Paul Collier's
Bottom Billion Wins CFR's
2008 Arthur Ross Book Award
May 9, 2007— The
Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries Are Failing and What Can Be Done About
It (Oxford University Press), by
Paul Collier, professor of economics and
director of the Center for the Study of African Economies at Oxford University,
has won the Council's seventh annual Arthur Ross Book Award for the best
book published on international affairs. Collier will receive $30,000 and be
honored at the Council this June.
"Paul Collier
explains why the world's poorest fifty countries are failing and why traditional
development programs haven't lifted them up. His innovative recommendations make
The Bottom Billion an indispensable new tool in alleviating poverty,"
said Foreign Affairs Editor James F. Hoge, who chaired the
selection committee.
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Treacherous Alliance
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The silver medal and a prize of $15,000 have been
awarded to National Iranian American Council president
Trita Parsi for
Treacherous Alliance: The Secret Dealings of Israel, Iran, and the United
States (Yale University Press). This unique and important book
takes a closer look at the complicated triangular relations between Israel,
Iran, and the United States that continue to shape the future of the Middle
East.
The jury also awarded an honorable mention and
$7,500 to historian Robert Dallek
for Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power (HarperCollins
Publisher). The expertly researched joint portrait of a pair of outsize leaders
examines the unlikely partnership that dominated the world stage and changed the
course of history.
Additional
shortlist nominees included
Joshua Kurlantzik
for Charm Offensive: How China's
Soft Power is Transforming the World (Yale
University Press), and Melvyn
Leffler for
For the Soul of Mankind: The United States, the
Soviet Union, and the Cold War
(Farrar,
Straus and Giroux).
CFR's Arthur Ross
Book Award is the most significant award for a book on international affairs.
It was endowed by the late Arthur Ross in 2001 to honor nonfiction works, in
English or translation, that merit special attention for: bringing forth new
information that changes our understanding of events or problems; developing
analytical approaches that allow new and different insights into critical
issues; or providing new ideas that help resolve foreign policy problems.
For more information, visit to
www.cfr.org/arba.
Founded in 1921, the
Council on Foreign Relations is an
independent national membership organization and a nonpartisan center for
scholars dedicated to producing and disseminating ideas so that members,
students, interested citizens, and government officials in the United States and
other countries can better understand the world and the foreign policy choices
facing the United States and other governments. The
Council, a national, nonpartisan membership organization, takes no institutional
position on policy issues.
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