Todo ano a Foreign Affairs reune as "pílulas" de suas resenhas ao longo de quatro números e os apresenta como chamariz para atrair assinantes. A revista vai fazer 100 anos em 2022, e certamente vai publicar um "Reader" de seus melhores artigos, como já fez em ocasiões anteriores, de datas comemorativas.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida
The Best of Books 2021 This Year’s Top Picks From Foreign Affairs’ Reviewers December 9, 2021
Luci Gutiérrez The best books we reviewed this year, selected by Foreign Affairs editors and book reviewers.
In this deft, textured work of intellectual history, Mitter opens a window into the legacy of China’s experience during World War II, showing how historical memory lives on in the present and contributes to the constant evolution of Chinese nationalism.
READ THE REVIEW Demick’s reporting is resourceful and inspired, but her message is a dispiriting one: there is little the outside world can do to halt Beijing’s deliberate and systematic erosion of the distinctive cultures and traditions of Buddhist Tibetans and other minority groups within China.
READ THE REVIEW Friedman examines the resilience of apartheid in South Africa, demonstrating how the old order has repeatedly prevented the new one from delivering on its promises of racial justice.
READ THE REVIEW In his most impressive work to date, Ikenberry presents liberal internationalism as a pragmatic political project, defending it against realists who dismiss it as utopianism and radicals who deride it as window-dressing for capitalist imperialism.
READ THE REVIEW Müller argues in this important book that the forms of popular authoritarianism seen recently in Brazil, Hungary, India, Poland, and the United States constitute a threat to democracy but do not herald a return to the fascism of the 1930s.
READ THE REVIEW In this superb work of intellectual history, Bell explores the ideas of some of the most intriguing figures of the late nineteenth century in the United Kingdom and the United States, delving into their dreams of a world-dominating Anglo-American political community united by race and empire.
READ THE REVIEW In this groundbreaking study, Foot shows how China has worked behind the scenes at the UN to promote a vision of security that emphasizes economic development, a strong state, and social stability.
READ THE REVIEW ECONOMIC | SOCIAL | ENVIRONMENTAL In this thought-provoking book, Goodhart and Pradhan describe how the integration of China and other emerging markets into the world economy led to rising inequality, stagnant wages, and low inflation—and what will change as those countries’ populations age.
READ THE REVIEW Aghion, Antonin, and Bunel explain how innovation can generate economic growth and help governments navigate the supply chain disruptions created by COVID-19. They argue that fostering such innovation requires striking a balance between too much competition and too little.
READ THE REVIEW Nordhaus emphasizes the indispensability of public policy interventions in the quest for a greener world, building on a lifetime of work incorporating the concept of externalities into the measuring of national income and the understanding of economic growth.
READ THE REVIEW MILITARY | SCIENTIFIC | TECHNOLOGICAL Becker delivers an enthralling biography of three female correspondents who reported on the Vietnam War, blending an account of the wider history with her protagonists’ growing doubts about the logic and legitimacy of the war.
READ THE REVIEW Zelikow addresses the question of whether U.S. President Woodrow Wilson could have mediated a peace deal in 1916 or 1917 to end World War I before the United States joined the fray—perhaps sparing the world the rise of Bolshevism in Russia and Nazism in Germany.
READ THE REVIEW Combining meticulous scholarship with a practitioner’s eye, Malkasian provides a full and authoritative account of U.S. involvement in Afghanistan over the past four decades, leading up to President Joe Biden’s decision earlier this year to withdraw U.S. troops.
READ THE REVIEW Wertheim explores when and why the United States embraced the global military supremacy that Americans have taken for granted for decades—and argues that this dominance has outlived its original purpose.
READ THE REVIEW With an impeccably sourced, highly readable volume based on hundreds of interviews and access to previously undisclosed documents from inside the company, Frenkel and Kang have produced an important addition to the literature on Facebook.
READ THE REVIEW Wood, seen by many historians as the greatest living scholar of the American Revolution, distills the core insights of his long career, covering power, liberty, concepts of representation and rights, slavery, and the emergence of a formidable judicial branch.
READ THE REVIEW Sarotte weaves together the most engaging and carefully documented account currently available of East-West diplomacy in the decade after the Cold War—a period that set the tone for U.S. and European relations with Russia today.
READ THE REVIEW Cooper, a British diplomat who for many years was the European Union’s unofficial foreign policy guru, presents a sweeping reflection on 500 years of transatlantic statecraft.
READ THE REVIEW Trudgill, a linguist, offers a pleasurable and humorous voyage of discovery into the chaos of the English language as it is spoken today by well over a billion people across the world.
READ THE REVIEW In this gripping page-turner, Broad and Cavanagh narrate the story of how a global coalition of environmental activists, labor unions, and religious leaders blocked a Canadian firm from opening a gold mine that threatened fragile watersheds in rural El Salvador.
READ THE REVIEW Salgado, a famed Paris-based Brazilian documentary photographer, takes his camera deep into the Amazon rainforest, capturing both the startling beauty of nature and intimate, sensitive portraits of the everyday life of indigenous peoples.
READ THE REVIEW Binet playfully imagines a world in which the Aztecs and the Incas conquer western Europe, offering a redemptive fantasy that rescues history from the tragedy of the European destruction of the precolonial Americas.
READ THE REVIEW EASTERN EUROPE AND FORMER SOVIET REPUBLICS Zubovich’s fascinating history of skyscrapers in Moscow—the city Joseph Stalin hoped to make “the capital of all capitals”—goes far beyond architectural design and looks at the social and political ramifications of monument building in the postwar Soviet Union.
READ THE REVIEW In their rigorous academic study based on a vast collection of archival documents and memoirs, Gorlizki and Khlevniuk trace the evolution of Soviet regional party leaders from the late 1940s to the 1970s.
READ THE REVIEW In this enthralling historical narrative, Fitzpatrick, one of the most prominent historians of the Soviet Union, traces the travails of the waves of Russian and Soviet refugees who arrived in Australia in the late 1940s and 1950s.
READ THE REVIEW Gordon brilliantly illustrates how repeated U.S. attempts at regime change in the Middle East have produced “no case of clear success, some catastrophic failures, and universally high costs and unintended consequences.”
READ THE REVIEW In this remarkably comprehensive account of the evolution of political jihad, Robinson provides an accessible history and a provocative analysis of one of the most important political movements in the world over the last half century.
READ THE REVIEW Bsheer precisely and elegantly describes the Saudi regime’s attempts, across the reigns of several kings, to both collect and suppress documentation about the country’s past in an effort to construct a narrative that will legitimize its rule.
READ THE REVIEW Placing individual stories against the backdrop of economic, social, political, business, and cultural trends, Yoo brings both clarity and nuance to the complex, interwoven histories of the two Koreas since 1945.
READ THE REVIEW Roberts reports that the frighteningly effective Chinese campaign to eliminate Uyghur culture that started with mass internments in 2017 has now reached such an intense pitch that it has become a “cultural genocide.”
READ THE REVIEW Bose traces episodes of violence and resistance in the contested territory of Kashmir over three-quarters of a century. His analysis suggests that peace is more remote than ever.
READ THE REVIEW In this innovative and informative study of authoritarian regimes, Meng shows that regimes in which the ruler’s power is constrained by institutions last longer. The regimes of less constrained dictators, meanwhile, rarely survive.
READ THE REVIEW This disturbing narrative relates the 2016 deaths of two Black laborers at the hands of several dozen white farmers and the flawed, three-year trial that followed. Harding’s account grows inexorably into a searing indictment of contemporary South Africa.
READ THE REVIEW In a sweeping history extending from the classical world to the twentieth century, Otele masterfully analyzes the changing relationship between Africa and Europe, particularly the hardening of racist European views about Africans.
READ THE REVIEW
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