Saturday, November 12, 2022

New Issue: International Affairs

The latest issue of International Affairs (Vol. 98, no. 6, November 2022) is out. Contents include:
  • Roy Allison, Russia, Ukraine and state survival through neutrality
  • Harald Edinger, Offensive ideas: structural realism, classical realism and Putin’s war on Ukraine
  • Bernhard Blumenau, Breaking with convention? Zeitenwende and the traditional pillars of German foreign policy
  • Kristen Hopewell, How China lost its wolf pack: the fracturing of the emerging-power alliance at the WTO
  • Till Schöfer & Clara Weinhardt, Developing-country status at the WTO: the divergent strategies of Brazil, India and China
  • Ryuta Ito, Hybrid balancing as classical realist statecraft: China’s balancing behaviour in the Indo-Pacific
  • Maryanne Kelton, Michael Sullivan, Zac Rogers, Emily Bienvenue & Sian Troath, Virtual sovereignty? Private internet capital, digital platforms and infrastructural power in the United States
  • Dana M. Landau & Lior Lehrs, Populist peacemaking: Trump’s peace initiatives in the Middle East and the Balkans
  • Alise Coen, Localizing refugeehood: norms and the US resettlement of Afghan allies
  • Gwilym David Blunt, The Gates Foundation, global health and domination: a republican critique of transnational philanthropy
  • Lee Jones & Shahar Hameiri, Explaining the failure of global health governance during COVID-19
  • Lucas ee Oliveira Paes, The Amazon rainforest and the global–regional politics of ecosystem governance
  • Kristen A. Harkness, Security force assistance to Cameroon: how building enclave units deepens autocracy
  • Matthew Dixon & George Lawson, From revolution and terrorism to revolutionary terrorism: the case of militant Salafism