The Maxwell Review
An Interdisciplinary Journal of Scholarship and Ideas

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SPRING 2002 EDITION
We welcome the reader to the 10th anniversary issue of the reborn Maxwell Review. In 2002, we have much to celebrate. We received over thirty manuscripts, setting a record. Despite shattering records we also broke a tradition: unlike previous years there are more articles in this issue that represent the interdisciplinary character of the Maxwell School. In addition to Public Administration and International Relations, the fields of Anthropology, Geography, and Political Science are represented. The Review also published articles on contemporary issues in more than six countries, representing Maxwell's global perspective.

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Does Corporate Governance Matter for Developing Countries? An Overview of the Mexican Case
Paula Acosta-Márquez, Public Administration

Privacy and Information Security: International Coordination Efforts and the OECD
Jason Bakelar, Public Administration

Township and Village Enterprises of China
Vikas Choudhary, Anthropology

Beyond Triangular Diplomacy: Nixon's Other China Initiative
John Compton, International Relations

Europe and the Regions: A Space fore Autonomy
Anna Dolmatch, Geography

Overproduction, soil Degradation, and Agro-industrialization: Tobacco Farming in the Black Patch, 1880-1945
Jamey Essex, Geography

The Challenge for Peace in Mindanao: Counter-insurgency Policies of the Estrada and Arroyo Governments for Southern Philippines
Catherine Denni R. Jayme, Public Administration and International Relations

Do Transitions Have To Be Corrupt? A Case Study of Slovakia
Leila Mamedova, Public Administration

Microfinance in South Africa
Sharif Roman Nankoe, Public Administration and International Relations

Freedom is an "Innate" Desire: Chechens and the Russian Federation
Svetlana Peshkova, Anthropology

Understanding the Relationship Between Interest Groups and Political Parties: The Case of Small Business and the Republican Party
McGee Young, Political Science