Sunday, March 13, 2022

New Issue: Global Policy

The latest issue of Global Policy (Vol. 13, no. 1, February 2022) is out. Contents include:
  • Alexander Kentikelenis & Thomas Stubbs, Austerity Redux: The Post-pandemic Wave of Budget Cuts and the Future of Global Public Health
  • Alex Cobham, Tommaso Faccio, Javier Garcia-Bernardo, Petr Janský, Jeffery Kadet, & Sol Picciotto, A Practical Proposal to end Corporate Tax Abuse: METR, a Minimum Effective Tax Rate for Multinationals
  • Vítor Manuel de Sousa Gabriel, María Belén Lozano, & Maria Fernanda Ludovina Inácio Matias, The Low-carbon Equity Market: A New Alternative for Investment Diversification?
  • Sara Kahn-Nisser, Contextualizing Donors’ Interests: The United Nations’ Shaming of the United States’ Trade Partners
  • Jen Iris Allan, Graeme Auld, Timothy Cadman, & Hayley Stevenson, Comparative Fortunes of Ecosystem Services as an International Governance Concept
  • Matthew Breay Bolton, Human Rights Fallout of Nuclear Detonations: Reevaluating ‘Threshold Thinking’ in Assisting Victims of Nuclear Testing
  • Jianyong Yue, The Limits to China's Peaceful Rise – Deep Integration and a New Cold War
  • Raj Verma, Afghanistan, regional powers and non-traditional security threats and challenges
  • Lisa Curtis, Picking up the Pieces in Afghanistan: Need for Smarter Diplomacy and Targeted Counterterrorism
  • Manoj Joshi, Non-traditional Security Threats to India from Afghanistan?
  • Zahid Shahab Ahmed, The Taliban’s Takeover of Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Non-traditional Security Challenges
  • Haibin Niu & Yuehan Huang, China’s Alternative Prudent Approach in Afghanistan
  • Ekaterina Stepanova, Russia, Central Asia and Non-traditional Security Threats from Afghanistan following the US Withdrawal
  • Mohsen Solhdoost & Mahmoud Pargoo, Iran’s Nontraditional Security Challenges under the Taliban Rule
  • Raj Verma, Instability in Afghanistan and Non-traditional Security Threats: A Public Good Problem?
  • David Horan, Towards a Portfolio Approach: Partnerships for Sustainable Transformations
  • Charles B. Roger, When is Weakness a Weapon?