Tuesday, September 13, 2022

New Issue: International Studies Quarterly

The latest issue of the International Studies Quarterly (Vol. 66, no. 3, September 2022) is out. Contents include:
  • Aggie Hirst, Wargames Resurgent: The Hyperrealities of Military Gaming from Recruitment to Rehabilitation
  • Rena Sung & Jonghyuk Park, How Do Economic Sanctions Affect Public Opinion and Consumer Behavior in Target States? Evidence from China's Economic Sanctions on South Korea
  • Yehonatan Abramson, Gadi Heimann, & Zohar Kampf, The Servant of Many Masters: The Multiple Commitments of State- Agents
  • Joseph MacKay, Art World Fields and Global Hegemonies Øyvind Svendsen, Theorizing Public Performances for International Negotiations Andrew Gates & George Klosko, Political Obligations of Refugees
  • Jeremy Springman, Edmund Malesky, Lucy Right, & Erik Wibbels, The Effect of Government Repression on Civil Society: Evidence from Cambodia
  • Caitlin Sparks, Shannon Brincat, & Tim Aistrope, The Imagination and International Relations Marieke de Goede & Carola Westermeier, Infrastructural Geopolitics Jun Yan Chang, Not between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea: Singapore's Hedging
  • Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, One without the Other? Prediction and Policy in International Studies
  • Jonathan Wilkenfeld, Egle Murauskaite, David Quinn, Devin Ellis, Allison Astorino-Courtois, & Corinne DeFrancisci, Escalation Management in Gray Zone Crises: The Proxy Factor
  • Mary Anne Madeira, The Defeminizing Reversal: Globalization, Industrial Upgrading, and Female Labor Force Participation
  • Vincent Charles Keating, Membership Has Its Privileges: Targeted Killing Norms and the Firewall of International Society
  • David B Carter, Morgan L Kaplan, & Kenneth A Schultz, The Geography of Separatist Violence
  • Liane Hartnett, Love is Worldmaking: Reading Rabindranath Tagore's Gora as International Theory Benjamin Helms & David Leblang, Labor Market Policy as Immigration Control: The Case of Temporary Protected Status
  • Kavi Joseph Abraham, Modeling Institutional Change and Subject-Production: The World Bank's Turn to Stakeholder Participation Farsan Ghassim, Mathias Koenig-Archibugi, & Luis Cabrera, Public Opinion on Institutional Designs for the United Nations: An International Survey Experiment Vanessa Alexandra Boese, Scott Gates, Carl Henrik Knutsen, Håvard Mokleiv Nygård, & Håvard Strand, Patterns of Democracy over Space and Time Iain Osgood & Hyeon-Young Ro, Free Trade's Organized Progressive Opposition
  • Sara Kahn-Nisser, Vicious Cycle: Violations of Foreign Nationals’ Rights among CAT Countries
  • Jérémie Cornut, Emotional Practices and How We Can Trace Them: Diplomats, Emojis, and Multilateral Negotiations at the UNHRC
  • Christopher Schwarz, Material Scarcity, Mortality, and Violent Conflict
  • Alexander Stoffel, The Dialectic of the International: Elaborating the Historical Materialism of the Gay Liberationists Alice B M Vadrot & Silvia C Ruiz Rodríguez, Digital Multilateralism in Practice: Extending Critical Policy Ethnography to Digital Negotiation Sites Aniruddha Saha, Nuclear Stigma and Deviance in Global Governance: A New Research Agenda
  • Danielle L Lupton & Clayton Webb, Wither Elites? The Role of Elite Credibility and Knowledge in Public Perceptions of Foreign Policy
  • Adam Dean, Arresting the Opposition: Labor Repression and Trade Liberalization in Developing Countries
  • Claudia Junghyun Kim, Transnational Advocacy, Norm Regress, and Foreign Compliance Constituencies: The Case of the “Comfort Women” Redress Movement
  • Koji Kagotani & Wen-Chin Wu, When Do Diplomatic Protests Boomerang? Foreign Protests against US Arms Sales and Domestic Public Support in Taiwan
  • William L Allen & Evan Easton-Calabria, Combining Computational and Archival Methods to Study International Organizations: Refugees and the International Labour Organization, 1919–2015
  • Iris Malone, Unmasking Militants: Organizational Trends in Armed Groups, 1970–2012
  • Jiyoung Ko, Not So Dangerous? Nationalism and Foreign Policy Preference
  • Joshua A Schwartz, Matthew Fuhrmann, Michael C Horowitz, Do Armed Drones Counter Terrorism, Or Are They Counterproductive? Evidence from Eighteen Countries