Articles

Students or Children?

Dylan Kissane • Nov 12 2013 • Articles

One of the cultural differences that is most striking about teaching in the private sector of France’s higher education industry is the way that French schools infantilise their students. A few examples really push this home.

The Knotted Gun: Practical Solutions to Conflict

Daryl Morini • Nov 11 2013 • Articles

IR academics have a special responsibility to the world, as the inheritors of an enduring and all-important question: How can we prevent future wars?

Czech Elections: How a Billionaire Populist Upstaged Established Parties

Sean Hanley • Nov 9 2013 • Articles

The Czech election results represent a decisive breach in the Republic’s previously stable pattern of party politics. The new political landscape is both fluid and highly fragmented.

Guyana: The Next Economic Tiger?

Peter Clegg • Nov 9 2013 • Articles

Although Guyana is the third poorest country in the Americas it has a tremendous stock of natural resources, and there is great hope that Guyana’s economy has reached take-off phase.

‘There’s a Soldier in All of Us’: Call of Duty’s Promotion of US Foreign Policy

Daniel Golebiewski • Nov 7 2013 • Articles

Video games like Call of Duty have a propaganda hidden in a message: to protect and promote post-9/11 US foreign policy and military strategy.

Phronesis, Morgenthau and Diplomacy

Anthony F. Lang Jr. • Nov 7 2013 • Articles

Morgenthau’s insights into diplomatic practice and his invocation of the Aristotelian idea of phronesis might help us to see the difficulties of diplomatic life today.

The Responses of the Nigerian Defense and Intelligence Establishments to the Boko Haram Security Challenge

Osumah Oarhe • Nov 6 2013 • Articles

Nigeria is sliding into anarchy on account of the Boko Haram insurgency as the defense and intelligence establishments seem to be losing their grip on the security challenge.

Boko Haram and the Isolation of Northern Nigeria

Joseph Siegle • Nov 6 2013 • Articles

The challenges posed by Boko Haram are emblematic of an emerging security paradigm in Africa where local grievances are fused with international ideology, funding, and technology.

U.S Congress and Boko Haram

Caitlin Poling • Nov 6 2013 • Articles

It is imperative that Congress maintains its careful attention to the rise of Boko Haram and takes all steps in its power to prevent an attack on American interests abroad or the US Homeland.

Greece’s Radical Politics on the Dark Side of Dawn

Othon Anastasakis • Nov 5 2013 • Articles

Most governments of the EU are now forced to dance to the tunes of the extreme right. In that respect, the Greek far right stands out as the ugliest reflection in the deforming mirror of the dark side of the EU.

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