Saturday, November 6, 2021

New Issue: International Affairs

The latest issue of International Affairs (Vol. 97, no. 6, November 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • Jamal Barnes & Samuel M Makinda, A threat to cosmopolitan duties? How COVID-19 has been used as a tool to undermine refugee rights
  • Isaac Olawale Albert, Decapitation strategies and the significance of Abubakar Shekau's death in Nigeria's Boko Haram crisis
  • Yao Song, Guangyu Qiao-Franco, & Tianyang Liu, Becoming a normative power? China's Mekong agenda in the era of Xi Jinping
  • Joe Burton & George Christou, Bridging the gap between cyberwar and cyberpeace
  • Claire Elder, Somaliland's authoritarian turn: oligarchic–corporate power and the political economy of de facto states
  • Elizabeth Cobbett & Ra Mason, Djiboutian sovereignty: worlding global security networks
  • Emeka Thaddues Njoku & Isaac Dery, Spiritual security: an explanatory framework for conflict-related sexual violence against men
  • Bruno Charbonneau, Counter-insurgency governance in the Sahel
  • Daniel Neep, ‘What have the Ottomans ever done for us?’ Why history matters for politics in the Arab Middle East
  • Lior Lehrs, Conflict and cooperation in the age of COVID-19: the Israeli–Palestinian case
  • Leonard August Schuette, Why NATO survived Trump: the neglected role of Secretary-General Stoltenberg
  • Louise Curran, Khalid Nadvi, & Sangeeta Khorana, Building on open economy politics to understand the stalled EU–India trade negotiations
  • Sebastian Biba, Germany's relations with the United States and China from a strategic triangle perspective
  • Daniëlle Flonk, Emerging illiberal norms: Russia and China as promoters of internet content control
  • May Farid & Hui Li, International NGOs as intermediaries in China's ‘going out’ strategy
  • Gisela Hirschmann, International organizations' responses to member state contestation: from inertia to resilience