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Boston Review books Boston Review Books is an imprint of Boston Review, a bimonthly magazine of ideas. The book series, like the magazine, covers a lot of ground. But a few premises tie it all together: that democracy depends on public discussion; that sometimes understanding means going deep; that vast inequalities are unjust; and that human imagination breaks free from neat political categories. Visit bostonreview.net for more information. The End of the Wild stephen m. meyer God and the Welfare State lew daly Making Aid Work abhijit vinayak banerjee The Story of Cruel and Unusual colin dayan Movies and the Moral Adventure of Life alan a. stone The Road to Democracy in Iran akbar ganji Why Nuclear Disarmament Matters hans blix Race, Incarceration, and American Values glenn c. loury The Men in My Life vivian gornick Africa’s Turn? edward miguel Inventing American History william hogeland After America’s Midlife Crisis michael gecan Why We Cooperate michael tomasello Taking Economics Seriously dean baker Rule of Law, Misrule of Men elaine scarry Immigrants and the Right to Stay joseph h. carens Preparing for Climate Change michael d. mastrandrea & stephen h. schneider Government’s Place in the Market eliot spitzer Border Wars tom barry Blaming Islam john r. bowen Back to Full Employment robert pollin Occupy the Future david b. grusky, et al. Giving Kids a Fair Chance james heckman The Syria Dilemma nader hashemi & danny postel ...

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