Articles

Afghanistan: Social and Economic Development as Military and Strategic Interests

Emrah Ozdemir • Apr 9 2016 • Articles

Afghans need political and economic support. International interventions should not insist on their strategic interests at the expense of socioeconomic development.

Past Reaching into Present in Ukraine’s Undeclared War

Marta Dyczok • Apr 4 2016 • Articles

If people take a clear look at the past and confront the truths and the lies, it may help convince those being spurred to kill that they’d be better off building a future.

The Ukraine-Russia Border: Passage Is Forbidden, But Who Will Stop You?

Marta Dyczok • Apr 4 2016 • Articles

It is shocking how casual the border between two countries in a state of undeclared war can be.

The Historian as Public Analyst: The Case of Ukraine

David R. Marples • Apr 3 2016 • Articles

The events of the Euromaidan galvanized Ukrainians and led scholars to debate whether it is a civil war or a war with Russia or the start of a new Cold War.

Fear, Anger and Attitudes Toward Immigration

Rose McDermott • Mar 30 2016 • Articles

Fear and anger that undergird the reactions to outgroups contribute greatly to coalescing diverse interests into supporting strong border controls which exclude migrants.

A Critical Appraisal of the ‘Comfort Women’ Agreement between Japan and South Korea

Kazuya Fukuoka • Mar 30 2016 • Articles

A true reconciliation over the ‘comfort women’ issue requires a future vision, or a grand scheme, within which the current agreement is contextualized.

Fixing the ‘Prevent’ Strategy in UK Education

Daniel Giraldo • Mar 30 2016 • Articles

A better counter-terrorism strategy would encourage cohesiveness and a better understanding of different ethnic groups – some of the core principles in any democratic society.

Imagining the End of the World in Fiction and Capitalism

Sadek Kessous • Mar 29 2016 • Articles

Capitalism has long been read as the only game in town but fiction has consistently tested that rule with the idea of dystopia.

Notes from 1951 on the Refugee Crisis

Natasha Saunders • Mar 28 2016 • Articles

Hannah Arendt’s reflections on the refugee problem in 1930’s Europe, written in 1951, have an eerie resonance with the refugee problem today

Is a Chinese Maritime Judicial Centre Credible?

Kerry Brown • Mar 25 2016 • Articles

The maritime judicial centre represents China’s intentions to no longer accept international rule making and judging, but to put its own version of things forward.

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