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World Affairs Online
Tiszta beszéd: a magyar irodalom forradalma 1956-ban
In: 1956/2006 - az ötvenedik évfordulón
A kommunista aszketizmus esztétikája: a 20. századi magyar irodalom néhány munkásmozgalom-történeti vonatkozása
In: Opus Új sorozat, 13
Rekonstruált (poszt)jugoszláv valóság – irodalmi térképzetek (Roginer Oszkár: A jugoszláviai magyar irodalom terei: A (poszt)jugoszláv magyar irodalom és a téralapú közösségi identitáskonstrukciók viszonya a sajtóban (1945–2010). Zenta: VMMI, 2019.)
In: Regio: kisebbség, politika, társadalom. [Ungarische Ausgabe], Band 28, Heft 1, S. 253
ISSN: 2415-959X
Magyar Irodalom—Magyar Kultúra. By György Lukács. Edited by Ferenc Fehér and Zoltán Kenyeres. Budapest: Gondolat, 1970. 695 pp. 72 Ft
In: Slavic review: interdisciplinary quarterly of Russian, Eurasian and East European studies, Band 30, Heft 3, S. 688-689
ISSN: 2325-7784
Magyar futball – magyar fátum? Borsi-Kálmán Béla: Pszeudo-fociesszék. Széljegyzetek a futball, a politika és az irodalom határvidékéről. Budapest: L'Harmattan, 2018
In: Regio: kisebbség, politika, társadalom. [Ungarische Ausgabe], Band 27, Heft 3, S. 306
ISSN: 2415-959X
A Szocialista Magyar Irodalom Dokumentumai Az Amerikai Magyar Sajtóban 1920-1945. By Jóssef Kovács. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1977. 439 pp. 100 Ft
In: Slavic review: interdisciplinary quarterly of Russian, Eurasian and East European studies, Band 37, Heft 2, S. 330-331
ISSN: 2325-7784
"Bűneiért bünteti isten a magyar népet": egy bibliai párhuzam vizsgálata a XVI. századi nyomtatott egyházi irodalom alapján
In: Bibliotheca humanitatis historica a Museo Nationali Hungarico digesta [N.S.] 2 = [10]
World Affairs Online
DA-RT and its crises
Critical deliberations concerning the Data Archiving and Research Transparency effort (DA-RT) which had been set in motion within the context of the American Political Science Association's (APSA) Qualitative and Multi-Methods Research (QMMR) Section had, by the Fall of 2015, resulted in multiple conference workshops and panels, email exchanges, webpage and listserv posts, and various Section newsletter publications. Most of these seemed to come from Comparative Government and International Relations (IR) scholars, who are the mainstays of the QMMR Section. Researchers in other subfields of political science—notably, public policy, public administration, public law, and political theory—were less often heard from among those deliberations. And so Peri Schwartz-Shea and I, both of us working in the first two of those subfields, convened a roundtable at the 2016 Western Political Science Association (WPSA) meeting, "Engaging DA-RT: Critical Assessments from Public Policy and Political Theory," to address this gap. The essays in this symposium—by Renee Cramer (Drake University), Samantha Majic (John Jay College, CUNY), Amy Cabrera Rasmussen (California State UniversityLong Beach), Peregrine Schwartz-Shea (University of Utah), and Nancy J. Hirschmann (University of Pennsylvania), ordered by appearance here—were developed from those roundtable presentations. (Amy T. Linch [Pennsylvania State University] was also a member of the roundtable, but she has not joined in this written compendium.) As panel chair, I set the stage for the discussion; and it is those comments that I present here, expanded to situate DA-RT in its contemporary context.
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