgrounds can find common approaches to various problems • Discusses both the discrete and continuum settings so readers see the parallels and disparities between these two settings • Gives thorough overviews of certain topics as well as brief glances at specific problems to allow readers to get a foothold in various areas of mathematics

Contents

Additional Information

1. Infinite planar graphs with nonnegative combinatorial curvature; 2. Curvature calculations for antitrees; 3. Gromov-Lawson tunnels with estimates; 4. Norm convergence of the resolvent for wild perturbations; 5. Manifolds with Ricci curvature in the Kato class: heat kernel bounds and applications; 6. Multiple boundary representations of λ—harmonic functions on trees; 7. Internal DLA on Sierpinski gasket graphs; 8. Universal lower bounds for Laplacians on weighted Graphs; 9. On Hardy inequalities on graphs and manifolds; 10. Neumann domains on manifolds and graphs; 11. On the existence and uniqueness of self-adjoint realizations of discrete (magnetic) Schrödinger operators; 12. Box spaces: geometry of finite quotients; 13. Ramanujan graphs and digraphs; 14. From partial differential equations to groups; 15. Spectral properties of limit-periodic operators; 16. Uniform existence of the IDS on lattices and groups.

Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series, 461 July 2020 228 x 152 mm c.502pp 978-1-108-71318-4 Paperback £65.00 / US$115.00


Mathematics

25

The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy An Annotated Translation of the Principia

Isaac Newton Edited and translated by C. R. Leedham-Green Queen Mary University of London

Description Newton’s Principia is perhaps the second most famous work of mathematics, after Euclid’s Elements. Originally published in 1687, it gave the first systematic account of the fundamental concepts of dynamics, as well as three beautiful derivations of Newton’s law of gravitation from Kepler’s laws of planetary motion. As a book of great insight and ingenuity, it has raised our understanding of the power of mathematics more than any other work. This heavily annotated translation of the third and final edition (1726) of the Principia will enable any reader with a good understanding of elementary mathematics to easily grasp the meaning of the text, either from the translation itself or from the notes, and to appreciate some of its significance. All forward references are given to illuminate the structure and unity of the whole, and to clarify the parts. The mathematical prerequisites for understanding Newton’s arguments are given in a brief appendix.

Key Features • A translation of Newton’s Principia, designed to be more readable than earlier translations which follow the Latin text verbally • Copious notes discuss the meaning, context, and significance of the text, and explore its ambiguities • The first translation into English that is based on an attempt to understand Newton’s arguments

Contents Definitions; The Axioms, or the Laws of Motion; Book One. On the Motion of Bodies: Section 1. On the theory of limits; Section 2. On the calculation of centripetal forces; Section 3. On the motion of particles in eccentric conic sections; Section 4. On the calculation of elliptical, parabolic, and hyperbolic orbits with a given focus; Section 5. On the calculation of orbits when neither focus is given; Section 6. On the calculation of motion in given orbits; Section 7. On the ascent and descent of particles in a straight line; Section 8. On the calculation of the orbits in which particles revolve under any centripetal forces; Section 9. On the motion of particles in moving orbits, and the motion of the apsides; Section 10. On the motion of particles on given surfaces, and the swinging motion of a string pendulum; Section 11. On the motion of particles attracting each other by centripetal forces; Section 12. On the attractive forces of spherical bodies; Section 13. On the attractive forces of non-spherical bodies; Section 14. On the motion of particles attracted by centripetal forces towards the various parts of arbitrarily large bodies; Book Two. On the Motion of Bodies: Section 1. On the motion of particles moving against a resistance that is proportional to the speed; Section 2. On the motion of particles moving against a resistance that is proportional to the square of the speed; Section. 3. On the motion of bodies to which the resistance consists of one part that is proportional to the speed, and another part that is proportional to the square of the speed; Section. 4. On the revolving motion of bodies in resisting media; Section 5. On the density and compression of fluids, and on hydrostatics; Section 6. On the motion and resistance of string pendulums;

Section 7. On the motion of fluids and the resistance of projectiles; Section 8. On motion propagated through fluids; Section 9. On the circular motion of fluids; Book Three. On Celestial Mechanics: The rules of Scientific Argument; Phenomena; Propositions; On the motion of the nodes of the moon; Appendices; Glossary of Latin terms; References; Index.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers August 2020 253 x 203 mm 800pp 270 b/w illus. 20 tables 978-1-107-02065-8 Hardback c. £199.00 / c. US$299.00


26

Mathematics

Matrix Positivity Charles R. Johnson

College of William and Mary, Virginia

Ronald L. Smith

University of Tennessee, Chattanooga

and Michael J. Tsatsomeros

Washington State University, Pullman, WA

Description Matrix positivity is a central topic in matrix theory: properties that generalize the notion of positivity to matrices arose from a large variety of applications, and many have also taken on notable theoretical significance, either because they are natural or unifying. This is the first book to provide a comprehensive and up-to-date reference of important material on matrix positivity classes, their properties, and their relations. The matrix classes emphasized in this book include the classes of semipositive matrices, P-matrices, inverse M-matrices, and copositive matrices. This self-contained reference will be useful to a large variety of mathematical, engineering and social scientists and graduate students. The generalizations of positivity and the connections observed provide a unique perspective, along with theoretical insight into applications and future challenges. Direct applications can be found in data analysis, differential equations, mathematical programming, computational complexity, models of the economy, population biology, dynamical systems and control theory.

Key Features • Covers several new topics in matrix classes that have not appeared in book form previously • Unified coverage presented by the leaders in the field of matrix positivity • Matrix classes are compared and interrelated, and their theory is developed in a natural order, which will lend to a well-rounded understanding of the theory, as well as its historical and scientific development

Contents Background; 1. Positivity classes; 2. Semipositive matrices; 3. P-matrices; 4. Inverse M-matrices; 5. Copositive matrices.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics, 221 October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.300pp 978-1-108-47871-7 Hardback £95.00 / US$125.00


Medicine

27

Geriatric Forensic Medicine and Pathology Edited by Kim A. Collins LifePoint Inc, South Carolina

and Roger W. Byard University of Adelaide

Description Forensic pathologists are increasingly faced with challenges when it comes to geriatric cases, due to an aging population and increased co-morbidities in the elderly. This text provides an up-to-date guide to all facets of geriatric forensic pathology, with contributions from experts from a variety of disciplines. Packed with color illustrations and case examples, chapters cover inflicted, self-inflicted and accidental trauma, as well as natural conditions leading to unexpected death. In addition, specific chapters cover a wide range of difficult and topical areas, from elder abuse, dementias and nutrition to pharmacology and toxicology issues, long-term care facilities and scene investigation. Topics such as euthanasia are also explored to provide the reader with a rich, contemporary understanding of medicolegal issues. This is an invaluable resource not only for pathologists, but also for medical practitioners and lawyers dealing with geriatric cases. The book comes packaged with online access to the text and high-resolution images.

Key Features • A unique reference text solely dedicated to the pathology and autopsy of elderly patients • Each chapter of the book is a stand-alone resource, helping readers to find pertinent information easily • Covers a very broad range of specific geriatric diseases and conditions, many of which have not been synthesized before with a forensic focus

Contents 1. A history of geriatric medicine and geriatric pathology; 2. Pathophysiology of ageing; 3. Medicolegal investigation of elder maltreatment and deaths; 4. The autopsy; 5. Fatal and non-fatal accidents; 6. Euthanasia; 7. Starvation, dehydration, malnutrition, and neglect; 8. Physical abuse and elder homicide; 9. The ageing foot – forensic considerations; 10. Forensic entomology; 11. Non-lethal elder abuse; 12. Sexual assault in the elderly; 13. Hypothermia and hyperthermia in the geriatric population; 14. Suicide and social isolation in elders; 15. Cardiovascular diseases in the elderly; 16. Lungs; 17. Infectious conditions and the immune system in the elderly; 18. Neurodegenerative diseases in the elder; 19. Other neurological conditions and age-related changes; 20. Genitourinary conditions; 21. The elder organ and tissue donor;

22. Conditions in gastrointestinal tract; 23. Hematologic conditions; 24. The oral cavity of the elder; 25. The anthropology of aging; 26. Endocrinology and diabetes; 27. Geriatric toxicology; 28. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation related injuries in elders; 29. Imaging of elders; 30. The ‘virtual autopsy’ and special radiographic applications; 31. Iatrogenic deaths; 32. Residential care facility deaths; 33. Morbid obesity and frailty; 34. Ancillary testing and special dissections; 35. The legal regulation of the consequences of aging; 36. Death certification.

Additional Information Level: medical specialists/consultants, specialist medical trainees July 2020 978-1-316-82304-0 Cambridge Core £140.00 / US$215.00


28

Music

A Huge Revolution of Theatrical Commerce Walter Mocchi and the Italian Musical Theatre Business in South America

Matteo Paoletti

Università degli Studi di Genova

Description In the first third of the twentieth century, South America became the most important market for many European theatrical companies. When Italy found itself in various theatrical crises, Walter Mocchi created a transoceanic theatrical empire, using his business acumen to craft viable solutions. While his efforts were most visible in the sphere of opera, he played an extremely significant role in the promotion and circulation of popular forms of musical theatre (such as operetta) and staged world premieres of works by Italian superstars in Argentina (such as Mascagni’s Isabeau), thus offering an early example of what Stephen Greenblatt calls ‘cultural mobility’.

Contents 1. Introduction; 2. Crisis in Italy, opportunity in South America: theatrical economies at the turn of the twentieth century; 3. Mocchi in South America: the Sociedad Teatral ĺtalo-Argentina; 4. Mocchi in Italy: the early years of the Società Teatrale Internazionale; 5. Becoming the ‘Buffalo Bill of Italian impresarios’: Mocchi and La Teatral; 6. Mocchi and World War I: new challenges, new cooperations; 7. New initiatives, new controversies: Mocchi in the 1920s and 1930s; 7. Epilogue.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Elements in Musical Theatre July 2020 229 x 152 mm c.75pp 978-1-108-79048-2 Paperback £15.00 / US$20.00


Music

29

Stravinsky in Context Graham Griffiths

City, University of London

Description Stravinsky in Context offers an alternative to chronological biography. Thirty-five short, specially commissioned essays explore the eventful life-tapestry from which Stravinsky’s compositions emerged. The opening chapters draw on new research into the composer’s childhood in St. Petersburg. Stravinsky’s early, often traumatic upbringing is examined in depth, particularly in the context of his brother Roman’s death, and religious sensibilities within the family. Further essays consider Stravinsky’s years in exile at the centre of dynamic and ever-evolving cultural environments, the composer constantly refining his idiom and re-defining his aesthetics against a backdrop of world events and personal tragedy. The closing chapters review new material regarding Stravinsky’s complicated relationship with the Soviet Union, whilst also anticipating his legacy from the varied perspectives of publishing, research and even – in the iconic example of The Rite of Spring – space exploration. The book includes previously unpublished images of the composer and his family.

Key Features • Thirty-five specially commissioned short essays explore the varied and eventful life-tapestry from which Stravinsky’s compositions emerged • Offers a range of perspectives on this supremely cosmopolitan composer, revealing the impact upon Stravinsky’s creativity of his association with many of the 20th century’s leading artistic figures • Each essay is followed by an ‘Author’s Recommendation’ that highlights a particularly relevant Stravinsky work as the ideal complement to the experience of reading the chapter

Contents Preface; List of Contributors; List of Abbreviations; Part I. Russia and Identity: 1. Memory and truth: Stravinsky’s childhood (1882-1901); 2. Religion, life and death in St Petersburg; 3. Kashperova and stravinsky: The making of a concert-pianist; 4. Reminiscences of Rimsky-Korsakov, his family and artistic circle; 5. Orthodoxies and unorthodoxies: Stravinsky’s spiritual journey; 6. The Russian soul; Part II. Stravinsky and Europe: 7. Sergei Diaghilev and Stravinsky: from world of art to ballets russes ; 8. Paris and the Belle Epoque; 9. Paris, Art Deco, and the spirit of Apollo; 10. Stravinsky’s Spain: fan or mirror?; 11. ‘It is Venice that he loves…’; Part III. Partnerships and Authorship: 12. Stravinsky’s sphere of influence: Paris and beyond; 13. Stravinsky and his literary collaborators; 14. Assuming co-authorship: Stravinsky and his ‘ghost-writers’; 15. Nadia Boulanger and Stravinsky: the transition to America; 16. Conversations with craft; Part IV. Performance and Performers: 17. Challenges to realism and tradition: Stravinsky’s modernist theatre; 18. Igor Stravinsky and ballet as modernism; 19. Stravinsky’s ear for instruments; 20. Towards a conductor-proof ideal; 21. The pianist in the recording studio: re-imagining interpretation; 22. The legacy of Stravinsky as recorded history; Part V. Aesthetics and Politics: 23. Stravinsky versus literature; 24. Stravinsky and Greek antiquity;

25. Stravinsky’s response to ‘Japonisme’; 26. Stravinsky, modernism and mass culture; 27. Perspectives on Schoenberg and Stravinsky: Adorno and others; 28. Stravinsky’s ‘problematical’ political orientation during the 1920s and 1930s; Part VI. Reception and Legacy: 29. The Apollonian clockwork re-wound; 30. Stravinsky reception in the USSR; 31. The Stravinsky/Craft conversations in Russian and their reception; 32. Publishing Stravinsky; 33. Copyright, the Stravinsky estate, and the Paul Sacher foundation; 34. Evoking the past, inspiring the future; 35. ‘Music is, by its very essence, powerless to express anything at all’; Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Composers in Context July 2020 228 x 152 mm c.400pp 10 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42219-2 Hardback c. £85.00 / c. US$110.00 978-1-108-43472-0 Paperback TBA / TBA


30

Music

The Cambridge Stravinsky Encyclopedia Edited by Edward Campbell University of Aberdeen

and Peter O’Hagan

Roehampton University, London

Description Igor Stravinsky is one of a small number of early modernist composers whose music epitomises the stylistic crisis of twentiethcentury music, from the Russian nationalist heritage of the early works, the neo-classical works which anticipate the stylistic diversity of the contemporary musical scene in the early twenty-first century and the integration of serial techniques during his final period. With entries written by more than fifty international contributors from Russian, European and American traditions, The Cambridge Stravinsky Encyclopedia presents multiple perspectives on the life, works, writings and aesthetic relationships of this multi-faceted creative artist. This important resource explores Stravinsky’s relationships with virtually all the major artistic figures of his time, painters, dramatists, choreographers and producers as well musicians and brings together fresh insights into to the life and work of one of the twentieth century’s greatest composers.

Key Features • Includes over 430 concise but detailed entries on Stravinsky’s work and creative and personal relationships • Provides comprehensive and up-to-date coverage of Stravinsky’s musical works, writings and creative collaboration from a range of international perspectives • Explores Stravinsky’s inter-disciplinary work and engagements with other musicians, writers, visual artists, dancers and impresarios

Contents List of Music Examples; List of Contributors; Editor’s Preface; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; Entries A-Z; Appendix 1: Musical Works; Appendix 2: Selected Sound Recordings; Select Bibliography; Index

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students October 2020 228 x 152 mm 580pp 2 tables 19 music examples 978-1-107-14087-5 Hardback £120.00 / US$155.00 978-1-316-50620-2 Paperback TBA / TBA


Neurology

31

Medication-Resistant Epilepsy Diagnosis and Treatment

Edited by John M. Stern

Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA

Raman Sankar

Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA

and Michael Sperling

Jefferson Hospital for Neurosciences, Philadelphia, PA

Description Fifty million people worldwide have epilepsy and yet up to 35% of patients experience seizures that are resistant to anti-epileptic drugs. Patients with medication-resistant epilepsy have increased risks of premature death, psychosocial dysfunction and a reduced quality of life. This key resource delivers guidance for all clinicians involved in caring for patients with medication-resistant epilepsy in order to reduce these risks. Covering the epidemiology, biology, causes and potential treatments for medication-resistant epilepsy, this definitive and focused text reviews the clinical care needs of patients. Guidance is practical and includes treatment for specialized groups including pediatric patients and those with psychiatric comorbidities. Several promising non-pharmacologic interventions available for patients, such as surgery, neuromodulation diet therapy and botanical treatment are explored in detail. Leading international figures from a range of disciplines bring their expertise together holistically in this essential manual.

Key Features • Focuses on the clinical care needs of patients, making it an essential guide for practicing clinicians • A broad yet detailed scope allows for the entire text to be read, bringing together topics holistically in an accessible handbook format • Treatments covered are cutting-edge, with the latest research and evidence discussed in detail meaning clinicians will be able to make fully informed decisions for their patients’ care

Contents 1. The natural history of epilspy; 2. Challenges in identifying medication-resistant epilepsy; 3. International league against epilepsy’s definition in medication-resistant epilepsy; 4. The economic impact of medication-resistant epilepsy; 5. Social consequences of medication-resistant epilepsy; 6. Morality and morbidity of medication-resistant epilepsy; 7. Models for medication-resistant epilepsy; 8. Neurobiology of medication-resistant epilepsy; 9. Genetic causes of medicationresistant epilepsy; 10. Malformation of cortical development as causes of medication-resistant epilepsy; 11. Hippocampal sclerosis as a cause of medication-resistant epilepsy; 12. Autoimmune causes of medication-resistant epilepsy; 13. Medication-resistant epilepsy syndromes in children; 14. Medication-resistant epilepsy in adults; 15. Approach to the treatment of medication-resistant epilepsy; 16. Pharmacotherapy for medication-resistant epilepsy; 17. Reproductive health for women with medication-resistant epilepsy; 18. Resective medication-resistant epilepsy surgery; 19. Ablative surgery for medication-resistant epilepsy; 20.1. Vagus and trigeminal nerve stimulation treatment of medication-resistant epilepsy; 20.2. Electrical stimulation of the anterior nucleus of the thalamus for medicationresistant epilepsy;

20.3. Responsive neurostimulation of the brain for medication-resistant epilepsy; 20.4. Stimulation treatments for medication-resistant epilepsy: transcranial magnetic stimulation; 21. Diet therapy for medication-resistant epilepsy; 22. Botanical treatments for medication-resistant epilepsy; 23. Psychiatric comorbidities in medication-resistant epilepsy.

Additional Information Level: Medical Specialists/Consultants September 2020 246 x 189 mm 320pp 80 b/w illus. 35 tables 978-1-107-13988-6 Hardback £84.99 / US$110.00


32

Politics

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology Edited by Katharine Legun University of Otago, New Zealand

Julie Keller

University of Rhode Island

Michael Bell

University of Wisconsin, Madison

and Michael Carolan Colorado State University

Description The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology is a go-to resource for cutting-edge research in the field. This two-volume work covers the rich theoretic foundations of the sub-discipline, as well as novel approaches and emerging areas of research that add vitality and momentum to the discipline. Over the course of sixty chapters, the authors featured in this work reach new levels of theoretical depth, incorporating a global scope and diversity of cases. This book explores the broad scope of crucial disciplinary ideas and areas of research, extending its investigation to the trajectories of thought that led to their unfolding. This unique work serves as an invaluable tool for all those working in the nexus of environment and society.

Key Features • An overview of various theoretical approaches and empirical examples that reflect both the breadth and depth of the field • Chapters are written from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the field of environmental sociology • New directions in environmental sociological theory and new empirical examples are highlighted, with special attention to the current political context

New to this Edition Everything

Contents Volume 1: Part I. Theory in Environmental Sociology; Part II. The Economy and Environmental Sociology; Part III. Culture and Environmental Sociology; Part IV. Politics, Power, State. Volume 2: Part I. Methods; Part II. Embodied Environmental Sociology; Part III. Beyond the Human; Part IV. Sustainability and Climate Change; Part V. Resources; Part VI. Food and Agriculture; Part VII. Social Movements.

Additional Information Level: undergraduate students, graduate students, academic researchers August 2020 253 x 177 mm c.1200pp 978-1-108-42930-6 2 Volume Hardback Set c. £288.00 / c. US$360.00 978-1-108-45375-2 2 Volume Paperback Set TBA / TBA 978-1-108-55449-7 Cambridge Core £140.00 / US$215.00


Politics

33

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology Volume 1

Katharine Legun

University of Otago, New Zealand

Julie Keller

University of Rhode Island

Michael Bell

University of Wisconsin, Madison

Michael Carolan

Colorado State University

Description The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology is a go-to resource for cutting-edge research in the field. This two-volume work covers the rich theoretic foundations of the subdiscipline, as well as novel approaches and emerging areas of research that add vitality and momentum to the discipline. Over the course of sixty chapters, the authors featured in this work reach new levels of theoretical depth, incorporating a global scope and diversity of cases. This book explores the broad scope of crucial disciplinary ideas and areas of research, extending its investigation to the trajectories of thought that led to their unfolding. This unique work serves as an invaluable tool for all those working in the nexus of environment and society.

Key Features • An overview of various theoretical approaches and empirical examples that reflect both the breadth and depth of the field • Chapters are written from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the field of environmental sociology • New directions in environmental sociological theory and new empirical examples are highlighted, with special attention to the current political context

Contents 1. Introduction; Part I. Theory in Environmental Sociology; 2. Classical Theory and Environmental Sociology: Toward Deeper and Stronger Roots; 3. Globalizing Environmental Sociology; 4. An Embodied Materialist Sociology; 5. The Environmental Sociology of the Good: Nature, Faith, and the Bourgeois Transition; 6. Microsociological Perspectives in Environmental Sociology; Part II The Economy and Environmental Sociology; 7. Material Worlds: Understanding the Relationship of Capital and Ecology; 8. Green Economies and Community Wellbeing; 9. Beyond the “Limits to Growth”: Neoliberal Natures and the “Green” Economy; 10. The Ecosocialist Alternative; 11. Commons, Power, and (Counter)Hegemony; 12. Emplacing Sustainability in a Post-Capitalist World; Part III: Culture and Environmental Sociology; 13. Media and the Environmental Movement in a Digital Age; 14. National Parks and (Neo)Colonialisms;

15. Post Carbon Transition Futuring: For a Reconstructive Turn in the Environmental Social Sciences?; 16. Outer Space and New Frontiers to Environmental Imaginations; 17. New Territory for Environmental Sociology: Environmental Philosophy and Nature-Based Tourism; Part IV: Politics, Power, State; 18. Conflicting Environmental Imaginaries in Post-Apartheid South Africa; 19. The Growth in International Audit Culture: Achieving Agricultural Sustainability Inside a World of Measures?; 20. Political Ecologies of State Land Management; 21. Green Crime and the Treadmill of Production; 22. Governing Science and Technology: From the Linear Model to Responsible Research and Innovation; 23. The Paradox of Public Knowledge in Environmental Sociology; 24. Relational Resilience and the Making of Diverse Worlds; Part V: Social Justice; 25. Expanding Critical and Radical Approaches to Environmental Justice; 26. Development Strategies and Environmental Inequalities in Brazil; 27. Rural Estrangement: Roadblocks and Roundabouts to Justice; 28. Environmental Justice and Capitalism; 29. Ecological Economics and Environmental Sociology: A Social Power Structures Approach to Environmental Justice in Economic Systems.	

Additional Information Level: undergraduate students, graduate students September 2020 253 x 177 mm c.600pp 5 b/w illus. 978-1-108-42932-0 Hardback c. £160.00 / c. US$200.00 978-1-108-45405-6 Paperback TBA / TBA


34

Politics

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology Volume 2

Katharine Legun

University of Otago, New Zealand

Julie Keller

University of Rhode Island

Michael Bell

University of Wisconsin, Madison

Michael Carolan

Colorado State University

Description The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology is a go-to resource for cutting-edge research in the field. This two-volume work covers the rich theoretic foundations of the sub-discipline, as well as novel approaches and emerging areas of research that add vitality and momentum to the discipline. Over the course of sixty chapters, the authors featured in this work reach new levels of theoretical depth, incorporating a global scope and diversity of cases. This book explores the broad scope of crucial disciplinary ideas and areas of research, extending its investigation to the trajectories of thought that led to their unfolding. This unique work serves as an invaluable tool for all those working in the nexus of environment and society.

Key Features • An overview of various theoretical approaches and empirical examples that reflect both the breadth and depth of the field • Chapters are written from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of the field of environmental sociology. • New directions in environmental sociological theory and new empirical examples are highlighted, with special attention to the current political context 18. Enclosing Water: Privatization, Commodification, and Access ; 19. Speech is Silver, Silence is Gold in the Fracking Zone ; 20. Environmental Part I. Methods; Sociology and the Genomic Revolution ; 1. Re-compos(t)ing the Ghosts of Sociologies Past: Towards More Cosmoecological 21. The Future is Co-Managed: Promises and Problems of Collaborative Sociologies; Governance of Natural Resources ; Part VI: Food and Agriculture; 2. On Discourse Intensive Approaches to Environmental Decision-Making: Applying 22. Future and Food: New Technologies, Old Political Debates ;	 Social Theory to Practice; 23. Eating Our Way to a Sustainable Future? ; 3. Community-Based Research ; 24. Neoliberal Globalization and Beyond: Food, Farming and the Environment ; 4. Using Geographic Data in Environmental Sociology; Part II. Embodied 25. The Sociology of Environmental Morality: Examples from Agri-Food ; Environmental Sociology; Part VII: Social Movements; 5. Strangers on the Land? Rural LGBTQs and Queer Sustainabilities; 26. Alternative Technologies and Emancipatory Environmental Practice ; 6. Masculinity and Environment ; 27. The Global Fair Trade Movement: For Whom, By Whom, How, and What Next ; 7. Toxicity, Health, and Environment ; 28. Possibilities for Degrowth: A Radical Alternative to the Neoliberal Restructuring 8. The Environment’s Absence in Medicine: Mainstream Medical Coverage of of Growth-Societies ; Leukemia ; 29. Achieving Environmental Justice: Lessons from the Global South ; Part III: Beyond the Human. 9. Interventions offered by Actor-Network Theory, 30. Conclusion: Envisioning Futures with Environmental Sociology. Assemblage Theory, and New Materialisms for Environmental Sociology ; 10. Plants and Philosophy, Plants or Philosophy ; 11. Animals and Society: An Island in Japan; Additional Information Part IV. Sustainability and Climate Change; Level: undergraduate students, graduate students 12: Possibilities and Politics in Imagining Degrowth ; 13. Accidental Environmentalists: Examining the Effect of Pro-Environmental Behavior on Social Status ; September 2020 253 x 177 mm c.556pp 14. Sustainability Cultures: Exploring the Relationships Between Cultural Attributes 978-1-108-42933-7 Hardback c. £160.00 / c. US$200.00 and Sustainability Outcomes ; 978-1-108-45406-3 Paperback TBA / TBA 15. Socio-Ecological Sustainability and New Forms of Governance: Community Forestry and Citizen Involvement with Trees, Woods, and Forests ; 16. Carbon Markets and International Environmental Governance ;	17. The Multi-Level Governance Challenge of Climate Change in Brazil ; Part V. Resources	;

Contents


Politics

35

The Cambridge Handbook of Social Theory Edited by Peter Kivisto Augustana College, Illinois

Description This ambitious two-volume handbook of social theory consists of forty original contributions. The researchers take stock of the state of social theory and its relationship to the canon, exploring such topics as the nature, purpose, and meaning of social theory; the significance of the classics; the impact of specific individual and theory schools; and more. Both volumes reflect a mixture of what intellectual historian Morton White distinguished as the ‘annalist of ideas’ and the ‘analyst of ideas’, locating theoretical thought within the larger socio-historical context that shaped it – within the terrain of the sociology of knowledge. Exploring the contemporary relevance of theories in a manner that is historically situated and sensitive, this impressive and comprehensive set will likely stand the test of time.

Key Features • Appeals to the social sciences in general, rather than just sociological theory • Synthesizes a body of knowledge about social theory in sociology • Offers a wide-ranging treatment of contemporary theory and its applications

Contents

Additional Information

Volume 1: 1. The emergence of social theory; 2. ‘What is a classic?’ Variations on an ancient theme; 3. Karl Marx; 4. The Marxist legacy; 5. Émile Durkheim: Theorist of solidarity; 6. What’s in a name? The sacred, science, and the collège de sociologie; 7. Max Weber; 8. Weberian social theory; 9. Georg Simmel and the metropolitization of social life; 10. Pounding on Parsons: how criticism undermined the reputation of sociology’s incurable theorist; 11. Symbolic interactionism; 12. Erving Goffman and dramaturgical sociology; 13. Structuralism. Volume 2: 1. Rational choice theory and methodological individualism; 2. Network theories; 3. Cultural sociology; 4. Identity; 5. Emotions theory; 6. Theorizing sex/gender: feminist social theory; 7. Intersectionality as critical social theory; 8. Modernity; 9. Realism; 10. Globalization: not good, bad, or over; 11. Time/space; 12. Social theory in the Anthropocene: ecological crisis and renewal; 13. Embodiment; 14. Sexualities; 15. Multiculturalism; 16. Risk; 17. Trust and the variety of its bases; 18. Unity’s within conflict: mapping biology’s relevance to sociological theory; 19. Civil society; 20. Social movements: sequences vs fuzzy temporality; 21. Immigration.

Level: undergraduate students, academic researchers October 2020 253 x 177 mm 1300pp 978-1-107-13170-5 2 Volume Hardback Set c. £225.00 / c. US$365.00 978-1-107-58279-8 2 Volume Paperback Set TBA / TBA


36

Psychology

The Handbook of Behavior Change Edited by Martin S. Hagger University of California, Merced

Linda D. Cameron

University of California, Merced

Kyra Hamilton

Griffith University, Queensland

Nelli Hankonen University of Helsinki

and Taru Lintunen

University of Jyväskylä, Finland

Description Social problems in many domains including health, education, social relationships, and the workplace have their origins in human behavior. The documented links between behavior and social problems has compelled governments and organizations to explore ways to effectively intervene to promote adaptive behavior change. The Handbook of Behavior Change provides comprehensive coverage of contemporary theory, research, and practice on behavior change. It incorporates evidence-based approaches to behavior change with chapters from leading theorists, researchers, and practitioners from multiple disciplines including psychology, sociology, behavioral science, economics, philosophy, and implementation science. It is the go-to resource for researchers, students, practitioners, and policymakers looking for current knowledge on behavior change and guidance on how to develop effective interventions to change behavior in various contexts.

Key Features • Provides a unified reference on both the foundations and key issues on research on the science of behavior change • Includes step-by-step practical guidelines on developing and carrying out behavior change interventions • Summarizes the state of the art in the development, evaluation, and implementation of behavior change interventions

Contents Part I. Using theory to change behavior: Part II. Using theory to change behavior: Part III. Using theory to change behaviour:

Additional Information Level: graduate students, academic researchers, professionals Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology June 2020 247 x 174 mm c.700pp 46 b/w illus. 978-1-108-49639-1 Hardback £140.00 / US$180.00


Psychology

37

The Cambridge Handbook of the International Psychology of Women Edited by Fanny M. Cheung The Chinese University of Hong Kong

and Diane F. Halpern

Claremont McKenna College, California

Description There is a growing knowledge base in understanding the differences and similarities between women and men, as well as the diversities among women and sexualities. Although genetic and biological characteristics define human beings conventionally as women and men, their experiences are contextualized in multiple dimensions in terms of gender, sexuality, class, age, ethnicity, and other social dimensions. Beyond the biological and genetic basis of gender differences, gender intersects with culture and other social locations which affect the socialization and development of women across their life span. This handbook provides a comprehensive and up-to-date resource to understand the intersectionality of gender differences, to dispel myths, and to examine gender-relevant as well as culturally relevant implications and appropriate interventions. Featuring a truly international mix of contributors, and incorporating cross-cultural research and comparative perspectives, this handbook will inform mainstream psychology of the international literature on the psychology of women and gender.

Key Features • Builds upon and expands the existing scholarship in the field by taking a broader perspective and using an international framework • Draws upon the expertise of international scholars to examine gender differences • Provides a thorough, contemporary and cross-cultural comparison of effects of intersecting factors such as income/class, ethnicity, sexuality, age, and functionality on the situation of women

Contents Part I. The Underpinnings of Sex and Gender and How to Study Them Part II. Developmental Perspectives of the International Psychology of Women Part III. Cognitive and Social Factors Part IV. Work and Family Issues Part V. Inequality and Social Justice Part VI. Health and Well-being

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2020 279 x 216 mm c.700pp 18 b/w illus. 10 tables 978-1-108-47303-3 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 978-1-108-46090-3 Paperback £54.99 / US$69.99


38

Psychology

The Cambridge Handbook of Psychology and Human Rights Neal S. Rubin Adler University

Roseanne L. Flores

Hunter College, City University of New York

Description Written by psychologists, historians, and lawyers, this handbook demonstrates the central role psychological science plays in addressing some of the world’s most pressing problems. Over 100 experts from around the world work together to supply an integrated history of human rights and psychological science using a rights and strengths-based perspective. It highlights what psychologists have done to promote human rights and what continues to be done at the United Nations. With emerging visions for the future uses of psychological theory, education, evidence-based research, and best practices, the chapters offer advice on how to advance the 2030 Global Agenda on Sustainable Development. Challenging the view that human rights are best understood through a political lens, this scholarly collection of essays shows how psychological science may hold the key to nurturing humanitarian values and respect for human dignity.

Key Features • Describes the significant developments of psychology in advancing human rights at the United Nations • Includes key historical figures in psychology and human rights • Explains human rights instruments to shed light on the human rights system • Links psychological science with understanding the behavioral dimensions of human rights challenges • Shows how to translate psychological science into an optimistic endeavor to address emerging global issues

Contents Part I. History of human rights Part II. The intersection of psychology and human rights Part III. Contemporary issues, psychology and human rights Part IV. Teaching, research, and training in psychology and human rights Part V. Future directions

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2020 244 x 170 mm c.800pp 978-1-108-42563-6 Hardback £155.00 / US$200.00 978-1-108-44281-7 Paperback £54.99 / US$69.99


Psychology

39

The Cambridge Handbook of Applied School Psychology Frank C. Worrell

University of California, Berkeley

Tammy L. Hughes

Duquesne University, Pittsburgh

Dante D. Dixson

Michigan State University

Description Practice books are often simple ‘how to’ lists or straightforward ‘recipes’ and the practitioner still does not know why the activity is related to the outcome they seek. In essence, they lose how the specifics of the practice are related to the theory of change or the theory of how the problem developed in the first place. This leads to practitioners potentially removing crucial elements of best practice procedures when making modifications to tackle new or different problems in an unfamiliar context. By understanding the theoretical underpinnings, practitioners can better plan for adjustments because they know how the outcomes they seek are informed by the theory. Engagingly written and perfect for day-to-day use, this book translates state-of-the-art research and interdisciplinary theory into practical recommendations for those working with children and adolescents.

Key Features • Translates theory concerning childhood challenges into practical recommendations to ensure better outcomes • Contains lists of resources at the end of each chapter • Connects empirical findings to best practice indicators and highlights how such research informs and supports professional decision-making

Contents 1. Broadening the focus of school psychology practice; Part I. Individual-Level Academic Interventions: 2. Enhancing reading motivation in schools; 3. Addressing won’t do issues in mathematics; 4. Learning disabilities in mathematics; 5. Executive function and school performance; Part II. Teacher and System-Level Interventions: 6. School-based interventions; 7. Helping teachers use progress monitoring for decision making; 8. Working with teachers on Tier 1; 9. The academic support index: a tool for understanding student data; Part III. Interventions from Educational and Social/Personality Psychology: 10. Belonging in schools; 11. Cross-race/cross-ethnic friendships in school; 12. Self-regulated learning in school contexts; 13. School environments that facilitate delay of gratification; 14. The role of hope in school settings; 15. School settings that facilitate high teacher expectations; 16. Parental autonomy and relatedness support; 17. Preventing and minimizing stereotype threat in school settings; 18. How implicit gender bias impacts academic engagement; Part IV. Behavioral and Social Emotional Interventions: 19. Internalizing problems and disorders of childhood; 20. Adolescent suicidal behavior in schools: what to know and what to do;

21. Emotional disturbance vs social maladjustment; 22. When conduct problems become illegal acts: helping individuals with autism; 23. Effective bullying prevention and intervention strategies for school professionals; 24. Prevention and intervention to close discipline gaps in schools; 25. Social emotional learning in schools; Part V. Health and Pediatric Interventions: 26. Impairments related to medical conditions; 27. Psychological considerations for asthma; 28. Substance usage; 29. Coordinating services with non-school providers; Part VI. Family Connections and Life Transitions: 30. Parent-teacher relationships; 31. Facilitating the transition to college; 32. Transition from school to work; Part VII. Special Populations: 33. School psychologists in early childhood settings; 34. Serving gifted and talented students; 35. How best to serve court-involved youth in schools; 36. School-based interventions for refugee children and adolescents; Part VIII. Conclusion: 37. School psychology in the 21st century; Index.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students, professionals Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2020 253 x 177 mm c.600pp 978-1-108-41596-5 Hardback £140.00 / US$180.00 978-1-108-40125-8 Paperback £44.99 / US$59.99


40

Psychology

The Cambridge Handbook of Personality Psychology Second edition

Edited by Philip J. Corr City, University London

and Gerald Matthews University of Central Florida

Description Research on personality psychology is making important contributions to psychological science and applied psychology. This second edition of The Cambridge Handbook of Personality Psychology offers a one-stop resource for scientific personality psychology. It summarizes cutting-edge personality research in all its forms, including genetics, psychometrics, social-cognitive psychology, and real-world expressions, with informative and lively chapters that also highlight some areas of controversy. The team of renowned international authors, led by two esteemed editors, ensures a wide range of theoretical perspectives. Each research area is discussed in terms of scientific foundations, main theories and findings, and future directions for research. The handbook also features advances in technology, such as molecular genetics and functional neuroimaging, as well as contemporary statistical approaches. An invaluable aid to understanding the central role played by personality in psychology, it will appeal to students, researchers, and practitioners in psychology, behavioral neuroscience, and the social sciences.

Key Features • Offers lively, engaging chapters written by an international team of leading personality researchers • Introduces cutting-edge methodologies, including technological tools such as molecular genetics and neuroimaging, as well as modern psychometric and statistical techniques • Balances basic theory with applications to work, education, physical and mental health, criminal justice, and economics

Contents General introduction; Part I. Foundational Issues: History and Approaches to Personality: 1. Conceptual and historical perspectives; 2. The trait approach; 3. Accuracy in person perception; 4. States and situations, traits and environments; 5. Personality and the unconscious; 6. Personality and emotion; Part II. Description and Measurement: How Personality Is Studied: 7. Methods of personality assessment; 8. Models of personality structure; 9. The five-factor model of personality; 10. Personality and intelligence; Part III. Development, Health and Change: Life Span and Health Outcomes: 11. Temperament and brain networks of personality; 12. Development of personality across the life span; 13. Personality traits and mental disorders; 14. Models of physical health and personality; 15. Attachment theory; Part IV. Biological Perspectives: Evolution, Genetics and Neuroscience of Personality:

16. Evolutionary personality psychology; 17. Personality in non-human animals; 18. Genetics of personality; 19. Approach-avoidance theories of personality; 20. Personality neuroscience; Part V. Cognitive and Motivational Perspectives: Dynamic Processes of Personality: 21. Cognitive processes and models; 22. Self-regulation and control in personality functioning; 23. Basic needs, goals and motivation; 24. Personality and the self; 25. Traits and dynamic processes; 26. Anxiety, depression and cognitive dysfunction; Part VI. Social and Cultural Processes: Personality at the Intersection of Society: 27. Narrative identity in the social world; 28. Social relations and social support; 29. Personality in cross-cultural perspective; 30. Personality and politics; Part VII. Applications of Personality Psychology: Personality Traits and Processes in Action: 31. Personality at work; 32. Educational psychology; 33. Personality in clinical psychology; 34. Personality and crime; 35. Personality, preferences and socioeconomic behavior; Appendix. Statistical analyses and computer programming in personality.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology July 2020 247 x 174 mm c.580pp 46 b/w illus. 29 tables 978-1-108-41709-9 Hardback £150.00 / US$195.00 978-1-108-40445-7 Paperback £54.99 / US$69.99


Psychology

41

The Cambridge Handbook of Infant Development Brain, Behavior, and Cultural Context

Edited by Jeffrey J. Lockman Tulane University, Louisiana

and Catherine S. Tamis-LeMonda New York University

Description This multidisciplinary volume features many of the world’s leading experts of infant development, who synthesize their research on infant learning and behaviour, while integrating perspectives across neuroscience, socio-cultural context, and policy. It offers an unparalleled overview of infant development across foundational areas such as prenatal development, brain development, epigenetics, physical growth, nutrition, cognition, language, attachment, and risk. The chapters present theoretical and empirical depth and rigor across specific domains of development, while highlighting reciprocal connections among brain, behavior, and social-cultural context. The handbook simultaneously educates, enriches, and encourages. It educates through detailed reviews of innovative methods and empirical foundations and enriches by considering the contexts of brain, culture, and policy. This cuttingedge volume establishes an agenda for future research and policy, and highlights research findings and application for advanced students, researchers, practitioners, and policy-makers with interests in understanding and promoting infant development.

Key Features • Makes current research methods and findings around infant development accessible to a multi-disciplinary audience, including advanced students, researchers, educators, clinicians, and policy makers • Provides comprehensive and cutting-edge research findings in key areas of infant development • Each chapter features an integrative treatment of neuroscience, culture/context, and policy/practice perspectives in specific areas of infant development

Contents Preface; Part I. Foundations: 1. Embodied Brain Model for Understanding Functional Neural Development of Foetuses and Infants – NOT YET FINAL; 2. Infant Physical Growth; 3. Dynamic Epigenetic Impact of the Environment on the Developing Brain; 4. Brain Development in Infants: Structure and Experience; 5. Development during Infancy in Children Later Diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder; II. Perceptual Development: 6. Visual Development; 7. Infant Visual Attention; 8. Infants’ Perception of Auditory Patterns; 9. The Development of Touch Perception and Body Representation; 10. Development of Infant Feeding; 11. The Development of Multisensory Attention Skills: Individual Differences, Developmental Outcomes, and Applications; Part III. Cognitive Development: 12. Infant Memory; 13. Infant Physical Knowledge; 14. Infant Categorization; 15. Early Knowledge about Space and Quantity; 16. Infant Learning in the Digital Age; Part IV. Action: 17. Action in Development: Plasticity, Variability, and Flexibility; 18. The Mirror Neuron System and Social Cognition; 19. Infant Object Manipulation and Play; 20. The Infant’s Visual World: The Everyday Statistics for Visual Learning; Part V. Language: 21. Infant Speech Perception; 22. Infant Vocal Learning and Speech Production; 23. Infant Word Learning and Emerging Syntax; 24. Dual Language Exposure and Early Learning; Part VI. Emotional and Social Development: 25. Infant Attachment (to Mother and Father) and its Place in Human Development: Five Decades of Promising Research (and an Unsettled Issue); 26. Infant Emotion Development and Temperament; 27. Infant Emotional Development; 28. Understanding and Evaluating the Moral World in Infancy; 29. Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Parent-Infant Interactions; Index.

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology August 2020 244 x 170 mm c.700pp 978-1-108-42603-9 Hardback £160.00 / US$210.00 978-1-108-44439-2 Paperback £74.99 / US$99.99


42

Psychology

The Cambridge Handbook of Substance and Behavioral Addictions Steve Sussman

University of Southern California

Description Written by leaders in the addictions field, 100 authors from six countries, this handbook is a thoroughly comprehensive resource. Philosophical and legal issues are addressed, while conceptual underpinnings are provided through explanations of appetitive motivation, incentive sensitization, reward deficiency, and behavioral economics theories. Major clinical and research methods are clearly mapped out (e.g. MRI, behavioral economics, interview assessments, and qualitative approaches), outlining their strengths and weaknesses, giving the reader the tools needed to guide their research and practice aims. The etiology of addiction at various levels of analysis is discussed, including neurobiology, cognition, groups, culture, and environment, which simultaneously lays out the foundations and high-level discourse to serve both novice and expert researchers and clinicians. Importantly, the volume explores the prevention and treatment of such addictions as alcohol, tobacco, novel drugs, food, gambling, sex, work, shopping, the internet, and several seldom-investigated behaviors (e.g. love, tanning, or exercise).

Key Features • Provides a multi-level understanding of addiction, including prevention and cessation discourse alongside conceptual and etiological perspectives • Supplies suggestions for future research • Highlights how concepts can be integrated across different topics to encourage an interdisciplinary outlook • Describes the state of the science of lab techniques in the arenas of behavioural economics and human neurobiology, as well as self-report measures and qualitative approaches

Contents Part I. Concepts of Addiction Part II. Clinical and research methods in the addictions Part III. Levels of analysis and etiology Part IV. Prevention and treatment Part V. Ongoing and future research directions

Additional Information Level: graduate students, professionals, academic researchers Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology August 2020 279 x 216 mm c.650pp 978-1-108-42716-6 Hardback £160.00 / US$195.00 978-1-108-44785-0 Paperback £80.00 / US$99.99


Psychology

43

The Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Training Fourth edition

Edited by Dan Landis University of Hawaii, Hilo

and Dharm P. S. Bhawuk University of Hawaii, Manoa

Description With the number of international migrants globally reaching an estimated 272 million (United Nations report, September 2019), the need for intercultural training is stronger than ever. Since its first edition, this handbook has evaluated the methodologies and suggested the best practice to develop effective programs aimed at facilitating cross-cultural dialogue and boosting the economic developments of the countries mostly affected by migration. This handbook builds and expands on the previous editions by presenting the rational and scientific foundations of intercultural training and focuses on unique approaches, theories, and areas of the world. In doing so, it gives students, managers, and other professionals undertaking international assignments a theoretical foundation and practical suggestions for improving intercultural training programs.

Key Features • Presents findings from many disciplines that zero in on the understanding of cultural transitions, including emotion studies, neuroscience, and social work • Prepares people to work effectively within unfamiliar countries and cultures • Reviews training methodologies and their benefits • Describes the history of intercultural communication and its developments to highlight how to improve the practice of intercultural training today

Contents 1. Introduction and Theoretical Framework; Part I. Theoretical Foundations of Intercultural Training: 2. Harry Triandis’s Contributions to Intercultural Training as a Field of Research: A Bibliometric Analysis; 3. Interdisciplinary History of Intercultural Communication Studies: From Roots to Research and Praxis; 4. Culture Theories and Intercultural Training; 5. An Analysis of Methods for Intercultural Training; 6. Intercultural Simulations: Theory and Practice; 7. Toward a Social Network Theory of Reentry; 8. Intractable Conflict, Delegitimization and Intercultural Training; 9. Evaluation of Cross-Cultural Training: A Review; Part II. Practice of Intercultural Training: 10. International Initiatives in K-12 and Higher Education: Learning from and Moving Beyond Disciplinary History; 11. The Triad Training Model in Counseling, Cultural Diversity, and Intercultural Training; 12. Multicultural Counseling Training and Intercultural Training: A Synthesis; 13. Training for Cross-Cultural Competence in the United States Military; 14. Developing Intercultural Competency Training in Global Organizations: An Examination of the Cadre of Global Managers; Part III. Indigenous Psychology and Intercultural Training: 15. Brazilian Cultural Patterns and Intercultural Training; 16. Russian Cultural Patterns and Intercultural Training; 17. Indian Psychology and Intercultural Training;

18. Culture-Inclusive Theories for Intercultural Training in Confucian Societies: An In-Depth Analysis of Face Dynamism; 19. Japanese Psychology and Intercultural Training: Presenting Wa in a Nomological Network; Part IV. New Interdisciplinary Approaches to Intercultural Training: 20. Cultural Neuroscience Basis of Intercultural Training and Education; 21. Perceptual Representation: An Etic Observational Category for Guiding Intercultural Communication Adaptation; 22. Emotional Contagion, Intimate Intercultural Relationships, and Intercultural Training; 23. Dialogue and Culture: Reflections on the Parameters of Cultural Dialogue; 24. Optimizing Globalization through ‘Intelligent Swarming’: Suggested Activities for Training; Part V. Summing Up: 25. Intercultural Training for the New Global Village.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology September 2020 244 x 170 mm c.708pp 978-1-108-49056-6 Hardback £145.00 / US$190.00 978-1-108-79590-6 Paperback £44.99 / US$59.99


44

Psychology

Culture, Mind, and Brain Emerging Concepts, Models, and Applications

Edited by Laurence J. Kirmayer McGill University, Montréal

Carol M. Worthman Emory University, Atlanta

Shinobu Kitayama

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Robert Lemelson

University of California, Los Angeles

and Constance Cummings

The Foundation for Psychocultural Research

Description Recent neuroscience research makes it clear that human biology is cultural biology – we develop and live our lives in socially constructed worlds that vary widely in their structure values, and institutions. This integrative volume brings together interdisciplinary perspectives from the human, social, and biological sciences to explore culture, mind, and brain interactions and their impact on personal and societal issues. Contributors provide a fresh look at emerging concepts, models, and applications of the co-constitution of culture, mind, and brain. Chapters survey the latest theoretical and methodological insights alongside the challenges in this area, and describe how these new ideas are being applied in the sciences, humanities, arts, mental health, and everyday life. Readers will gain new appreciation of the ways in which our unique biology and cultural diversity shape behavior and experience, and our ongoing adaptation to a constantly changing world.

Key Features • Brings together a diverse group of researchers to take a fresh look at emerging concepts, tools, models, and data in culture, mind, and brain interactions • Bridges disciplines with dynamic developmental and ecological models • Explores integrative approaches to studying the relationships between culture, mind, and brain

Contents 1. Co-Constructing Culture, Mind and Brain; Part I. Dynamics of Culture, Mind, and Brain: Models and Evidence; 2. Culture, Mind, and Brain in Human Evolution: An Extended Evolutionary Perspective on Paleolithic Toolmaking as Embodied Practice; 3. Mutual Constitution of Culture and the Mind: Insights From Cultural Neuroscience; 4. Being There: Foundations, Theory, Method; 5. Culture in Mind – An Enactivist Account: Not Cognitive Penetration but Cultural Permeation; 6. The Brain as Cultural Artifact: Concepts, Actions, and Experiences Within the Human Affective Niche; 7. Cultural Priming Effects and the Human Brain; 8. Culture, Self, and Agency: An Ecosocial View; 9. Neuroanthropological Perspectives on Culture, Mind, and Brain. 10. The Neural Mechanisms Underlying Social Norms: Norm Detection, Punishment, and Compliance; 11. Ritual and Religion as Social Technologies of Cooperation; Part II. Applications; 12. The Cultural Brain as Historical Artifact; 13. Experience-Dependent Plasticity in the Hippocampus; 14. Liminal Brains in Uncertain Futures: Critical Neuroscience and the Cultural Contexts of Neuroeducation; 15. The Reward of Musical Emotions and Expectations; 16. Literary Analysis and Weak Theories;

17. Capturing Context Is Not Enough: the Embodied Impact of Story and Emotion in Ethnographic Film; 18. Social Neuroscience in Global Mental Health: Case Study on Stigma Reduction in Nepal; 19. Cities, Psychosis, and Social Defeat; 20. Internet Sociality; 21. Neurodiversity as a Conceptual Lens and Topic of Cross-Cultural Study; 22. Epilogue: Interdisciplinarity in the Study of Culture, Mind, and Brain; Index.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students, undergraduate students Series: Current Perspectives in Social and Behavioral Sciences September 2020 228 x 152 mm c.352pp 978-1-108-48414-5 Hardback £89.99 / US$120.00 978-1-108-70596-7 Paperback TBA / TBA


Theatre

45

The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea Anne Finch Edited by Jennifer Keith

University of North Carolina, Greensboro

and Claudia Thomas Kairoff

Wake Forest University, North Carolina

Description This is the first ever complete critical edition of the writings of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661–1720), including work printed in her lifetime and material left in manuscript form at her death. Textual analysis, based on print and manuscript copies in repositories across the United Kingdom and United States, reveals her revision processes and uses of manuscript and print. Extensive commentary clarifies her techniques, sources, contexts, and diction. A detailed essay traces the history of her works’ reception and transmission. The result is a complete view of her achievements that will promote more accurate assessments of her contributions to literary and cultural shifts, including perspectives on literary value, women’s equality, religion, and affairs of state. Writer and critic of the Glorious Revolution, Finch imparts rare insights into this watershed of political and cultural values. Her work represents a complex convergence of artistic innovation, political allegiance, and personal passion.

Key Features • The first ever complete, critical edition of the works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661–1720) • Provides established texts of all Finch’s poems, plays, and letters, organized by their appearance in Finch’s authorized collections • Includes a comprehensive introduction, extensive explanatory notes and thorough textual commentary

Contents Volume 1: List of illustrations; Preface and acknowledgments; Chronology; Abbreviations; Note; General introduction; Textual introduction; Account of the texts; Works excluded from this edition; From Poems on Several Subjects written by Ardelia (The Northamptonshire Manuscript); Miscellany Poems with Two Plays by Ardelia (The Folger Manuscript); Some Pieces out of the First Act of the Aminta of Tasso; The Triumphs of Love and Innocence: A Tragecomedy; Aristomenes, or the Royal Shepheard: A Tragedy; Additional Poems Cheifly upon Subjects Devine and Moral; Explanatory and textual notes; List of source copies; Select bibliography; Index of titles; Index of first lines. Volume 2: List of illustrations; Preface and acknowledgments; Chronology; Abbreviations; Note;

General introduction; Textual introduction; Account of the texts; From Miscellany Poems, on Several Occasions; The Wellesley Manuscript; Additional Poems; Explanatory and textual notes; Correspondence; A reception and transmission history of Finch’s work: illustrative cases from the eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth centuries; List of source copies; Select bibliography; Index of titles; Index of first lines.

Additional Information Level: academic researchers, graduate students September 2020 216 x 138 mm 1400pp 978-0-521-19622-2 2 Volume Hardback Set £200.00 / US$260.00 978-0-521-19622-2 2 Volume Hardback Set £200.00 / US$260.00


46

Theatre

Shakespeare and Emotion Katharine Craik

Oxford Brookes University

Description Shakespeare and Emotion devotes sustained attention to the emotions as a novel way of exploring Shakespeare’s works in their original contexts. A variety of disciplinary approaches drawn from literary, theatrical, historical, cultural and film studies brings the recent upsurge of interest in affect into conversation with some of the most urgent debates in Shakespeare studies. The volume provides both a comprehensive account of the current state of scholarship and a speculative forum for new research. Its chapters outline some important contexts for understanding Shakespeare’s creativity through an emotional lens – from religion, rhetoric, and medicine, to language, acting and Bollywood – and offer a range of case studies which reveal particular emotions at work. Considering emotional and passionate experience as an animating and sometimes alienating force within the plays and poems, the volume highlights the continuing importance of Shakespeare today: for our sense of who we are and who we might become.

Key Features • Explores emotional experience as a central feature of Shakespeare’s works, offering innovative approaches to the plays and poems • Forges new insights into the vibrant field of the early modern history of the emotions • Builds on Shakespeare’s enduring legacy to make links between past and present emotional experience, considering the realworld benefit of Shakespeare’s creativity for today’s geo-political realities

Contents Introduction; Part I. Contexts: 1. Rhetoric: Titus Andronicus, Julius Caesar; 2. Medicine: King Lear, Macbeth, The Tempest; 3. Religion: Henry VI, Henry IV, Henry V; 4. Character: As You Like It, A Midsummer Night’s Dream; 5. Inheritance and Innovation: Richard III, 3 Henry VI, Richard II, The Merchant of Venice; 6. Communities: Julius Caesar; 7. Audiences: Much Ado about Nothing, Measure for Measure; 8. Acting: The Taming of the Shrew, Coriolanus; 9. Bollywood: Macbeth, Othello; 10. Language: Macbeth, King Lear; 11. Emotional Labour: Hamlet; 12. Passionate Shakespeare; Part II. Emotions: 13. Fear: Macbeth, Othello;

14. Grief: Hamlet; 15. Sympathy: Titus Andronicus, The Comedy of Errors, Romeo and Juliet; 16. Shame: A Lover’s Complaint, Coriolanus, The Rape of Lucrece; 17. Anger: Titus Andronicus, Timon of Athens; 18. Pride: Coriolanus; 19. Happiness: Othello, I Henry IV, Antony and Cleopatra; 20. Love: Sonnets, As You Like It, A Midsummer Night’s Dream; 21. Nostalgia: Richard II, Henry V, Henry VI; 22. Wonder: Pericles, The Tempest, ‘The Phoenix and the Turtle’; 23. Confusion: Cymbeline, Merchant of Venice, The Winter’s Tale.

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students October 2020 228 x 152 mm c.350pp 978-1-108-41616-0 Hardback £74.99 / US$99.99 978-1-108-40266-8 Paperback TBA / TBA


47

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American Literature 1

Kristina Bross

A History of American Puritan Literature

978-1-108-84003-3

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US$110.00

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Archeology 2

Salima Ikram

A History of Egyptology

Classics 3

4

Emily A. Hemelrijk

Roger Rees

Women and Society in the Roman World

A Commentary on Panegyrici Latini II(12)

978-1-107-14245-9

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Lesley Dean-Jones

Historia Animalium Book X

978-1-107-01515-9

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£110.00

US$145.00

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Marco Fantuzzi

The Rhesus Attributed to Euripides

978-1-107-02602-5

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S. J. V. Malloch

Stephen White

The Tabula Lugdunensis

978-1-108-48419-0

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Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers

978-0-521-88335-1

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The Cambridge Handbook of the Capability Approach

978-1-107-11528-6

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Economics 9

Enrica ChiapperoMartinetti

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English Literature 10

Stuart N. Clarke

Jacob’s Room

978-0-521-84674-5

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History 11

Angeliki Lymberopoulou Hell in the Byzantine World

12

Anne Curry

13

The Cambridge History of War The Cambridge History of Ireland

Law 14

World Trade Organization GATT Dispute Settlement Reports

15

August Reinisch

International Protection of Investments

978-1-107-01358-2

Hardback

£220.00

US$285.00

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Irene Calboli

The Cambridge Handbook of International and Comparative Trademark Law

978-1-108-42309-0

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Jorge E. Viñuales

The UN Friendly Relations Declaration at 50

978-1-108-48381-0

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Larry A. DiMatteo

The Cambridge Handbook of Judicial Control of Arbitral Awards

978-1-108-48861-7

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Sumudu A. Atapattu The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Justice and Sustainable Development

978-1-108-47000-1

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Woodrow Barfield

The Cambridge Handbook of the Law of Algorithms

978-1-108-48196-0

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Shyamkrishna Balganesh

The Cambridge Handbook of Copyright Limitations and Exceptions

978-1-108-48304-9

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Life Sciences 22

Vincenzo Penteriani Bears of the World

Linguistics 23

Anna De Fina

The Cambridge Handbook of Discourse Studies

978-1-108-42514-8

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£120.00

US$155.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-44122-3

Paperback

TBA

TBA

.................

.................

978-1-108-71318-4

Paperback

£65.00

US$115.00

.................

.................

Mathematics 24

Matthias Keller

Analysis and Geometry on Graphs and Manifolds

25

C. R. LeedhamGreen

The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy

978-1-107-02065-8

Hardback

£199.00

US$299.00

.................

.................

26

Charles R. Johnson

Matrix Positivity

978-1-108-47871-7

Hardback

£95.00

US$125.00

.................

.................

Geriatric Forensic Medicine and Pathology

978-1-316-82304-0

Cambridge Core

£140.00

US$215.00

.................

.................

.................

.................

Medicine 27

Kim A. Collins

Music 28

Matteo Paoletti

A Huge Revolution of Theatrical Commerce

978-1-108-79048-2

Paperback

£15.00

US$20.00

29

Graham Griffiths

Stravinsky in Context

978-1-108-42219-2

Hardback

£85.00

US$110.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-43472-0

Paperback

TBA

TBA

.................

.................

30

Edward Campbell

The Cambridge Stravinsky Encyclopedia

978-1-107-14087-5

Hardback

£120.00

US$155.00

.................

.................

978-1-316-50620-2

Paperback

TBA

TBA

.................

.................

978-1-107-13988-6

Hardback

£84.99

US$110.00

.................

.................

Subtotal

.................

Neurology 31

John M. Stern

Medication-Resistant Epilepsy


Quantity

Cost

Politics 32

Katharine Legun The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology

978-1-108-42930-6

2 Volume Hardback Set

£288.00

US$360.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-45375-2

2 Volume Paperback Set

TBA

TBA

.................

.................

£140.00

US$215.00

.................

.................

£160.00

US$200.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-55449-7

Cambridge Core

33

Katharine Legun

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology

978-1-108-42932-0

Hardback

978-1-108-45405-6

Paperback

TBA

TBA

.................

.................

34

Katharine Legun

The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Sociology

978-1-108-42933-7

Hardback

£160.00

US$200.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-45406-3

Paperback

TBA

TBA

.................

.................

35

Peter Kivisto 978-1-107-13170-5

2 Volume Hardback Set

£225.00

US$365.00

.................

.................

978-1-107-58279-8

2 Volume Paperback Set

TBA

TBA

.................

.................

978-1-108-49639-1

Hardback

£140.00

US$180.00

.................

.................

The Cambridge Handbook of Social Theory

Psychology 36

Martin S. Hagger

The Handbook of Behavior Change

37

Fanny M. Cheung

The Cambridge Handbook of the International Psychology of Women

38

39

Neal S. Rubin

Frank C. Worrell

The Cambridge Handbook of Psychology and Human Rights

The Cambridge Handbook of Applied School Psychology

978-1-108-47303-3

Hardback

£150.00

US$195.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-46090-3

Paperback

£54.99

US$69.99

.................

.................

978-1-108-42563-6

Hardback

£155.00

US$200.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-44281-7

Paperback

£54.99

US$69.99

.................

.................

978-1-108-41596-5

Hardback

£140.00

US$180.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-40125-8

Paperback

£44.99

US$59.99

.................

.................

Hardback

£150.00

US$195.00

.................

.................

40

Philip J. Corr

The Cambridge Handbook of Personality Psychology

978-1-108-41709-9 978-1-108-40445-7

Paperback

£54.99

US$69.99

.................

.................

41

Jeffrey J. Lockman

The Cambridge Handbook of Infant Development

978-1-108-42603-9

Hardback

£160.00

US$210.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-44439-2

Paperback

£74.99

US$99.99

.................

.................

42

Steve Sussman

The Cambridge Handbook of Substance and Behavioral Addictions

978-1-108-42716-6

Hardback

£160.00

US$195.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-44785-0

Paperback

£80.00

US$99.99

.................

.................

978-1-108-49056-6

Hardback

£145.00

US$190.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-79590-6

Paperback

£44.99

US$59.99

.................

.................

978-1-108-48414-5

Hardback

£89.99

US$120.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-70596-7

Paperback

TBA

TBA

.................

.................

978-0-521-19622-2

2 Volume Hardback Set

£200.00

US$260.00

.................

.................

978-0-521-19622-2

2 Volume Hardback Set

£200.00

US$260.00

.................

.................

978-1-108-41616-0

Hardback

£74.99

US$99.99

.................

.................

978-1-108-40266-8

Paperback

TBA

TBA

.................

.................

Subtotal

.................

Total for all pages

.................

43

44

Dan Landis

Laurence J. Kirmayer

The Cambridge Handbook of Intercultural Training

Culture, Mind, and Brain

Theatre 45

Jennifer Keith The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea

46

Katharine Craik

Shakespeare and Emotion


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