Wednesday, March 8, 2023

New Issue: International Affairs

The latest issue of International Affairs (Vol. 99, no. 2, March 2023) is out. Contents include:
  • India as a ‘civilizational state’
    • Emma Mawdsley, Introduction: India as a ‘civilizational state’
    • Kate Sullivan de Estrada, What is a vishwaguru? Indian civilizational pedagogy as a transformative global imperative
    • Jayati Srivastava, The narratives and aesthetics of the civilizational state in the ‘new’ India
    • Shibashis Chatterjee & Udayan Das, India’s civilizational arguments in south Asia: from Nehruvianism to Hindutva
    • Esra Elif Nartok, ‘Hindu civilization’ in business: the World Hindu Economic Forum’s intellectual project
    • Rani Singh & Tim Winter, From Hinduism to Hindutva: civilizational internationalism and UNESCO
    • Sebastian Haug & Supriya Roychoudhury, Civilizational exceptionalism in international affairs: making sense of Indian and Turkish claims
    • Priya Chacko, Disciplining India: paternalism, neo-liberalism and Hindutva civilizationalism
  • Louise Fawcett, The Iraq War 20 years on: towards a new regional architecture
  • Oula Kadhum, Nation-destroying, emigration and Iraqi nationhood after the 2003 intervention
  • Juliet Kaarbo, Kai Oppermann & Ryan K. Beasley, What if? Counterfactual Trump and the western response to the war in Ukraine
  • Míla O’Sullivan & Kateřina Krulišová, Women, Peace and Security in central Europe: in between the western agenda and Russian imperialism
  • Boaz Atzili & Min Jung Kim, Buffer zones and international rivalry: internal and external geographic separation mechanisms
  • Duncan Depledge, Low-carbon warfare: climate change, net zero and military operations
  • Julia Gurol, The authoritarian narrator: China’s power projection and its reception in the Gulf
  • Fiona B. Adamson & Kelly M. Greenhill, Deal-making, diplomacy and transactional forced migration
  • Yf Reykers, John Karlsrud, Malte Brosig, Stephanie C. Hofmann, Cristiana Maglia & Pernille Rieker, Ad hoc coalitions in global governance: short-notice, task- and time-specific cooperation
  • Okechukwu C. Iheduru, The Catholic church and regional governance in west Africa
  • Nicole Scicluna & Stefan Auer Europe’s constitutional unsettlement: testing the political limits of legal integration
  • Thomas Peak, Halting genocide in a post-liberal international order: intervention, institutions and norms
  • Daniel Fittante, Constructivist memory politics: Armenian genocide recognition in Latvia