This valuable reference is an annual publication from Freedom House, a watchdog organization that monitors countries' political freedom and human rights progress. It supplies information on countries that are 'at a critical turning point' in their political development. The publication analyzes different sets of countries in even and odd years. The 2010 edition furnishes information about 32 countries. Making comparisons between the different editions is easy because they use similar rankings, and the country articles follow a uniform format (for the 2006 report, see CH, Apr'07, 44-4207). Freedom House authors take surveys to assess factors such as accountability and public voice, civil liberties, rule of law, and anticorruption and transparency. Numerical scales range from one to seven, with seven being the highest score. The rankings are presented in well-organized tables. Report authors follow prescribed guidelines to write corresponding narratives and recommendations. They present evidence showing general decreases in political freedom in the countries covered....This illuminating reference will be useful for both undergraduate and graduate collections. Summing Up: Recommended.Countries at the Crossroads manages to achieve the best of both worlds. A precise, standardized measurement tool for civil liberties, rule of law, corruption, and accountability allows meaningful comparisons across countries and across time. At the same time, in-depth narratives put flesh on the bones and provide concrete prescriptions for reform.In a short period of time, Countries at the Crossroads has managed to become an invaluable source for analysts, practitioners, and policy makers working on governance and development. Crossroads' integration of quantitative indices and in-depth qualitative descriptions is particularly noteworthy. So is its perspective on the meaning of governance, which is much more than technocratic public sector performance: Crossroads emphasizes the importance l³+