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Continues Far Eastern Quarterly (1941 - 1956)
Title history
  • No longer published by Cambridge University Press
  • ISSN: 0021-9118 (Print), 1752-0401 (Online)
Published for the Association for Asian Studies
The Journal of Asian Studies (JAS) has played a defining role in the field of Asian studies for over 75 years. JAS publishes the very best empirical and multidisciplinary work on Asia, spanning the arts, history, literature, the social sciences, and cultural studies. Experts around the world turn to this quarterly journal for the latest in-depth scholarship on Asia's past and present, for its extensive book reviews, and for its state-of-the-field essays on established and emerging topics. With coverage reaching from South and Southeast Asia to China, Inner Asia, and Northeast Asia, JAS welcomes broad comparative and transnational studies as well as essays emanating from fine-grained historical, cultural, political, and literary research. The journal also publishes clusters of papers that present new and vibrant discussions on specific themes and issues.

Area Studies « Cambridge Core Blog

Fifteen Eighty Four | Cambridge University Press

  • Can Governments Trust Their Citizens? The Paradox of Voluntary Compliance
  • 20 October 2025, Yuval Feldman
  • Every policymaker knows the dilemma: should governments trust people to do the right thing, or make sure they do it? The safer option has usually been enforcement. The post Can Governments Trust Their Citizens? The Paradox of Voluntary Compliance first appeared on https://www.cambridgeblog.org/dating-whatsapp-numbers/....
  • Imagination and Thinking Well
  • 20 October 2025, Eleanor Helms
  • Section 1: What are Thought Experiments For? Thomas Kuhn famously asked how it was possible for thought experiments to lead to new scientific knowledge The post Imagination and Thinking Well first appeared on https://www.cambridgeblog.org/dating-whatsapp-numbers/....
  • Reassessing the Peloponnesian War
  • 17 October 2025, Samuel Gartland, Robin Osborne
  • In the early summer of 431 BCE, villages and farms in Attica were abandoned as people moved into Athens. They were fleeing the advance of one of the largest The post free dating sites in germany without payment first appeared on https://www.cambridgeblog.org/dating-whatsapp-numbers/....