Bibliography
Bibliographic Entries | Country/Region | Key Terms |
---|---|---|
Manu Kaushik. “A Force to Reckon With.” Business Today, October 31, 2010. Web. Available online at http://businesstoday.intoday.in/story/a-force-toreckon-with/1/9591 |
India, South Asia | security challenges, privatization of security, police and policing, police demands |
Mara L. Keire. "The Vice Trust; A Reinterpretation of the White Slavery Scare in the United States, 1907-1917." Journal of Social History 35, no. 1 (2001): 5-41. |
United States, North America | white slavery |
Marcel Fafchamps and Bart Minten. "Crime, Transitory Poverty, and Isolation: Evidence from Madagascar." Economic Development and Cultural Change 54, no. 3 (2006): 579-603. |
Madagascar, Africa | crime and poverty, crime and economic incentives, relationship between poverty and crime, geographic isolation and crime |
Marcella Bombardieri and Walter V. Robinson. “Wealthiest nonprofits favored by foundations.” The Boston Globe, January 11, 2004. |
foundations, grant-making organizations, donors, philanthropy | |
Marcus A. Melo. “Political and Institutional Checks on Corruption: Explaining the performance of Brazilian audit institutions.” Comparative Political Studies 42, no. 9 (2009): 1217-1244. |
Brazil, South America | reducing corruption, anti-corruption, aid accountability, government accountability |
Margaret Roper. "Kids First: Approaching school safety." in Crime Prevention Partnerships, Eric Pelser, ed. Pretoria, ZA: Institute for Security Studies, 2002: 67-80. |
Africa, South Africa | safe schools, building safe school, human rights |
Margie Buchanan-Smith and Jeremy Lind. Armed violence and poverty in Northern Kenya: A case study for the armed violence and poverty initiative. Yorkshire, UK: University of Bradford, Centre for International Cooperation and Security, 2005. |
Kenya, Africa, Northern Africa | armed violence, impact of armed violence on poverty, violent conflict and social infrastructure, aid donors and root causes of violence |
Margit Stange. Personal Property: Wives, White Slaves, and the Market in Women. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002 |
white slavery, attitudes toward women | |
Maria Beatriz Orlando, “Gender-Based Violence: Is it the World Bank’s Business?” March 16, 2012. Web Access: http://blogs.worldbank.org/latinamerica/gender-based-violence-is-it-the-... |
gender-based violence, violence against women | |
Maria Dakolias. “A Strategy for Judicial Reform: The Experience in Latin America.” Virginia Journal of International Law 36, no.167 (1995): 199-225. |
Latin America, South America | judicial reform, alternative dispute resolution, access to justice, justice for women, legal teaching and training |
María de Asís, Donal O’Leary, Per Ljung, and John Butterworth. Improving Transparency, Integrity, and Accountability in Water Supply and Sanitation: Action, learning, experiences. Washington, DC: The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development and The World Bank, 2009. |
water sanitation, governance and corruption, transparency | |
Maria Gonzales de Asis. "Reducing Corruption at the Local Level." Washington, DC: World Bank, 2000. |
corruption, accountability, transparency, reforming local institutions, civil society/community participation in corruption prevention/intervention | |
Maria Stern and Joakim Öjendal. “Mapping security_development : A question of methodology?” Security Dialogue 42, no. 1 (2011): 105-110. |
security and development, peacebuilding, security, human security, violence | |
Maria Valenti, Christin M. Ormhaug, Robert E. Mtonga, and John Loretz. “Armed Violence: A Health Problem, a Public Health Approach.” Journal of Public Health Policy 28, no. 4 (2007): 389–400. |
causes of violence, armed violence, awareness about armed violence, risk factors of armed violence, violence as a global health problem | |
Marianne Fay, ed. The Urban Poor in Latin America. Washington, DC: World Bank, 2005. |
Latin America, Caribbean | poverty reduction, poverty in urban areas, urbanization and economic development, urbanization and development |
Marie Freckleton, Allan S. Wright, and Roland Craigwell. “Foreign Direct Investment, Economic Growth and Corruption in Developing Countries.” Journal of Economic Studies 39, no. 6 (2012): 639-652. |
corruption, effect of corruption on FDI, foreign development investment, short-term impact of corruption | |
Mark H. Haller. “Historical Roots of Police Behavior: Chicago, 1890-1925.” Law and Society Review 10, no. 2 (1976): 303-323. |
Chicago, New York, United States, North America | historical legal systems, decentralized police and court systems, police and political affiliations, corruption, police and corruption, informal systems of operation |
Mark H. Haller. “Police Reform in Chicago 1905-1935.” The American Behavioral Scientist 13 (1970): 649-666. |
Chicago, United States, North America | historical legal systems, police reform |
Mark H. Haller. “Urban Crime and Criminal Justice: The Chicago Case.” The American Behavioral Scientist 57 no. 3 (1970): 619-635. |
Chicago, United States, North America | crime, criminal justice, justice reform, historical legal systems |
Mark H. Moore, David Thacher, Francis X. Hartmann, Catherine Coles, and Peter Sheingold. "Case Studies of the Transformation of Police Departments: A Cross-Site Analysis." Washington, DC: The Urban Institute, 1999. |
organizational change, community policing, problem-solving policing | |
Mark J. Roe and Jordan I. Siegel. “Finance and Politics: A review essay based on Kenneth Dam’s analysis of legal traditions in The Law–Growth Nexus.” Journal of Economic Literature 47, no. 3 (2009): 781–800. |
legal traditions, policy-making based on erroneous understanding of legal traditions, relationship between legal origins and economic/financial development, historical context for legal systems/origins | |
Mark L. Schneider. Placing Security and Rule of Law on the Development Agenda. Washington, DC: World Bank (2009). Print. |
human security, international security, rule of law, international development, conflict prevention | |
Mark Neocleous. “Social Police and the Mechanisms of Prevention: Patrick Colquhoun and the Condition of Poverty.” British Journal of Criminology 40, no. 4 (2000): 710-726. |
social police, social policy and police studies, poverty and police, political economy, crime prevention, historical criminal justice systems | |
Mark R. Kramer. Measuring Innovation: Evaluation in the field of social entrepreneurship. San Francisco, CA: Foundation Strategy Group, 2005. |
social entrepreneurship, philanthropic measurement and accountability, accountability from aid recipients, return on investment | |
Marshall Carter and Otwin Marenin. "human rights in the Nigerian Context: A Case Study and Discussion of the Nigerian Police." Universal human rights 1, no. 2 (1979): 43-61. |
Nigeria, Africa | cultural relativism, police and policing, human rights abuses, police abuse, police treatment of the public, human rights, democracy and socialism, human rights and development, police and political order, public trust of police |
Martha Finnemore and Kathryn Sikkink. "International Norm Dynamics and Political Change." International Organization 52, no. 4 (1998): 887-917. Web. Available online at http://home.gwu.edu/~finnemor/articles/1998_norms_io.pdf |
international politics, international relations, norm dynamics and political change, norm research and international relations | |
Martin Luther King, Jr. “I Have a Dream.” Lincoln Memorial, Washington, DC, (August 28, 1963). Available online at http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/mlkihaveadream.htm |
United States, North America | social justice, civil rights |
Martin Schoenteich. "Pretrial Detention and Corruption: Justice for Sale." Open Society Foundations. Web. Available at http://blog.soros.org/2011/12/pretrial-detention-and-corruption-justice-... |
Kenya, Africa | pretrial detention, police corruption |
Mary Ann Glendon. "Knowing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights," Notre Dame Law Review 73 (1998): 1153-1182. |
human rights, Universal Declaration of Human Rights | |
Mary Ann Glendon. A World Made New: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. New York: Random House, 2001. |
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, human rights | |
Mary E. Paddon. “The Inferior Criminal Courts of New York City.” Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology 11, no. 1 (1920): 8-20. |
New York, United States, North America | historical legal systems, uncoordinated court system, legal/judicial reform |
Mary Kimani. "Women Claim Legal Right to Access Land: Seek change in traditional land right practices." Africa Renewal, Special Edition on Women, 2012: 37 |
Africa | widow's rights, women's rights, colonial legacy, customary law, property rights, land rights |
Mary Martin and Taylor Owen. “The Second Generation of Human Security: Lessons from the UN and EU experience.” International Affairs 86, no. 1 (2010): 211-224. |
human security, divergence of narratives between the EU and UN, challenges in establishing a new security paradigm, international peace and security | |
Mary McClymont and Stephen Golub, eds. Many Roads to Justice: The law-related work of Ford Foundation grantees around the world. New York: The Ford Foundation, 2000. |
rule of law, rule of law assistance, bottom-up and civil society initiatives, law and development | |
Mary Robinson. “Making human rights Matter: Eleanor Roosevelt's time has come.” Harvard human rights Journal 16 (2003): 1-11. |
human rights education, human security, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, sustainable development, good/weak governance | |
Massoud Karshenas. "Global Poverty: New National Accounts Consistent Estimates based on 2005 Purchasing Power Parity Exchange Rates, with extension to the Least Developed Countries poverty trends." United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) Background Paper no. 8, 2010. |
measuring poverty, global poverty trends | |
Maurits Barendrecht and Patricia van Nispen. “Microjustice.” Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC) Discussion Paper No. 2008-010, 2008. |
rule of law, public v private justice, justice for the poor, justice as a market, justice and supply and demand, aid organizations incentivizing justice for the poor | |
Mayra Buvini_ and Andrew Morrison. "Technical Note 4: Violence as an Obstacle to Development." Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank, 1999. Web. Available online at http://idbdocs.iadb.org/wsdocs/getdocument.aspx?docnum=362887 |
violence and economic development, violence as a deterrent for foreign/domestic investment, impact of violence on education investment/attainment, domestic violence, social violence | |
Medicines Sans Frontieres. “Sexual Violence." Web. Available online at http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news/issue_print.cfm?id=3466 |
sexual violence, aftercare for sexual violence, raising awareness of sexual violence, access to social and legal support | |
Meghana Shah. “Rights under Fire: The Inadequacy of International human rights Instruments in Combating Dowry Murder in India.” Connecticut Journal of International Law 19 (2003): 209-229. |
dowry-violence, gender-based violence, violence against women, human rights violations | |
Michael A. Samway. “Access to Justice: A Study of Legal Assistance Programs for the Poor in Santiago, Chile.” Duke Journal of Comparative and International Law 6 (Summer 1996): 347-370. |
Chile, South America, Latin America | public legal assistance programs, access to justice, legal system and the poor, legal system and economic development, legal reform |
Michael Brzoska and Peter J. Croll. “Promoting Security: But how and for whom?” Bonn, DE: Bonn International Center for Conversion, 2004. |
security sector reform, security policy, post-conflict reconstruction work | |
Michael D. McGinnis. "Strategizing for the Lord and for Self-Governance: What IGOs and NGOs can learn from the missionary experience of the indigenization of African Christianity." Paper presented at the 47th Annual Convention of the International Studies Association, San Diego, CA, March 22-25, 2006. |
peacebuilding, missionaries, lessons from the field, local context, local culture, legal pluralism, public entrepreneurship, democracy | |
Michael J. Harrison. “Can Corrupt Countries Attract Foreign Direct Investment? A Comparison Of FDI Inflows Between Corrupt And Non-Corrupt Countries.” International Business and Economics Research Journal 2, no. 9 (2003): 93-100. |
impact of corruption on development, relationship between corruption and development, corruption as a taxon FDI, foreign direct investment | |
Michael J. Trebilcock and Ronald J. Daniels. Rule of Law Reform and Development: Charting the Fragile Path of Progress. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2008. |
rule of law, law reform, relationship between development and law reform, access to justice, justice reform in developing countries | |
Michael Moss. "How Iraq Police Reform Became Casualty of War." The New York Times. May 22, 2006. |
Iraq, Middle East | police, police reform, police corruption |
Michael R. Anderson. Access to Justice and Legal Process: Making legal institutions responsive to poor people in LDCs. Brighton, UK: University of Sussex, Institute of Development Studies, 2003. Web. Available online at http://www.ids.ac.uk/files/dmfile/Wp178.pdf |
rule of law, predatory violence of poor, disproportionate effect of violence on the poor, political accountability | |
Michael R. Pahl. “Wanted: Criminal Justice – Colombia’s adoption of a prosecutorial system of criminal procedure.” Fordham International Law Journal 16, no. 3 (1993): 608-634. |
Colombia, South America, Latin America | historical change, criminal procedure, development of criminal procedure, law enforcement, criminal justice procedure |
Michael Shifter. Countering Criminal Violence in Central America. New York: Council on Foreign Relations (2012). Web. Available online at http://www.cfr.org/central-america/countering-criminal-violence-central-... |
Central America, Latin America | criminal violence, everyday violence, common crime, organized crime, human trafficking, human insecurity |
Michael Weissenstein. “Mexico Drug War: Common Crime Rates Rise.” Huffington Post, October 20, 2012 . Web. Available online at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/20/mexico-drug-war_n_1992497#... |
Mexico, North America | drug trafficking, violent crime, human security, street crime, everyday violence |