Robert D. Burrowes was adjunct professor in the Political Science Department and the Henry M. Jackson School of international Studies (JSIS) at the University of Washington from the beginning of the 1990s until his formal retirement in 2003. He is the author of The Yemen Arab Republic: The Politics of Development, 1962-1986 (1987).
The significantly expanded dictionary provides over 800
cross-referenced entries on important persons, places, and events.
The new edition affords increased attention to foreign affairs,
economic institutions and policies, social issues, religion, and
politics. As with all the volumes in the series, it is an expensive
addition, but it is a valuable source for those libraries that need
such references.
*American Reference Books Annual, May 2010*
This dictionary promises to be an invaluable reference tool. ...
The only work of its kind in English. Essential.
*CHOICE, June 2010*
In this update to his original 1995 edition, Burrowes (Yemen Arab
Republic) expands the book's scope to incorporate events occurring
within the last decade and a half, broadening the number of
definitions to more than 800. Alphabetized, fully cross-referenced
entries run multiple paragraphs in length and profile the figures,
religious concerns, organizations, battles, regions, foreign
policies, and broader concepts that have shaped historical and
contemporary Yemen. The book opens with an informative subject
chronology, dating to 1200 C.E. Recommended for collections
focusing on Middle Eastern studies and cultural anthropology.
*Library Journal*
There is a lot to like about Scarecrow’s various Historical
Dictionaries series. The books are written by experts in the area
or country that is covered. All contain well-written brief
histories of the country and chronologies that, though they cover
historical time periods, heavily feature more recent events. Brief
A–Z entries cover the main people, politics, social issues, foreign
affairs, institutions, and policies that make the country unique.
Extensive bibliographies are divided into several general subject
areas....Yemen is familiar to most Americans. It has been featured
prominently in national news and U.S. foreign policy recently, and
the Historical Dictionary of Yemen should help the curious figure
out some of the intricate tribal relations within the country as
well as provide a better understanding of the unique variety of
Zaydi Shi’a and Shafii Sunni Islam practiced there. In particular,
the entries on the various governmental structures imposed first by
the Ottomans, then by the British, as well as entries on
postindependent nationalism, provide strong background on the
united Yemeni government that exists today. All university
libraries as well as larger public libraries will be well
served.
*Booklist, July 2010*
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