Articles

South Sudan a Year On: Statehood in Perspective

Hagar Taha • Jul 6 2012 • Articles

As we approach the one-year anniversary of the South Sudanese state’s creation, the country is still plagued with many of the issues it has faced for decades. Indeed, it’s only because we have inflated expectations of states that we believed it would be any different.

Taming the Anarchical Society

Ian Hall • Jul 5 2012 • Articles

We should see The Anarchical Society as a book more important for what it says about Western anxieties in the latter half of the 1970s than for what it might offer latter-day theorists.

Oliver North: A New Low for the Military-Industrial-Entertainment Network

Robert E Kelly • Jul 5 2012 • Articles

American geopolitical entertainment has become brutal. Games play with relish for pro-American killing & bloodlust, morally fig-leafed by patriotism.

China in Transition: From a Harmonious World to a Contested Region

Jingdong Yuan • Jul 5 2012 • Articles

China’s new leadership will inherit a complex, and highly contested security environment from Sino-US relations to territorial disputes in the South China Sea.

Racism and Sport: Myths and Facts

Barbara Faedda • Jul 5 2012 • Articles

Racism and xenophobia are important issues in sports. Why is racism continuously reframed and conceptualized in different situations, and why it is still so pervasive and reluctant to die?

An Election Short on Hope: Mexico 2012

Arthur Schmidt • Jul 4 2012 • Articles

Mexico’s recent Presidential election returned the PRI back to power twelve years after the party was ousted. Numerous problems continue to plague the country. This election won’t change that.

“Welcome to North Korea,” Predicting the Effect of Russia’s new Protest Law

Regina Smyth • Jul 4 2012 • Articles

While Russia is not likely to emerge as North Korea, or even Belarus, it is likely that the state will continue to engage in a complex strategy of repression to maintain its position.

Scottish Energy and Catalan Hope

Edgar Illas • Jul 3 2012 • Articles

The necessity to control one’s economic, political and cultural space in the global market seems to indicate that the separatist sentiment among the Scottish and the Catalans will continue to grow.

Fear of Relativism

Patrick Thaddeus Jackson • Jul 3 2012 • Articles

Two claims inhabiting different traditions of inquiry cannot possibly contradict one another unless they can be translated into the other tradition and straightforwardly evaluated.

The Moral Molecule and International Relations

Paul J. Zak • Jul 3 2012 • Articles

Every representative political system depends on trust. The same is true for relations between polities. Yet, very little research has been done to understand why it is that we trust others and what those findings could mean for International Relations.

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