Staking out an inshore commons: Pound-netting in Gilded Age America
David Ress
págs. 3-15
Escaping court martial for sodomy: Prosecution and its alternatives in the Royal Navy, 1690-1840
Seth Stein LeJacq
págs. 16-36
Navigating the Great Barrier Reef: The Inner and Outer Routes, 1815-1860
Kenneth Morgan
págs. 37-53
‘Astounding it is, what Lidice carries’: The transport of Czechoslovak weapons for the Algerian National Liberation Front in 1959
Lenka Krátká
págs. 54-69
Continuity and change in the maritime dimension of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Teresa Usewicz
págs. 70-89
How can higher maritime education lead shipping growth? Korea’s experience, 1948–1982
S. June Kim
págs. 90-117
Ports in state socialism, or why the Cold War matters to maritime history
Sarah Lemmen, Brigitte Le Normand
págs. 118-128
Economic necessity and political reality in the GDR: Establishing an overseas port at Rostock
Joseph A. Stollenwerk
págs. 129-144
The making of a socialist port: The Czechoslovak port in Hamburg in the 1940s and 1950s
Sarah Lemmen
págs. 145-161
Between solid and liquid experience in a socialist port: Gdańsk shipyard workers at the turn of the 1980s
Piotr Perkowski
págs. 162-177
Weaving the port into the socialist city: Fluid connections and transgressive movements in Gdańsk and Gdynia
Marta Kalabinski
págs. 178-192
Rijeka as a socialist port: Insights from Jugolinija's early years, 1947-1960
Brigitte Le Normand
págs. 193-208
The Soviet Union's global ports and flexible web-like naval strategy: Case studies of Antsiranana and Tivat
Rinna Kullaa
págs. 209-231
The wayward path of an American hero: Sailing Master Philip Brum
Daniel Roberts
págs. 232-237
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