Articles

The Kurdish Question of Turkey’s Foreign Policy

Ali Bilgiç • Mar 2 2016 • Articles

Turkey’s foreign policy following the Arab uprisings is considered volatile and difficult questions remain for the actors involved in Syria and the wider Middle East.

A Critical Contribution to Academic Freedom in Turkey

Gonenc Uysal • Mar 2 2016 • Articles

The majority of academics seem to fail to understand the relationship between the pressure on academic freedom and the neoliberal-conservative pressure on the labour force.

Forgiveness in Reconciliation Between Japan and South Korea

Naoko Kumagai • Mar 2 2016 • Articles

Reconciliation without forgiveness exists between Japan and Korea. Genuine reconciliation should be pursued to complement to what political reconciliation has missed.

Canada’s Audacious Refugee Response

The Canadian approach shows the possibility of a future for thousands of Syrian youth through resettlement, as important as any other effort to confront the Syrian war.

Is the India-Pakistan Conflict Really Intractable?

Saeed Ahmed Rid • Mar 1 2016 • Articles

The issue of terrorism must be delinked from the peace dialogue and sports exchanges, as well as people-to-people contacts, in order for a more durable peace process.

The Financialisation of the Art Market

Erica Coslor • Mar 1 2016 • Articles

Through sophisticated quantification tools and valuation techniques, economists make the art market recognisable as an investment opportunity for financial markets.

The Way We Were: Studying Europe Forty Years Ago

Peter Vale • Mar 1 2016 • Articles

Reflecting on masters courses in the 1970s, questions emerge on whether these courses help or hinder England understand its view of itself in the world.

Great Power Management: English School Meets Governmentality?

Alexander Astrov • Feb 25 2016 • Articles

Various non-governmental agencies are identifying the sins of the world while leaving to the states the managerial task of actually addressing the problems.

Citizens Not Zombies: Rethinking Assumptions about US Religious Voters

John A. Rees • Feb 25 2016 • Articles

The habit of homogenising religious political behaviour only leads to sloppy thinking disconnected from the evidence of how really existing religious citizens act

The Outbreak of the Zika Virus and Reproductive Rights in Latin America

Marianna Leite • Feb 24 2016 • Articles

There has been a range of reactions to the Zika outbreak, the most alarming being the impairment of women’s reproductive rights and access to safe abortion services.

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