Monday, August 9, 2021

New Issue: International Affairs

The latest issue of International Affairs (Vol. 97, no. 4, July 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • New Trends in Gulf International Relations and Transnational Politics
    • Emma Soubrier, Jessie Moritz, & Courtney Freer, Introduction: new trends in Gulf international relations and transnational politics
    • Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, Transnational identity and the Gulf crisis: changing narratives of belonging in Qatar
    • Kristin Diwan, Clerical associations in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates: soft power competition in Islamic politics
    • Jessie Moritz, Bahrain's transnational Arab Spring: repression, oil and human rights activism
    • Florence Gaub & Lotje Boswinkel, How the Gulf States are using their air space to assert their sovereignty
  • Articles
    • Youngjune Chung, Allusion, reasoning and luring in Chinese psychological warfare
    • Kristen Hopewell, When the hegemon goes rogue: leadership amid the US assault on the liberal trading order
    • Joanne Wallis & Anna Powles, Burden-sharing: the US, Australia and New Zealand alliances in the Pacific islands
    • Janine Natalya Clark, Beyond a ‘survivor-centred approach’ to conflict-related sexual violence?
    • Mustafa Kutlay & Ziya Öniş, Turkish foreign policy in a post-western order: strategic autonomy or new forms of dependence?
    • Ariel González Levaggi & Federico Donelli, Turkey's changing engagement with the global South
    • Katerina Dalacoura, Turkish foreign policy in the Middle East: power projection and post-ideological politics
    • Courtney J Fung & Shing-hon Lam, Staffing the United Nations: China's motivations and prospects
    • Andrea Schneiker, The UN and women's marginalization in peace negotiations
    • Jelena Cupać & Irem Ebetürk, Backlash advocacy and NGO polarization over women's rights in the United Nations
    • Maria-Louise Clausen & Peter Albrecht, Interventions since the Cold War: from statebuilding to stabilization
    • Ntagahoraho Z Burihabwa & Devon E A Curtis, Postwar statebuilding in Burundi: ruling party elites and illiberal peace