Archive for 2012

Can the South Caucasian States Establish Themselves as Independent Actors?

anon • Oct 2 2012 • Essays

Treating the South Caucasus as one defined region is very credulous, which consequently runs the risk of blurring the complexities of regional policy-making.

The BRICS Bank and the Global South

Siphamandla Zondi • Oct 2 2012 • Articles

The idea of a BRICS development bank is now a huge bone of contention in South Africa, but the idea is pregnant with many positive possibilities provided it focuses on South-led global development.

A Global Survey of the IR Curriculum

Daryl Morini and Christian Romuss • Oct 1 2012 • Articles

Today marks the opening of a global survey of the IR curriculum. We are calling on all IR students to tell us exactly what they think of the theory-practice balance in their studies, and of their IR education in general

The Lukewarm Response from the International Community to the Crises in Guinea-Bissau

Brandon D. Lundy • Oct 1 2012 • Articles

Since the most recent coup in April, Guinea-Bissau has continued to seek new international partners. But only time will tell if growing foreign investment in Guinea-Bissau will help it escape failed statehood.

‘The Shadow of an Axe’: Exploring the Hungary-Azerbaijan-Armenia Diplomatic Tensions

Andras Racz • Sep 30 2012 • Articles

With the extradition of Ramil Safarov to Azerbaijan, Hungary maneuvered itself into a position where it has to cope with all the negative domestic and international consequences of the case.

Review – War Beyond the Battlefield

Sheldon G. Levy • Sep 30 2012 • Features

David Grondin’s edited collection represents a variety of perspectives that aim to demonstrate that the locus of battle is not on the traditional battlefield in the War on Terror.

Review – Gender, Sex and the Postnational Defence

Katharine Wright • Sep 29 2012 • Features

In Gender, Sex and the Postnational Defence, Annica Kronsell challenges an assumption that gender mainstreaming is more achievable than gender parity in military organisations.

The First Great Debate

Brian C. Schmidt • Sep 28 2012 • Articles

Eighty plus years after the debate between idealists and realists allegedly occurred, the ‘first great debate’ continues to occupy a central place in IR’s historical consciousness. Yet, we now have a better understanding of the historiography of the field.

The Shifting China Narrative: From ‘Rise’ to ‘Fall?’

Harry Kazianis • Sep 28 2012 • Articles

From 1995 until about 2010 experts sang the praises of China’s rise, but the last several years have seen a gradual shift in the conversation. Now, talk of China’s impending “fall” is in vogue.

Liberal Legal Internationalism: A History (and Present) of Double Standards

Mohsen al Attar • Sep 27 2012 • Articles

Liberal legal internationalism is anything but liberal, legal or international. International law today is as rife with double standards as it was nearly five centuries ago during times of colonial conquest.

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