Sunday, November 29, 2020

New Issue: International Studies Review

The latest issue of International Studies Review (Vol. 22, no. 4, December 2020) is out. Contents include:
  • Michal Onderco, Collaboration Networks in Conference Diplomacy: The Case of the Nonproliferation Regime
  • Charlotta Friedner Parrat, Change in International Society: How Not to Recreate the “First Debate” of International Relations
  • Milton L Mueller, Against Sovereignty in Cyberspace
  • Holly L Guthrey, Microlevel Security after Armed Conflict: A New Framework for Analyzing Risks and Benefits of Peacebuilding Processes
  • Maiken Gelardi, Moving Global IR Forward—A Road Map
  • Jonathan Kent, Kelsey P Norman, & Katherine H Tennis, Changing Motivations or Capabilities? Migration Deterrence in the Global Context
  • Dylan M H Loh, Institutional Habitus, State identity, and China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  • Rakhyun E Kim, Is Global Governance Fragmented, Polycentric, or Complex? The State of the Art of the Network Approach
  • Amal Jamal, Ontological Counter-securitization in Asymmetric Power Relations: Lessons from Israel
  • Brieg Powel, Blinkered Learning, Blinkered Theory: How Histories in Textbooks Parochialize IR