
The latest issue of the
European Journal of International Relations (Vol. 25, no. 3, September 2019) is out. Contents include:
- Eric Hundman & Sarah E Parkinson, Rogues, degenerates, and heroes: Disobedience as politics in military organizations
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Deepak Nair, Saving face in diplomacy: A political sociology of face-to-face interactions in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
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Sarah von Billerbeck & Oisín Tansey, Enabling autocracy? Peacebuilding and post-conflict authoritarianism in the Democratic Republic of Congo
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Simon Frankel Pratt, Norm transformation and the institutionalization of targeted killing in the US
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Heidarali Masoudi, Metaphorical incarnations of the “other” and Iranian International Relations discourses
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Peter Marcus Kristensen, States of emergence, states of knowledge: A comparative sociology of international relations in China and India
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Toby Greene, Foreign policy anarchy in multiparty coalitions: When junior parties take rogue decisions
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Valentina Carraro, Electing the experts: Expertise and independence in the UN human rights treaty bodies
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Zuzana Murdoch, Hussein Kassim, Sara Connolly, & Benny Geys, Do international institutions matter? Socialization and international bureaucrats
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Carsten-Andreas Schulz, Territorial sovereignty and the end of inter-cultural diplomacy along the “Southern frontier”
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Jack Donnelly, Systems, levels, and structural theory: Waltz’s theory is not a systemic theory (and why that matters for International Relations today)
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Andrew Linklater, Symbols and world politics: Towards a long-term perspective on historical trends and contemporary challenges