Articles

Opinion – The Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict: Russia’s Exit Cue from South Caucasus?

Vahagn Avedian • Jan 22 2023 • Articles

The Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict and its outcome might determine Russia’s future in the South Caucasus, but the role of the West in it is still an ambiguous one.

Opinion – NATO’s Expansion in Northern Europe Rests on Türkiye

Alexander Brotman • Jan 19 2023 • Articles

Erdogan craves relevance and abhors isolation on the global stage. This will be what continues to bind NATO and Türkiye together.

Reflections on Decoloniality, Time, History and Remembering

Ali Kassem • Jan 17 2023 • Articles

Racialised communities across metropoles such as Beirut, Singapore and Edinburgh have contested questions of the past, of history, and of memory.

Opinion – Biden and the Netanyahu Government: An Inevitable Clash?

Glen Segell • Jan 17 2023 • Articles

If the extremists take control of Netanyahu and not the other way around, it will lead to clashes with Biden that could harm American support of Israel.

Geopolitics for EU lawyers

Luigi Lonardo • Jan 10 2023 • Articles

To make sense of law as a social object, scholars of EU law and EU foreign policy should look wider and consider the perspectives of other disciplines.

Opinion – Rwandan Support for M23 Rebels Cannot Continue

Wilder Alejandro Sánchez • Jan 10 2023 • Articles

Kigali’s sponsoring of proxy warfare in Eastern DRC via the March 23 Movement demonstrates that President Kagame is a security liability.

Opinion – Remembering North Korea’s Human Side

Gabriela Bernal • Jan 6 2023 • Articles

Whilst the North Korean government will likely continue to focus on its military capabilities in 2023, life for ordinary people is unlikely to improve significantly.

Opinion – The Iranian Regime’s Continuing Oppression Amid Growing Protests

Nadeem Ahmed Moonakal • Jan 4 2023 • Articles

The nature of the response to the protests reveals the regime’s fear as it faces one of its most serious legitimacy crises.

Visualising Peace: A Virtual Museum

Borrowing the words of Frank Möller, shifting from war to peace in discourse is a precondition for politics to move the same way.

Thomas Sankara, Intersectionality and the Fate of Africa’s Liberation

Ethan Oversby and Benjamin Maiangwa • Dec 31 2022 • Articles

Sankara knew that Africa’s development had to come both from internal transformation and opposition to corrupt forces, as well as resistance from imperialism.

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