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HAMMOND, ANDREW (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   183521


Bringing the ‘social’ in from the cold: towards a social history of American intelligence / Moran, Christopher Richard; Hammond, Andrew   Journal Article
Hammond, Andrew Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The subject of American intelligence has traditionally been studied by people who would identify themselves as diplomatic historians, International Relations scholars, or a combination of both. As a result, the history of American intelligence is a rather ‘top down’ history. It is a history of Beltway politics, NSC meetings, and the private interactions between intelligence chiefs and policymakers. It is the history of major operations rather than of the everyday. It is a history of landmark documents rather than the workaday. Yet, the history of American intelligence is also the history of social relationships, social structures, and social hierarchies. The aim of this article, as an Introduction to the following Special Issue, is to sketch what a ‘social’ history of American intelligence would look like. In short, this article asks: how would a social historian write the history of American intelligence?
Key Words American Intelligence 
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2
ID:   154657


Salafi thought in Turkish public discourse since 1980 / Hammond, Andrew   Journal Article
Hammond, Andrew Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Turkey has been absent from the growing literature on the phenomenon of transnational Salafism. A tendency among Middle East specialists to focus on Arab regions and in Turkey on the Islamist movement and its long struggle with the Kemalist establishment has perpetuated the notion of Turkey as a category apart. This article argues that, on the contrary, Salafism is a fringe strand of Turkish Islam that began to evolve in the context of the state's effort in the 1980s to recalibrate religion as a complement to nationalism. Salafism became a topic of discussion in media and scholarly writing in Turkish religious studies faculties, while self-styled Salafi preachers trained in Saudi Arabia found a niche through publishing houses. These publishers facilitated the translation into Turkish of Arabic texts by important Saudi religious scholars in an effort to change the discursive landscape of Islam in Turkey. I show that contra assumptions of a rich Sufi tradition acting as a block against modern Salafi ideas, Salafism managed to gain a foothold in Turkey, facilitated in part by the republic's experience of secular materialism.
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3
ID:   078397


What the Arabs think of America / Hammond, Andrew 2007  Book
Hammond, Andrew Book
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Publication Oxford, Greenwood World Publishing, 2007.
Description x, 246p.
Standard Number 9781846450006
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
052547303.482174927073/HAM 052547MainOn ShelfGeneral