Land, Climate, and Conflict: Unravelling the Nexus in Sudan, Syria, and Morocco

Isabel MacKellar • Dec 23 2025 • Essays

Climate change acts as a threat multiplier, contributing to conflict only where weak land tenure governance amplifies drought-induced social and political stresses.

Elections as Spectacle: Myanmar’s Manufactured Legitimacy

Federica Cidale • Dec 22 2025 • Articles

The 2025 election is another chapter in a long-running performance designed to mask the persistence of military domination in Myanmar.

The Desert of Dune to the University Classroom: Pop-culture and Political Theory

Faiz Sheikh • Dec 21 2025 • Articles

Bringing together researchers and students to watch a pop culture artefact and discuss its implications for IR is a very accessible way to enter into expert conversations.

Opinion – The Mearsheimer Logic Underlying Trump’s National Security Strategy

Mark N. Katz • Dec 19 2025 • Articles

Trump’s 2025 National Security Strategy has adopted Mearsheimer’s aims for US to achieve predominance in the West and prevent great powers to dominate other regions.

Opinion – Okinawa’s Struggle with Ongoing US Military Presence

Peter Chai • Dec 19 2025 • Articles

National sentiment in Japan can diverge sharply over military instalments, and local resistance remains a source of uncertainty for Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s plans.

Opinion – Evidence that Georgia Deployed WW1-Era Chemicals against Demonstrators

Martin Duffy • Dec 19 2025 • Articles

Weapons experts consulted by the BBC suggested that an obsolete, more potent agent like camite was used, alongside CS-gas, in Tbilisi.

Interview – Ankit Panda

E-International Relations • Dec 18 2025 • Features

Ankit Panda reflects on a new nuclear age marked by great-power rivalry, rising proliferation pressures, and fading arms control, urging realism about deterrence in a riskier world.

The Revolutionary New Dynamics of the 2025 National Security Strategy of the United States

Seán Molloy • Dec 17 2025 • Articles

The NSS 2025 shares an unrealistic belief that simply being the world’s predominant in power will inevitably deliver positive outcomes for the United States.

The State of China’s Soft Power in 2025

Daniele Carminati • Dec 17 2025 • Articles

China’s gains are hard to deny, but five years are not enough to define a new paradigm of attraction in international relations.

The Hedley Bull – Ali Mazrui Dialogue as a Metaphor for IR

Seifudein Adem • Dec 17 2025 • Articles

The intellectual relationship between Mazrui and Bull remains one of the most instructive cross-civilizational dialogues in the history of IR.

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