
The latest issue of the
International Studies Quarterly (Vol. 57, no. 3, September 2013) is out. Contents include:
- Harvey Starr, On Geopolitics: Spaces and Places
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Nathan M. Jensen, Domestic Institutions and the Taxing of Multinational Corporations
- Laron K. Williams,
Flexible Election Timing and International Conflict
- Shahar Hameiri & Lee Jones,
The Politics and Governance of Non-Traditional Security
- Emilie Hafner-Burton & James Ron,
The Latin Bias: Regions, the Anglo-American Media, and Human Rights
- Charles R. Hankla & Daniel Kuthy,
Economic Liberalism in Illiberal Regimes: Authoritarian Variation and the Political Economy of Trade
- Philip B.K. Potter,
Electoral Margins and American Foreign Policy
- Tanya Bagashka & Randall W. Stone,
Risky Signals: The Political Costs of Exchange Rate Policy in Post-Communist Countries
- Colin M. Barry, K. Chad Clay & Michael E. Flynn,
Avoiding the Spotlight: Human Rights Shaming and Foreign Direct Investment
- Joe Clare,
The Deterrent Value of Democratic Allies
- William R. Clark, Sona N. Golder, & Paul Poast,
Monetary Institutions and the Political Survival of Democratic Leaders
- Monika Bauhr, Nicholas Charron & Naghmeh Nasiritousi,
Does Corruption Cause Aid Fatigue? Public Opinion and the Aid-Corruption Paradox
- Toby J. Rider,
Uncertainty, Salient Stakes, and the Causes of Conventional Arms Races
- Edward D. Mansfield & Jon C.W. Pevehouse,
The Expansion of Preferential Trading Arrangements
- Katja B. Kleinberg & Benjamin O. Fordham,
The Domestic Politics of Trade and Conflict
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Controversy
- Barry Buzan & George Lawson,
The Global Transformation: The Nineteenth Century and the Making of Modern International Relations
- Christopher Chase-Dunn,
Response to Barry Buzan and George Lawson The Global Transformation: The 19th Century and the Making of Modern International Relations
- Paul Musgrave & Daniel H. Nexon,
Singularity or Aberration? A Response to Buzan and Lawson
- Andrew Phillips,
From Global Transformation to Big Bang—A Response to Buzan and Lawson