Reacting to a recent event on the study of religion, conflict and peace
When I was in graduate school, my training included the methods and theories of international...
The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) recently published results of a survey of historians on the...
What is the name of the book and what are its coordinates? The book is Exit from International...
Reacting to a recent event on the study of religion, conflict and peace
When I was in...
The Council on...
The Hayseed Scholar podcast has come to a close. In this farewell episode, Brent's brother...
Dr. Benjamin de Carvalho joins the Hayseed Scholar podcast. Ben was born in Switzerland to a...
I get emails. Sometimes they find me well; sometimes they try to convince me that I need to bring...
When I was in grad school in the mid-aughts, one Professor was a die-hard supporter of George W....
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s speech at the Munich Security Conference demonstrated he is a...
A century before Trump’s tariff threats, Joseph Chamberlain pitched the same idea: use duties as a “big revolver” to force rivals into “fair trade.” That history helps explain why “unfairness” rhetoric and coercive foreign policy keep returning when hegemonic powers decline.