Additionally Noted Things
Tim Burke live-blogs (one, two, three) the Social Computing Symposium 2006 sponsored by Microsoft Research.
Here's a link to Benny Morris,"And Now for Some Facts," TNR, 8 May, on the Mearsheimer and Walt controversy. If that doesn't work for you, Judith Klinghoffer reproduces it in full.
Roy Warmsley of King's College London's International Centre for Prison Studies maintains a"World Prison Population List." Its latest, the sixth edition, presents some fascinating and disturbing data. Of the world's 9 million prisoners, nearly half are in the United States, China, or Russia. Listing prison population per hundred thousand national population, it finds the United States, at 714, at the top of the list by far, followed by Belarus, Bermuda, and Russia at 532. Nearly 3/5 of the nation/states have prison populations at less than 150 per hundred thousand national population, with England and Wales at 142. The report also identifies remarkable regional contrasts in the world's prison population. Thanks to Andrew Sullivan for the tip, but he does misrepresent the data. There's no cause to go all Jim Lindgren on Michael Bellesiles about it, but I'm just sayin' ...
Which reminds me to welcome Jim Lindgren's visit to Cliopatria. It's occasioned by a blogospheric clash of titans: BelleWaring v Eugene Volokh. As Jim says, check out the comments. One of my favorites is his citation of Catherine McKinnon in defense of Volokh! Lindgren cites McKinnon for the defense! It's like – well – it's like Lindgren citing McKinnon in defense of Volokh!
On another front, it is Ohio State University historian Christopher Phelps v Eugene Volokh.