1.
Said, E. W. Orientalism. vol. Modern classics (Penguin Books, 2003).
2.
Jean-Louis Cohen. Architectural History and the Colonial Question: Casablanca, Algiers and Beyond. Architectural History 49, 349–372 (2006).
3.
Graber, O. Orientalism: an exchange. The New York review of books 29:13, (1982).
4.
Lewis, B. The Question of Orientalism. The New York Review of Books (1982).
5.
Kramer, M. Ivory Towers on Sand Middle Eastern Studies in America - The Failure of Middle Eastern Studies in America - The Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
6.
Lewis, B. The Question of Orientalism. The New York review of books (1982).
7.
Chrisman, L. & Williams, P. Colonial discourse and post-colonial theory: a reader. (Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1993).
8.
Porterfield, T. B. The allure of empire: art in the service of French imperialism, 1798-1836. (Princeton University Press, 1998).
9.
Prochaska, D. Art of colonialism, colonialism of art: the Description de l’Egypte (1809-1829). L’Esprit créateur 34, 69–91 (1994).
10.
Lorcin, P. M. E. Algeria & France, 1800-2000: identity, memory, nostalgia. vol. Modern intellectual and political history of the Middle East (Syracuse University Press, 2006).
11.
Abun-Nasr, J. M. A history of the Maghrib in the Islamic period. (Cambridge University Press, 1987).
12.
Ageron, C. R. & Brett, M. Modern Algeria: a history from 1830 to the present. (Hurst & Co, 1991).
13.
Joffé, E. G. H. North Africa: nation, state, and region. vol. Routledge/SOAS series on contemporary politics and culture in the Middle East (Routledge, 1993).
14.
The Maghrib in Question: Essays in History and Historiography. (University of Texas Press, 2010).
15.
Clancy-Smith, J. A. & American Council of Learned Societies. Rebel and saint: Muslim notables, populist protest, colonial encounters (Algeria and Tunisia, 1800-1904). vol. Comparative studies on Muslim societies (University of California Press, 1994).
16.
Clancy-Smith, J. A. Mediterraneans: North Africa and Europe in an age of migration, c. 1800-1900. vol. The California world history library (University of California Press, 2011).
17.
Gallois, W. A history of violence in the early Algerian colony. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).
18.
Hunter, F. R. Rethinking Europe’s conquest of North Africa and the Middle East: the opening of the Maghreb, 1660–1814. The Journal of North African Studies 4, 1–26 (1999).
19.
ʻArawī, ʻAbd Allāh & American Council of Learned Societies. The history of the Maghrib: an interpretive essay. vol. History e-book project (Princeton University Press, 1977).
20.
Raymond, A. French Studies of the Ottoman Empire’s Arab Provinces. Mediterranean Historical Review 19, 54–72 (2004).
21.
Ruedy, J. Modern Algeria: the origins and development of a nation. (Indiana University Press, 2005).
22.
Renan, E. What is a nation? (Qu’est-ce qu’une nation?). http://web.archive.org/web/20110827065548/http://www.cooper.edu/humanities/core/hss3/e_renan.html (1882).
23.
Weiss, G. L. Captives and corsairs: France and slavery in the early modern Mediterranean. (Stanford University Press, 2011).
24.
Weiss, G. Barbary Captivity and the French Idea of Freedom. French Historical Studies 28, 231–264 (2005).
25.
Weiss, G. Imagining Europe through Barbary captivity. Taiwan Journal of East Asian Studies 4, 49–67 (2007).
26.
Valensi, L. On the eve of colonialism: North Africa before the French conquest. (Africana Publishing Company, 1977).
27.
Brown, L. C. & Gordon, M. S. Franco-Arab encounters: studies in memory of David C.Gordon. (American University of Beirut, 1996).
28.
Ageron, C. R. & Brett, M. Modern Algeria: a history from 1830 to the present. (Hurst & Co, 1991).
29.
Buheiry, M. R. & Conrad, L. I. The formation and perception of the modern Arab world: studies. (Darwin Press, 1989).
30.
Davis, D. K. Resurrecting the granary of Rome: environmental history and French colonial expansion in North Africa. (Ohio University Press, 2007).
31.
Falls, N. The conquest of Algiers: Nigel Falls describes how France became caught up in an unexpectedly complicated imperial adventure in 1830. History Today 55,.
32.
Gill, H. Hegemony and Ambiguity: Discourses, Counter-discourses and Hidden Meanings in French Depictions of the Conquest and Settlement of Algeria. Modern & Contemporary France 14, 157–172 (2006).
33.
Greenhalgh, M. The New Centurions: French Reliance on the Roman Past During the Conquest of Algeria. War & Society 16, 1–28 (1998).
34.
Lorcin, P. M. E. Imperial identities: stereotyping, prejudice and race in colonial Algeria. vol. Society and culture in the modern Middle East (I.B. Tauris, 1995).
35.
Redouane, Joelle. British attitude to the French conquest of Algeria, 1830-71. Maghreb Review 15, 2–15.
36.
Ruedy, J. Modern Algeria: the origins and development of a nation. (Indiana University Press, 2005).
37.
Pitts, J. A turn to empire: the rise of imperial liberalism in Britain and France. (Princeton University Press, 2005).
38.
Sessions, J. E. By sword and plow: France and the conquest of Algeria. (Cornell University Press, 2014).
39.
Thomson, Ann. Arguments For the Conquest of Algiers in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries. Maghreb Review 14, 108–118.
40.
Tocqueville, A. de & Pitts, J. Tocqueville, Alexis de. Writings on Empire and Slavery. Trans. Jennifer Pitts (2001), Introduction & Essay on Algeria, Oct. 1841. (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001).
41.
Trumbull, G. R. An empire of facts: colonial power, cultural knowledge, and Islam in Algeria, 1870-1914. (Cambridge University Press, 2009).
42.
Veugelers, J. W. P. Tocqueville on the conquest and colonization of Algeria. Journal of Classical Sociology 10, 339–355 (2010).
43.
Welch, C. B. Colonial Violence and the Rhetoric of Evasion: Tocqueville on Algeria. Political Theory 31, 235–264 (2003).
44.
Achrati, N. Following the Leader: A History and Evolution of the Amir ‘Abd al-Qadir al-Jazairi as Symbol. The Journal of North African Studies 12, 139–152 (2007).
45.
Amira K. Bennison. ʿAbd al-Qādir’s Jihād in the Light of the Western Islamic Jihād Tradition. Studia Islamica 106, 196–213 (2011).
46.
Bennison, Amira K. The 1847 Revolt of ’Abd al-Qadir and the Algerians Against Mawlay ’Abd al-Rahman, Sultan of Morocco. Maghreb Review 22, 109–123.
47.
Chamyl Boutaleb. Heroes and Villains: an Algerian Review of Tocqueville and Emir Abd al-Qadir. Review of Middle East Studies 45, 44–49 (2011).
48.
Brower, B. C. & Ebooks Corporation Limited. A desert named peace: the violence of France’s empire in the Algerian Sahara, 1844-1902. vol. History and society of the modern Middle East (Columbia University Press, 2009).
49.
Clancy-Smith, J. A. & American Council of Learned Societies. Rebel and saint: Muslim notables, populist protest, colonial encounters (Algeria and Tunisia, 1800-1904). vol. Comparative studies on Muslim societies (University of California Press, 1994).
50.
Danziger, R. Abd al-Qadir and the Algerians: resistance to the French and internal consolidation. (Homes & Meier Publishers, 1977).
51.
Danziger, Raphael. From Alliance to Belligerency: Abd Al-Qadir in Morocco, 1843-1847. Part Two. Maghreb Review 5, 63–73.
52.
Gallois, W. A history of violence in the early Algerian colony. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).
53.
Hannoum, A. Colonialism and knowledge in Algeria: The archives of the Arab bureau. History and Anthropology 12, 343–379 (2001).
54.
Hannoum, A. Colonialism and knowledge in Algeria: The archives of the Arab bureau. History and Anthropology 12, 343–379 (2001).
55.
Hannoum, A. Violent modernity: France in Algeria. vol. Harvard Middle Eastern monographs (Harvard University Press, 2010).
56.
Heggoy, A. A. Looking back: the military and colonial policies in French Algeria. The Muslim World 73, 57–66 (1983).
57.
Imamuddin, S. M. The French occupation of Algeria and the national risings of the nineteenth century. The Islamic review 48, 26–31 (1960).
58.
Kemper, M. The Changing Images of Jihad Leaders: Shamil and Abd al-Qadir in Daghestani and Algerian Historical Writing. Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions 11, 28–58 (2007).
59.
Perkins, K. P. Pressure and persuasion in the policies of the French military in colonial North Africa. Military Affairs 40,.
60.
Rid, T. Razzia: A Turning Point in Modern Strategy. Terrorism and Political Violence 21, 617–635 (2009).
61.
Sessions, J. E. By sword and plow: France and the conquest of Algeria. (Cornell University Press, 2014).
62.
Abi-Mershed, O. Apostles of modernity: Saint-Simonians and the civilizing mission in Algeria. (Stanford University Press, 2010).
63.
Calhoun, C. Pierre Bourdieu and Social Transformation: Lessons from Algeria. Development and Change 37, 1403–1415 (2006).
64.
Delnore, A. J. Empire by Example? Deportees in France and Algeria and the Re-Making of a Modern Empire, 1846-1854. French Politics, Culture & Society 33, (2015).
65.
Davis, D. K. Resurrecting the granary of Rome: environmental history and French colonial expansion in North Africa. (Ohio University Press, 2007).
66.
Mikhail, A. Water on sand: environmental histories of the Middle East and North Africa. (Oxford University Press, 2013).
67.
Stacey Renee Davis. Turning French Convicts into Colonists: The Second Empire’s Political Prisoners in Algeria, 1852-1858. French Colonial History 2, 93–113 (2002).
68.
Drew, A. We are no longer in France: communists in colonial Algeria. (Manchester University Press, 2014).
69.
Heffernan, M. J. The Parisian Poor and the Colonization of Algeria during the Second Republic, French History 3:4 (1989). French History 3, 377–403 (1989).
70.
Settler colonialism in the twentieth century: projects, practices, legacies. (Routledge, 2005).
71.
Mikdashi, M. What Is Settler Colonialism? (for Leo Delano Ames Jr.). American Indian Culture and Research Journal 37, 23–34 (2013).
72.
Mamdani, M. Settler Colonialism: Then and Now. Critical Inquiry 41, 596–614 (2015).
73.
Prochaska, D. Approaches to the economy of colonial Annaba, 1870-1920. Africa 60,.
74.
Prochaska, D. Fourierism and the colonization of Algeria: L’Union agricole d’Afrique, 1846-1853. Proceedings of the Western Society for French History 1, 283–302 (1974).
75.
Prochaska, D. Making Algeria French: colonialism in Bône, 1870-1920. (Cambridge University Press, 1990).
76.
Sessions, J. E. By sword and plow: France and the conquest of Algeria. (Cornell University Press, 2014).
77.
Veracini, L. Settler colonialism: a theoretical overview. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
78.
Wolfe, P. Settler colonialism and the elimination of the native. Journal of Genocide Research 8, 387–409 (2006).
79.
Abdallah Zouache. Socialism, Liberalism and Inequality: The Colonial Economics of the Saint-Simonians in 19th-century Algeria. Review of Social Economy 67, 431–456 (2009).
80.
Cooke, J. J. Eugène Etienne and the emergence of colon dominance in Algeria, 1884-1905. The Muslim World 65, 39–53 (1975).
81.
Effros, B. Museum-building in nineteenth-century Algeria. Journal of the History of Collections 28, 243–259 (2016).
82.
Gosnell, J. K. The politics of Frenchness in Colonial Algeria, 1930-1954. vol. Rochester studies in African history and the diaspora (University of Rochester Press, 2002).
83.
Lorcin, P. M. E. Rome and France in Africa: recovering colonial Algeria’s Latin past. French Historical Studies 25, 295–329 (2002).
84.
Pichot, M. Educational policies of the French Third Republic (1870-1939) in the village of Guiard, Algeria: hostility of the French settlers and cultural resistance of the indigenous Muslims. Michigan academician 31, 509–517 (1999).
85.
Prochaska, D. The political culture of settler colonialism in Algeria : politics in Bone (1870-1920). Revue de l’Occident musulman et de la Méditerranée 48, 293–311 (1988).
86.
Prochaska, D. History as Literature, Literature as History: Cagayous of Algiers. The American Historical Review 101, (1996).
87.
Prochaska, D. Making Algeria French: colonialism in Bône, 1870-1920. (Cambridge University Press, 1990).
88.
Prochaska, D. Making Algeria French and Unmaking French Algeria. Journal of Historical Sociology 3, 305–328 (1990).
89.
Prochaska, D. The archive of algérie imaginaire. History and Anthropology 4, 373–420 (1990).
90.
L’Algerie devenue francaise: The Naturalization of Non-French Colonists in French Algeria, 1830-1849. Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Western Society for French History 30, 165–177 (2002).
91.
Emanuel Sivan. Colonialism and Popular Culture in Algeria. Journal of Contemporary History 14, 21–53 (1979).
92.
Smith, A. L. Citizenship in the Colony: Naturalization law and legal assimilation in 19th century Algeria. Political and Legal Anthropology Review 19, 33–50 (1996).
93.
Weil, P. How to be French: nationality in the making since 1789. (Duke University Press, 2008).
94.
Lizabeth Zack. French and Algerian Identity Formation in 1890s Algiers. French Colonial History 2, 115–143 (2002).
95.
Abi-Mershed, O. Apostles of modernity: Saint-Simonians and the civilizing mission in Algeria. (Stanford University Press, 2010).
96.
Bourdieu, Pierre. The Algerians, trans. Alan C.M. Ross (1962).
97.
Michael Brett. Legislating for Inequality in Algeria: The Senatus-Consulte of 14 July 1865. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London 51, 440–461 (1988).
98.
Clancy-Smith, J. A. & American Council of Learned Societies. Rebel and saint: Muslim notables, populist protest, colonial encounters (Algeria and Tunisia, 1800-1904). vol. Comparative studies on Muslim societies (University of California Press, 1994).
99.
Christelow, A. Algerians without borders: the making of a global frontier society. (University Press of Florida, 2012).
100.
Gallois, W. Local Responses to French Medical Imperialism in Late Nineteenth-Century Algeria. Social History of Medicine 20, 315–331 (2007).
101.
Gray, W. French Algerian policy during the second empire. Proceedings of the Western Society for French History 3, 477–489 (1976).
102.
Hannoum, A. The Historiographic State: How Algeria Once Became French. History and Anthropology 19, 91–114 (2008).
103.
Hannoum, A. Violent Modernity: France in Algeria. vol. Harvard Middle Eastern monographs (Harvard University Press, 2010).
104.
Marnia Lazreg. The Reproduction of Colonial Ideology: The Case of the Kabyle Berbers. Arab Studies Quarterly 5, 380–395 (1983).
105.
Lorcin, P. M. E. Imperial identities: stereotyping, prejudice and race in colonial Algeria. vol. Society and culture in the modern Middle East (I.B. Tauris, 1995).
106.
Patricia M. E. Lorcin. Imperialism, Colonial Identity, and Race in Algeria, 1830-1870: The Role of the French Medical Corps. Isis 90, 653–679 (1999).
107.
Pichot, M. Educational policies of the French Third Republic (1870-1939) in the village of Guiard, Algeria: hostility of the French settlers and cultural resistance of the indigenous Muslims. Michigan academician 31, 509–517 (1999).
108.
Sessions, J. E. By sword and plow: France and the conquest of Algeria. (Cornell University Press, 2014).
109.
Von Sivers, Peter. Indigenous Administrators in Algeria, 1846-1914: Manipulation and Manipulators. Maghreb Review 7, 116–121.
110.
Taithe, B. Algerian Orphans and Colonial Christianity in Algeria, 1866-1939. French History 20, 240–259 (2006).
111.
Trumbull, G. R. An empire of facts: colonial power, cultural knowledge, and Islam in Algeria, 1870-1914. (Cambridge University Press, 2009).
112.
Clancy-Smith, J. A. & Gouda, F. Domesticating the empire: race, gender, and family life in French and Dutch colonialism 1830-1962. (University Press of Virginia, 1998).
113.
Clancy-Smith, J. A. & Gouda, F. Domesticating the Empire: Race, Gender and Family Life in French and Dutch Colonialisms (eds) Julia Clancy-Smith & Frances Gouda (1998). (University Press of Virginia, 1998).
114.
Chaudhuri, N., Strobel, M., & American Council of Learned Societies. Western women and imperialism: complicity and resistance. (Indiana University Press, 1992).
115.
Sonbol, A. E. A. & American Council of Learned Societies. Women, the family, and divorce laws in Islamic history. vol. Contemporary issues in the Middle East (Syracuse University Press, 1996).
116.
Matthee, R. P., Baron, B. & Keddie, N. R. Iran and beyond: essays in Middle Eastern history in honor of Nikki R. Keddie. (Mazda Publishers, 2000).
117.
Middle East historiographies: narrating the twentieth century. (University of Washington Press, 2006).
118.
Gordon, D. C. Women of Algeria: an essay on change. vol. Harvard Middle Eastern monographs (Harvard University Press for Center for Middle Eastern Studies of Harvard University, 1972).
119.
Khanna, R. Algeria cuts: women and representation, 1830 to the present. (Stanford University Press, 2008).
120.
Khanna, R. Algeria cuts: women and representation, 1830 to the present. (Stanford University Press, 2008).
121.
Kimble, S. L. Emancipation through Secularization: French Feminist Views of Muslim Women’s Condition in Interwar Algeria. French Colonial History 7, 109–128 (2006).
122.
Lazreg, M. The eloquence of silence: Algerian women in question. (Routledge, 2018).
123.
Lorcin, P. Mediating Gender, Mediating Race: Women Writers in Colonial Algeria. Culture, Theory and Critique 45, 45–61 (2004).
124.
Ebooks Corporation Limited. The color of liberty: histories of race in France. (Duke University Press, 2003).
125.
Rice, L. ‘Nomad Thought’: Isabelle Eberhardt and the Colonial Project. Cultural Critique (1990) doi:10.2307/1354143.
126.
Rogers, R. A Frenchwoman’s imperial story: Madame Luce in nineteenth-century Algieria. (Stanford University Press, 2013).
127.
Lorcin, P. M. E. Algeria & France, 1800-2000: identity, memory, nostalgia. vol. Modern intellectual and political history of the Middle East (Syracuse University Press, 2006).
128.
Trumbull, G. R. An empire of facts: colonial power, cultural knowledge, and Islam in Algeria, 1870-1914. (Cambridge University Press, 2009).
129.
Mendelsohn, E. Jews and the state: dangerous alliances and the perils of privilege. (Oxford University Press, 2003).
130.
Cole, J. Constantine before the riots of August 1934: civil status, anti-Semitism, and the politics of assimilation in interwar French Algeria. The Journal of North African Studies 17, 839–861 (2012).
131.
Kalman, S. French colonial fascism: The extreme right in Algeria, 1919-1939. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).
132.
Katz, E. Between emancipation and persecution: Algerian Jewish memory in the                              (1930–1970). The Journal of North African Studies 17, 793–820 (2012).
133.
Katz, E. The burdens of brotherhood: Jews and Muslims from North Africa to France. (Harvard University Press, 2015).
134.
Michael M. Laskier. Aspects of the Activities of the Alliance Israélite Universelle in the Jewish Communities of the Middle East and North Africa: 1860-1918. Modern Judaism 3, 147–171 (1983).
135.
Lisa Moses Leff. Jews, Liberals and the Civilizing Mission in Nineteenth-Century France. Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques 32, 105–128 (2006).
136.
Roberts, S. B. Anti-Semitism and municipal government in interwar French colonial Algeria. The Journal of North African Studies 17, 821–837 (2012).
137.
Shurkin, M. French Liberal Governance and the Emancipation of Algeria’s Jews. French Historical Studies 33, 259–280 (2010).
138.
Schreier, J. Arabs of the Jewish faith: the civilizing mission in colonial Algeria. vol. Jewish cultures of the world (Rutgers University Press, 2010).
139.
Schreier, J. Napoleon’s Long Shadow: Morality, Civilization, and Jews in France and Algeria, 1808-1870. French Historical Studies 30, 77–103 (2007).
140.
Stein, S. A. Saharan Jews and the fate of French Algeria. (The University of Chicago Press, 2014).
141.
Stein, S. A. Dividing south from north: French colonialism, Jews, and the Algerian Sahara. The Journal of North African Studies 17, 773–792 (2012).
142.
Reinharz, J. Living with Antisemitism: Modern Jewish Responses (ed.) Jehuda Reinharz (1987), pp. 349-66. vol. The Tauber Institute for the Study of European Jewry series (Published for Brandeis University Press by University Press of New England, 1987).
143.
Anny Wynchank. Consequences of French Colonization for North African Jews: The Division of a Cohesive Minority. French Colonial History 2, 145–157 (2002).
144.
Murphy, J. P. Baguettes, Berets and Burning Cars: The 2005 Riots and the Question of Race in Contemporary France. French Cultural Studies 22, (2011).
145.
Bayles, J. Gendered Configurations of Colonial and Metropolitan Space in ‘Pépé le Moko’. Australian Journal of French Studies 36,.
146.
Çelik, Z., Clancy-Smith, J. A., Terpak, F., & Getty Research Institute. Walls of Algiers: narratives of the city through text and image. (Getty Research Institute, 2009).
147.
Janice Morgan. In the Labyrinth: Masculine Subjectivity, Expatriation, and Colonialism in Pépé le Moko. The French Review 67, 637–647 (1994).
148.
O’Shaughnessy, M. Pepe le Moko or the impossibility of being French in the 1930s. French Cultural Studies 7, 247–258 (1996).
149.
Loukides, P. & Fuller, L. K. Beyond the stars: stock characters in American popular film. vol. Beyond the stars : studies in American popular film (Bowling Green State Univ. Popular Press, 1990).
150.
Beaulieu, J. & Roberts, M. Orientalism’s interlocutors: painting, architecture, photography. (Duke University Press, 2002).
151.
Benchérif, O. The image of Algeria in Anglo-American writings. (University Press of America, 1997).
152.
Boer, I. E. & Bal, M. Disorienting vision: rereading stereotypes in French orientalist texts and images. vol. Genus--gender in modern culture (Rodopi, 2004).
153.
Chafer, T. & Sackur, A. Promoting the colonial idea: propaganda and visions of empire in France. (Palgrave, 2002).
154.
Evans, M. Empire and culture: the French experience, 1830-1940. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004).
155.
Heggoy, Alf Andrew ; Miller, Aurie H. ; Cooke, J. J. Through Foreign Eyes: Western Attitudes Toward North Africa. (University Press of America, 1982).
156.
Alf Andrew Heggoy. The French conquest of Algiers, 1830. (Ohio University Center for International Studies, Africa Studies Program, 1986).
157.
Julien, C. A. & Le Tourneau, R. History of North Africa: Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, from the Arab Conquest to 1830. (Routledge & K. Paul, 1970).
158.
Adamson, K. Political and economic thought and practice in nineteenth-century France and the colonization of Algeria. vol. Studies in French civilization (Edwin Mellen Press, 2002).
159.
Bennison, A. K. Jihad and its interpretations in pre-colonial Morocco: state-society relations during the French conquest of Algeria. (Routledge, 2015).
160.
Goldstein, A. & Lubin, A. Settler colonialism. (Duke University Press, 2008).
161.
Christelow, A. Muslim law courts and the French colonial state in Algeria. vol. Princeton legacy library (Princeton University Press, 2014).
162.
Hoffman, K. E. & Miller, S. G. Berbers and others: beyond tribe and nation in the Maghrib. vol. Public cultures of the Middle East and North Africa (Indiana University Press, 2010).
163.
Hart, U. K. Two ladies of colonial Algeria: the lives and times of Aure+ѓlie Picard and Isabelle Eberhardt. vol. Monographs in international studies. African series (Ohio University Center for International Studies, 1987).
164.
Lorcin, P. M. E. Historicizing Colonial Nostalgia. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2011).
165.
Stoler, A. L. Carnal knowledge and imperial power: race and the intimate in colonial rule. (University of California Press, 2010).
166.
Bahloul, J. The architecture of memory: a Jewish-Muslim household in colonial Algeria, 1937-1962. vol. Cambridge studies in social and cultural anthropology (Cambridge University Press, 2003).
167.
Colonialism and the Jews. vol. The modern Jewish experience (Indiana University Press, 2017).
168.
Laskier, M. M. North African jewry in the Twentieth Century: the Jews of Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria. (New York Univ.Press, 1997).
169.
Slavin, D. H. Colonial cinema and imperial France, 1919-1939: white blind spots, male fantasies, settler myths. (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001).
170.
Leon Carl Brown. The Islamic Reformist Movement in North Africa. The Journal of Modern African Studies 2, 55–63 (1964).
171.
Ageron, C. R. & Brett, M. Modern Algeria: a history from 1830 to the present. (C. Hurst & Co. (Publishers) Ltd, 1991).
172.
Christelow, A. Algerians without borders: the making of a global frontier society. (University Press of Florida, 2012).
173.
Allan Christelow. Ritual, Culture and Politics of Islamic Reformism in Algeria. Middle Eastern Studies 23, 255–273 (1987).
174.
Colonna, F. Cultural resistance and religious legitimacy in colonial Algeria. Economy and Society 3, 233–252 (1974).
175.
McDougall, J. Nation, society and culture in North Africa. (Frank Cass, 2003).
176.
James J. Cooke. Tricolour and Crescent: Franco-Muslim relations in Colonial Algeria, 1880-1940. Islamic Studies 29, 57–75 (1990).
177.
Cooke, J. J. The colonial origins of colon and Muslim nationalism in Algeria – 1880-1920. Indian Political Science Review 10, 19–36 (1976).
178.
John Damis. The Free-School Phenomenon: The Cases of Tunisia and Algeria. International Journal of Middle East Studies 5, 434–449 (1974).
179.
Evans, M. & Ebooks Corporation Limited. Algeria: France’s undeclared war. vol. Making of the Modern World (Oxford University Press, 2012).
180.
Gosnell, J. K. The politics of Frenchness in Colonial Algeria, 1930-1954. vol. Rochester studies in African history and the diaspora (University of Rochester Press, 2002).
181.
Keddie, N. R. & ʼAfghānī, J. ʼal-D. An Islamic response to imperialism: political and religious writings of Sayyid Jamāl ad-D̄ın ‘al-Afghānī’. (University of California Press, 1983).
182.
James McDougall. The Secular State’s Islamic Empire: Muslim Spaces and Subjects of Jurisdiction in Paris and Algiers, 1905-1957. Comparative Studies in Society and History 52, 553–580 (2010).
183.
James McDougall. The Shabiba Islamiyya of Algiers: Education, Authority, and Colonial Control, 1921-57. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 24, 147–154 (2005).
184.
McDougall, J. History and the culture of nationalism in Algeria. (Cambridge University Press, 2009).
185.
Naylor, P. C. The Formative Influence of French Colonialism on the Life and Thought of Malek Bennabi (Malik bn Nabi). French Colonial History 7, 129–142 (2006).
186.
John Ruedy. Chérif Benhabylès and Ferhat Abbas: Case Studies in the Contradictions of the ‘Mission civilisatrice’. Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques 28, 185–201 (2002).
187.
Ruedy, J. Modern Algeria: the origins and development of a nation. (Indiana University Press, 2005).
188.
Salah el Din el Zein el Tayeb. The Europeanized Algerians and the Emancipation of Algeria. Middle Eastern Studies 22, 206–235 (1986).
189.
Zack, L. Early origins of Islamic activism in Algeria: The case of Khaled in Post-World War I Algiers. The Journal of North African Studies 11, 205–217 (2006).
190.
Ageron, C. R. & Brett, M. Modern Algeria: a history from 1830 to the present. (C. Hurst & Co. (Publishers) Ltd, 1991).
191.
Ruedy, J. Modern Algeria: the origins and development of a nation. (Indiana University Press, 2005).
192.
Aissaoui, R. ‘Nous Voulons Dechirer Le Baillon Et Briser Nos Chaines’: Racism, Colonialism and Universalism in the Discourse of Algerian Nationalists in France between the Wars. French History 17, 186–209 (2003).
193.
Aissaoui, R. Exile and the Politics of Return and Liberation: Algerian Colonial Workers and Anti-Colonialism in France During the Interwar Period. French History 25, 214–231 (2011).
194.
Aissaoui, R. Algerian nationalists in the French political arena and beyond: the Etoile nord-africaine and the Parti du peuple algérien in interwar France. The Journal of North African Studies 15, 1–12 (2010).
195.
Drew, A. We are no longer in France: communists in colonial Algeria. vol. Studies in imperialism (Manchester University Press, 2014).
196.
Evans, M. & Ebooks Corporation Limited. Algeria: France’s undeclared war. vol. Making of the Modern World (Oxford University Press, 2012).
197.
Goebel, M. Anti-imperial metropolis: interwar Paris and the seeds of Third World nationalism. vol. Global and international history (Cambridge University Press, 2015).
198.
Kalman, S. French colonial fascism: The extreme right in Algeria, 1919-1939. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).
199.
The French right between the wars: political and intellectual movements from conservatism to fascism. (Berghahn Books, 2014).
200.
Lambelet, A. Back to the Future: Politics, Propaganda and the Centennial of the Conquest of Algeria. French History and Civilization.
201.
Majumdar, M. Algerian Nationalism and the Popular Front (Interview).
202.
Thomas, M. The French empire between the wars: imperialism, politics and society. vol. Studies in imperialism (Manchester, England) (Manchester University Press, 2005).
203.
Chafer, T. & Sackur, A. French colonial empire and the Popular Front: hope and disillusion. (St. Martin’s Press, 1999).
204.
Ageron, C. R. & Brett, M. Modern Algeria: a history from 1830 to the present. (C. Hurst & Co. (Publishers) Ltd, 1991).
205.
The Maghrib in Question: Essays in History and Historiography. (University of Texas Press, 2010).
206.
Evans, M. & Ebooks Corporation Limited. Algeria: France’s undeclared war. vol. Making of the Modern World (Oxford University Press, 2012).
207.
Kedward, H. R. & Wood, N. The Liberation of France: image and event. (Berg, 1995).
208.
Harbi, M. Massacre in Algeria. Le Monde Diplomatique.
209.
Horne, A. A savage war of peace: Algeria 1954-1962. (Papermac, 1987).
210.
Jauffret, J. The origins of the Algerian War: The reaction of France and its army to the two emergencies of 8 May 1945 and 1 November 1954. The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 21, 17–29 (1993).
211.
Killingray, D. & Rathbone, R. Africa and the Second World War. (Macmillan, 1986).
212.
MacMaster, N. The Roots of Insurrection: The Role of the Algerian Village Assembly (Djemâa) in Peasant Resistance, 1863–1962. Comparative Studies in Society and History 55, 419–447 (2013).
213.
Rahal, M. A local approach to the UDMA: local-level politics during the decade of political parties, 1946–56. The Journal of North African Studies 18, 703–724 (2013).
214.
Ruedy, J. Modern Algeria: the origins and development of a nation. (Indiana University Press, 2005).
215.
Thomas, M. Resource War, Civil War, Rights War: Factoring Empire into French North Africa’s Second World War. War in History 18, 225–248 (2011).
216.
Thomas, M. Intelligence and the Transition to the Algerian Police State: Reassessing French Colonial Security after the Sétif Uprising, 1945. Intelligence and National Security 28, 377–396 (2013).
217.
Algerian war and the French army, 1954-62 (Conference), European Studies Research Institute, Centre for European Studies Research, & Askews & Holts Library Services. The Algerian war and the French army, 1954-62: experiences, images, testimonies. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2002).
218.
Benallègue, Nora. Algerian women in the struggle for independence and reconstruction. International Social Science Journal 35,.
219.
Cornell, Drucilla. The Secret Behind the Veil: A Reinterpretation of ‘Algeria Unveiled’. Philosophia Africana 4, 27–35.
220.
Muriam Haleh Davis. Restaging Mise en Valeur: ‘Postwar Imperialism’ and The Plan de Constantine. Review of Middle East Studies 44, 176–186 (2010).
221.
Derradji, A.-R. The Algerian guerrilla campaign: strategy and tactics. (Edwin Mellen Press, 1997).
222.
Evans, M. Guy Mollet’s Third Way: National Renewal and the French Civilizing Mission in Algeria. French History & Civilization 2, (2019).
223.
Fanon, F. & Fanon, F. A dying colonialism. (Grove Press, 1965).
224.
Galula, D. Pacification in Algeria, 1956-1958 (Original RAND Corporation Memorandum).
225.
Guelton, F. The French Army ‘Centre for Training and Preparation in Counter-Guerrilla Warfare’ (CIPCG) at Arzew. Journal of Strategic Studies 25, 35–53 (2002).
226.
Heggoy, Alf Andrew. Kepi and Chalkboards: French Soldiers and Education in Revolutionary Algeria. Military Affairs 37,.
227.
Martha Crenshaw Hutchinson. The Concept of Revolutionary Terrorism. The Journal of Conflict Resolution 16, 383–396 (1972).
228.
Hutchinson, M. C. Revolutionary terrorism: the FLN in Algeria, 1954-1962. vol. Hoover Institution publication (Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University, 1978).
229.
Le Sueur, J. D. Uncivil war: intellectuals and identity politics during the decolonization of Algeria. (University of Nebraska Press, 2005).
230.
Amelia H. Lyons. The Civilizing Mission in the Metropole: Algerian Immigrants in France and the Politics of Adaptation during Decolonization. Geschichte und Gesellschaft 489–516 (2006).
231.
Lyons, A. H. Social welfare, French Muslims and decolonization in France: the case of the Fonds d’action sociale. Patterns of Prejudice 43, 65–89 (2009).
232.
Lyons, A. H. The civilizing mission in the metropole: Algerian families and the French welfare state during decolonization. (Stanford University Press, 2013).
233.
MacMaster, N. Burning the veil: the Algerian war and the ‘emancipation’ of Muslim women, 1954-62. (Manchester University Press, 2012).
234.
Moritz Feichtinger  &  Stephan Malinowski. «Eine Millionen Algerier lernen im 20. Jahrhundert zu leben». Umsiedlungslager und Zwangsmodernisierung im Algerienkrieg 1954–1962. Journal of Modern European History 8, 107–135 (2010).
235.
Melnik, C. The French Campaign against the FLN (RAND Corporation Memorandum). (1967).
236.
Paret, P. French revolutionary warfare from Indochina to Algeria: the analysis of a political and military doctrine. vol. Princeton studies in world politics (Published for the Center of International Studies, Princeton University, by Frederick A. Praeger, 1964).
237.
Reid, D. The Worlds of Frantz Fanon’s ‘L’Algerie se devoile’. French Studies 61, 460–475 (2007).
238.
Rid, T. The Nineteenth Century Origins of Counterinsurgency Doctrine. Journal of Strategic Studies 33, 727–758 (2010).
239.
Keith Sutton. Army Administration Tensions over Algeria’s Centres de Regroupement, 1954-1962. British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 26, 243–270 (1999).
240.
The roots of counter-insurgency: armies and guerrilla warfare, 1900-1945. (Blandford Press, 1988).
241.
Meredeth Turshen. Algerian women in the liberation struggle and the civil war: from active participants to passive victims? Social Research.
242.
Tyre, S. From Algerie Francaise to France Musulmane: Jacques Soustelle and the Myths and Realities of ‘Integration’, 1955-1962. French History 20, 276–296 (2006).
243.
Vince, N. Transgressing Boundaries: Gender, Race, Religion, and ‘Francaises Musulmanes’ during the Algerian War of Independence. French Historical Studies 33, 445–474 (2010).
244.
Branche, R. Torture of terrorists? Use of torture in a "war against terrorism”: justifications, methods and effects: the case of France in Algeria, 1954–1962. International Review of the Red Cross 89, (2007).
245.
Christopher Cradock. ‘No Fixed Values’: A Reinterpretation of the Influence of the Theory of Guerre Révolutionnaire and the Battle of Algiers, 1956–1957. Journal of Cold War Studies 9, 68–105 (2007).
246.
Decker, J. L. Terrorism (Un) Veiled: Frantz Fanon and the Women of Algiers. Cultural Critique (1990).
247.
Lou DiMarco. Losing the moral compass: torture and guerre revolutionnaire in the Algerian War. Parameters.
248.
Guha, R. & Spivak, G. C. Selected Subaltern studies. (Oxford University Press, 1988).
249.
Hutchinson, M. C. Revolutionary terrorism: the FLN in Algeria, 1954-1962. vol. Hoover Institution publication (Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University, 1978).
250.
Kemp, M. A. Re-readings of the Algerian War during the US `war on terror’: Between recognition and denial. Journal of European Studies 38, 157–175 (2008).
251.
Lazreg, M. Torture and the twilight of empire: from Algiers to Baghdad. vol. Human rights and crimes against humanity (Princeton University Press, 2008).
252.
Macmaster, N. Torture: from Algiers to Abu Ghraib. Race & Class 46, 1–21 (2004).
253.
Maran, R. Torture: the role of ideology in the  French-Algerian war.                    industry in transition. (Praeger, 1989).
254.
Charters, D. A. & Tugwell, M. Armies in low-intensity conflict: a comparative analysis. (Brassey’s Defence Publishers, 1989).
255.
McCormack, J. Terminale History Class: Teaching about torture during the Algerian war. Modern & Contemporary France 12, 75–86 (2004).
256.
David Prochaska. That Was Then, This Is Now: The Battle of Algiers and After. Radical History Review 85, 133–149 (2003).
257.
Donald Reid. Re-Viewing the Battle of Algiers with Germaine Tillion. History Workshop Journal 93–115 (2005).
258.
Understanding counterinsurgency: doctrines, operations, and challenges. vol. Cass military studies (Routledge, 2010).
259.
Roberts, K. A. Constrained Militants: Algerian Women ‘in-between’ in Gillo Pontecorvo’s                              and Bourlem Guerdjou’s. The Journal of North African Studies 12, 381–393 (2007).
260.
Trinquier, R. Modern warfare: a French view of counterinsurgency. (2006).
261.
The Algerian war and the French army, 1954-62: experiences, images, testimonies. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2002).
262.
David Carroll. Camus’s Algeria: Birthrights, Colonial Injustice, and the Fiction of a French-Algerian People. MLN 112, 517–549 (1997).
263.
Carroll, D. Albert Camus, the Algerian: colonialism, terrorism, justice. (Columbia University Press, 2007).
264.
Cherki, A. Frantz Fanon: a portrait. (Cornell University Press, 2006).
265.
Colonialism and violence: Camus and Sartre on the Algerian war. Maghreb Review 15, 16–30 (1990).
266.
Cohen-Solal, Annie. Camus, Sartre and the Algerian war. Journal of European Studies; Chalfont St. Giles, U.K. 28,.
267.
Drew, A. We are no longer in France: communists in colonial Algeria. vol. Studies in imperialism (Manchester University Press, 2014).
268.
Evans, M. The memory of resistance: French opposition to the Algerian War (1954-1962). vol. Berg French studies (Berg, 1997).
269.
Evans, M. Memories of resistance to the Algerian war: Janine Cahen, Roger Rey, Denise Barrat. Modern & Contemporary France 2, 165–174 (1994).
270.
Foxlee, N. Mediterranean Humanism or Colonialism with a Human Face? Contextualizing Albert Camus’ ‘The New Mediterranean Culture’. Mediterranean Historical Review 21, 77–96.
271.
Hargreaves, A. G. Camus and the Colonial Question in Algeria. The Muslim World 77, 164–174 (1987).
272.
Messay Kebede. The Rehabilitation of Violence and the Violence of Rehabilitation: Fanon and Colonialism. Journal of Black Studies 31, 539–562 (2001).
273.
Kuby, E. From the torture chamber to the bedchamber: French soldiers, antiwar activists, and the discourse of sexual deviancy in the Algerian War (1954-1962). Contemporary French Civilization 38, 131–153 (2013).
274.
James D. Le Sueur. Albert Camus and the Anticolonials: Why Camus Would Not Play the Zero Sum Game. South Central Review 31, 27–42 (2014).
275.
Le Sueur, J. D. Uncivil war: intellectuals and identity politics during the decolonization of Algeria. (University of Nebraska Press, 2005).
276.
Sueur, J. D. L. Decolonising ‘French universalism’: reconsidering the impact of the Algerian war on French intellectuals. The Journal of North African Studies 6, 167–186 (2001).
277.
Ulloa, M.-P. Francis Jeanson: a dissident intellectual from the French Resistance to the Algerian War. (Stanford University Press, 2007).
278.
Barkaoui, M. Managing the colonial: Eisenhower’s Cold War and the Algerian war of independence. The Journal of North African Studies 17, 125–141 (2012).
279.
Von Bulow, M. West Germany, Cold War Europe and the Algerian War. vol. New studies in European history (Cambridge University Press, 2016).
280.
von Bülow, M. Franco-German Intelligence Cooperation and the Internationalization of Algeria’s War of Independence (1954–62). Intelligence and National Security 28, 397–419 (2013).
281.
Von Bülow, M. Myth or Reality? The Red Hand and French Covert Action in Federal Germany during the Algerian War, 1956–61. Intelligence and National Security 22, 787–820 (2007).
282.
Byrne, J. J. Mecca of revolution: Algeria, decolonization, and the Third World order. vol. Oxford studies in international history (Oxford University Press, 2016).
283.
Trentin, M. & Gerlini, M. The Middle East and the Cold War: between security and development. (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012).
284.
Hal Victor Cartwright. Revolutionary Algeria and the United Nations: a study in agenda politics. (University Microfilms, 1984).
285.
Connelly, M. J. A diplomatic revolution: Algeria’s fight for independence and the origins of the post-Cold War era. (Oxford University Press, 2003).
286.
Matthew Connelly. Rethinking the Cold War and Decolonization: The Grand Strategy of the Algerian War for Independence. International Journal of Middle East Studies 33, 221–245 (2001).
287.
Connelly, M. Taking Off the Cold War Lens: Visions of North-South Conflict during the Algerian War for Independence. The American Historical Review 105, (2000).
288.
Gleijeses, P. Cuba’s First Venture in Africa: Algeria, 1961–1965. Journal of Latin American Studies 28, (1996).
289.
Haddad-Fonda, K. An illusory alliance: revolutionary legitimacy and Sino-Algerian relations, 1958–1962. The Journal of North African Studies 19, 338–357 (2014).
290.
Johnson, J. The battle for Algeria: sovereignty, health care, and humanitarianism. vol. Pennsylvania studies in human rights (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016).
291.
Klose, F. Human rights in the shadow of colonial violence: the wars of independence in Kenya and Algeria. vol. Pennsylvania studies in human rights (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013).
292.
Klose, F. The Colonial Testing Ground: The International Committee of the Red Cross and the Violent End of Empire. Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development 2, 107–126 (2011).
293.
Human rights in the twentieth century. (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
294.
Onyedum, J. J. Humanize the conflict’: Algerian health care organizations and propaganda campaigns. International Journal of Middle East Studies 44, 713–731 (2012).
295.
Martin Thomas. France Accused: French North Africa before the United Nations, 1952-1962. Contemporary European History 10, 91–121 (2001).
296.
Thomas, M. The dilemmas of an ally of France: Britain’s policy towards the Algerian rebellion, 1954–62. The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 23, 129–154 (1995).
297.
Martin Thomas. Policing Algeria’s Borders, 1956–1960: Arms Supplies, Frontier Defences and the Sakiet Affair. War & Society.
298.
Vélez, F. Latin American revolutionaries and the Arab world: from the Suez Canal to the Arab spring. (Ashgate, 2015).
299.
Wall, E. M. The United States, Algeria, and the Fall of the Fourth French Republic. Diplomatic History 18, 489–511 (1994).
300.
Westad, O. A. The global Cold War: Third World interventions and the making of our times. (Cambridge University Press, 2005).
301.
Yahia H. Zoubir. The United States, the Soviet Union and decolonization of the Maghreb, 1945-62. Middle Eastern Studies.
302.
Robert Aldrich. Colonial Past, Post-Colonial Present History Wars French-Style. History Australia.
303.
Shadows of war: a social history of silence in the twentieth century. (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
304.
Contemporary history on trial: Europe since 1989 and the role of the expert historian. (Manchester University Press, 2007).
305.
Jean-Paul Brunet and Emile Chabal. Police Violence in Paris, October 1961: Historical Sources, Methods, and Conclusions. The Historical Journal 51, 195–204 (2008).
306.
Choi, S. The Muslim Veteran in Postcolonial France: The Politics of the Integration of Harkis After 1962. French Politics, Culture & Society 29, (2011).
307.
Choi, S.-E. Decolonization and the French of Algeria: bringing the settler colony home. vol. Cambridge imperial and post-colonial studies series (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
308.
William B. Cohen. The Algerian War, the French State and Official Memory. Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques 28, 219–239 (2002).
309.
Joshua Cole. Remembering the Battle of Paris: 17 October 1961 in French and Algerian Memory. French Politics, Culture & Society 21, 21–50 (2003).
310.
Crapanzano, V. The Harkis: the wound that never heals. (University of Chicago Press, 2011).
311.
Richard L. Derderian. Algeria as a lieu de memoire: Ethnic Minority Memory and National Identity in Contemporary France. Radical History Review 83, 28–43 (2002).
312.
Eldridge, C. ‘We’ve never had a voice’: memory construction and the children of the harkis (1962-1991). French History 23, 88–107 (2008).
313.
Eldridge, C. Blurring the boundaries between perpetrators and victims: Pied-noir memories and the harki community. Memory Studies 3, 123–136 (2010).
314.
Eldridge, C. From empire to exile: history and memory within the pied-noir and harki communities, 1962-2012. vol. Studies in Modern French History (Manchester University Press, 2016).
315.
Gildea, R. & Simonin, A. Writing contemporary history. (Hodder Education, 2008).
316.
Gordon, D. A. World Reactions to the 1961 Paris Pogrom.
317.
The Papon affair: memory and justice on trial. (Routledge, 2000).
318.
Golsan, R. J. Memory’s bombes a retardement: Maurice Papon, crimes against humanity, and 17 October 1961. Journal of European Studies 28, 153–172 (1998).
319.
Hare-Cuming, S. Duty, death and the Republic: The career of Maurice Papon from Vichy France to the Algerian War. (2008).
320.
House, J. & MacMaster, N. Paris 1961: Algerians, state terror, and memory. (Oxford University Press, 2009).
321.
Jim House and Neil Macmaster. Time to Move on: A Reply to Jean-Paul Brunet. The Historical Journal 51, 205–214 (2008).
322.
James D. Le Sueur. Beyond Decolonization? The Legacy of the Algerian Conflict and the Transformation of Identity in Contemporary France. Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques 28, 277–291 (2002).
323.
Jo McCormack. Social Memories in (Post)colonial France: Remembering the Franco-Algerian War. Journal of Social History 44, 1129–1138 (2011).
324.
McCormack, J. Memory and Exile: Contemporary France and the Algerian War (1954-1962). Critical Studies 30, (2008).
325.
McCormack, J. Collective memory: France and the Algerian war (1954-1962). vol. After the empire (Lexington Books, 2007).
326.
War and remembrance in the twentieth century. vol. Studies in the social and cultural history of modern warfare (Cambridge University Press, 1999).
327.
David L. Schalk. Has France’s Marrying Her Century Cured the Algerian Syndrome? Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques 25, 149–164 (1999).
328.
Balibar, É. Uprisings in the Banlieues. Constellations 14, 47–71 (2007).
329.
Ben Jelloun, T. & Bray, B. French hospitality: racism and North African immigrants. vol. European perspectives (Columbia University Press, 1999).
330.
Bleich, E. The legacies of history? Colonization and immigrant integration in Britain and France. Theory and Society 34, 171–195 (2005).
331.
Bowen, J. R. Why the French don’t like headscarves: Islam, the state, and public space. (Princeton University Press, 2008).
332.
Bowen, J. R. Does French Islam Have Borders? Dilemmas of Domestication in a Global Religious Field. American Anthropologist 106, 43–55 (2004).
333.
Chadwick, K. Reaffirming the Republic: France, Islam, and the Centenary of Laïcité. Contemporary French Civilization 31, 1–19 (2007).
334.
Choi, S.-E. Decolonization and the French of Algeria: bringing the settler colony home. vol. Cambridge imperial and post-colonial studies series (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
335.
Christelow, A. Algerians without borders: the making of a global frontier society. (University Press of Florida, 2012).
336.
Evans, M. The left, laïcité and Islam. Contemporary France 45, (1991).
337.
Fernando, M. L. The republic unsettled: Muslim French and the contradictions of secularism. (Duke University Press, 2014).
338.
Fysh, P. & Wolfreys, J. The politics of racism in France. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003).
339.
Haddad, Y. Y. & Balz, M. J. The October Riots in France: A Failed Immigration Policy or the Empire Strikes Back? International Migration 44, 23–34 (2006).
340.
Alec G. Hargreaves. Third-Generation Algerians in France: Between Genealogy and History. The French Review 83, 1290–1299 (2010).
341.
Jeremy Jennings. Citizenship, Republicanism and Multiculturalism in Contemporary France. British Journal of Political Science 30, 575–597 (2000).
342.
Jobard, F. Rioting as a Political Tool: the 2005 Riots in France. The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice 48, 235–244 (2009).
343.
Leonard, M. d. N. The Effects of Political Rhetoric on the Rise of Legitimized Racism in France: The Case of the 2005 French Riots. Critical Sociology 42, 1087–1107 (2016).
344.
Marcus, J. The National Front and French politics: the resistible rise of Jean-Marie Le Pen. (Macmillan, 1995).
345.
Murphy, J. P. Baguettes, Berets and Burning Cars: The 2005 Riots and the Question of Race in Contemporary France. French Cultural Studies 22, (2011).
346.
Noiriel, G. Difficulties in French Historical Research on Immigration. Bulletin of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 46, (1992).
347.
Sayad, A. The suffering of the immigrant. (Polity, 2004).
348.
Schneider, C. L. Police Power and Race Riots in Paris. Politics & Society 36, 133–159 (2008).
349.
Joan Wallach Scott. The politics of the veil. vol. Public square (Princeton, N.J.) (Princeton University Press, 2007).
350.
Silverstein, P. A. Algeria in France: transpolitics, race, and nation. vol. New anthropologies of Europe (Indiana University Press, 2004).
351.
Winter, B. Hijab & the republic: uncovering the French headscarf debate. vol. Gender and globalization (Syracuse University Press, 2008).