<p style="text-align: justify;">Introduction <strong>I. War and Society 1700-1900</strong> 1. “Ottoman Empire” in Philippa Levine and John Marriot, eds., <em>Ashgate Research Companion to Modern Imperial Histories</em>, London: Ashgate, 2012, 127-60. 2. “War and Peace” in Suraiya Faroqhi, ed. The Cambridge History of Turkey. Vol. 3: <em>The Later Ottoman Empire, 1603-1839</em>, Cambridge, 2006, 81-117. 3. “Military Reform and its Limits in a Shrinking Ottoman World, 1800-1840,” in Aksan and Daniel Goffman, eds., <em>The Early Modern Ottomans,</em> Cambridge, CUP, 2007, 117-33. 4. "Islam-Christian Transfers of Military Technology, 1730-1918," 1-20 in <em>EGO</em>, <em>European History Online</em>, <a href="http://www.ieg-ego.eu/,">http://www.ieg-ego.eu/,</a> 2011. 5. “Ahmed ibn Ibrahim” (Resmi Giridi) <em>Historians of the Ottoman Empire </em>(Online), Cemal Kafadar, Cornell Fleischer and Hakan Karateke, eds. Cambridge MA, Harvard University, 2006. 6. "Canikli Ali Paşa (d. 1785): A Provincial Portrait in Loyalty and Disloyalty," in Eleni Gara, M. Erdem Kabadayı, Christoph Neumann, <em>Popular Protest and Political Participation in the Ottoman Empire: Studies in Honor of Suraiya Faroqhi, </em>Istanbul: Bilgi University Press, 2011, 211-24. 7. “Enlightening the Ottomans: Tott and Mustafa III,” in Ali Caksu, ed., International Congress on Learning and Education in the Ottoman World, Istanbul, 2001), 163-74. 8. "Who was an Ottoman? Reflections on 'Wearing Hats' and 'Turning Turk,'" in Barbara Schmidt-Haberkamp, ed. <em>Europe und die Türkei in 18. Jahrhundert / Europe a</em><em>nd Tu</em><em>r</em><em>key in the Eighteenth Century </em>(Göttingen: Unipress, 2011), 305-18, 4 col. Illus. <strong>II. Comparative Empires</strong> 9. “Theoretical Ottomans,”<em> History and Theory</em> 47 (2008), 109-22. 10. “The Ottoman Military and State Transformation in a Globalizing World,” <em>Comp</em><em>arative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East</em> 27 (2007), 257-70. 23 pp. 11. “Ottoman Military and State Transformations, 1826-28: Engagement and Resistance in a Moment of Global Imperialism,” In Stephen M. Streeter and John C. Weaver and William D. Coleman, eds<em>, Empires and Autonomy: Moments in the History of Globalization. </em>Vancouver; Toronto: UBC Press, 2009, 61-78.<em> </em>12. “Turks and Ottomans Among the Empires”: [review article] <em>International Journal of Turkish Studies </em>15:1-2<em> </em>(2009), 103-14. 13. “Expressions of Ottoman Rule in an Age of Transition: 1760-1830,” in <em>Hoca, 'Allame, Puits de Science: E</em><em>s</em><em>says in Honor of Kemal H. Karpat, Kaan Durukan, Robert W. Zens and Akile Zorlu-Durukan, eds.</em>, Istanbul: Isis Press, 2010, 81-95. 14. "Mobilization of Warrior Populations in the Ottoman Context 1750-1850," in Erik Jan Zürcher. ed. <em>Fighting for a Living, </em>International Institute for Social History, Amsterdam, 2013, 323-43 15. “The Ottoman Absence from the Battlefields of the Seven Years War,” in Patrick J. Speelman and Mark J. Danley, eds. <em>Seven Years War as a Global Conflict. </em>E. J. Brill, 2013, pp. 165-90 16. "Ottoman Military Power in the Eighteenth Century," Brian Davies, ed. <em>Warfare in Eastern Europe 1500-1800, </em>Leiden, E. J. Brill, 2012, 315-48. 17. "Ottoman Ethnographies of Warfare, 1500-1800," chap. 6 in Wayne E. Lee, ed. <em>E</em><em>m</em><em>pires and Indigenes: Intercultural Alliance, Imperial Expansion, and Warfare in the Early Modern World, </em>New York: NYU Press, 2011, 141-63. 18. “Whose Territory and Whose Peasants? Ottoman Boundaries on the Danube in the 1760s,” in Frederick F. Anscombe, ed., <em>The Ottoman Balkans, 1750-1830, </em>Princeton: Markus Weiner Publishers, 2006,<em> </em>61-86<em>.</em> 19. "Introduction" to "Dossier: Captivity, Migration and Diplomacy in the Late Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries," <em>Turkish Historical Review </em>3 (2012), 144-48, 3 articles on Russo-Ottoman relations. 20. “The Ottoman Army,” in Frederick C. Schneid, ed. <em>Armies of the French Revolution,</em> University of Oklahoma Press, 2015. pp. 245-72. 21. “Locating the Ottomans in Napoleon’s World,” in Ute Planert, ed. <em>Napoleon’s Empire, </em>London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015, 277-90. <strong>III. Review Articles</strong> 22. “The Ottoman Story Today,” [review article] <em>Mi</em><em>d</em><em>dle East Studies Association Bulletin</em> 25 (2001), 35-42. 23. “Finding the Way Back to the Ottoman Empire: Review Article,” <em>International History Review</em> 25 (2003), 96-107. 24. “Ottoman Military Matters,” review article of 12 works, <em>Journal of Early Modern History</em> 6 (2002), 52-62. 25. "How Do We 'Know' the Middle East? MESA Presidential Address 2009," <em>Review of Middle East Studies </em>44:1 (summer 2010), 3-12. 26. "The Muslim World: Recent Scholarship on the Ottoman Middle East," <em>Journal of Eighteenth Ce</em><em>n</em><em>tury Studies </em>34:4 (2011), 535-42, special review issue on eighteenth century studies. 27. “What’s Up in Ottoman Studies?” <em>Journal of the Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association </em>1:1-2 (2014), 3-21.</p>