Labour MP David Lammy has a new piece in Foreign Affairs called, “The Case for Progressive...
Even though the school year is ending, protests against Israel–most prominent on college...
Does Whataboutism work? A new article has answers.
This is the fifth in our series of remembrances on the late Susan Sell. There was a terrific...
Labour MP David...
Even though the...
Does Whataboutism work? A new article has answers.
Professor Sebastian Kaempf of the University of Queensland joins the Hayseed Scholar podcast this...
Professor Lene Hansen of the University of Copenhagen likely needs no introduction to most...
Huss Banai of Indiana University is an individual Brent considers himself incredibly fortunate to...
THe short-term contributions of the Special Issue have been worthwhile, but there remains a continued concern and challenge that with greater attention paid to race and imperialism in IR, these issues will become co-opted into the game of academic production, sanitised as intellectual curiosities, instead of being treated as matters of life and death that need to be opposed practically and not just on paper.
International institutional policy, shaped by a globally entrenched explanatory framework of development and underdevelopment, perpetuates the suppression of knowledge production aimed at challenging social, economic, and political injustices by elites across the global South
Intra-elite, state-centric society is a strategic front, and ought to be defended and put to use in the continued development of a global and decolonial turn in IR.
126 countries now publish a national security strategy or defense document, and 45 of these feature
a leaders’ preambles. How these talk about the world, or not, is surprisingly revealing of historical
global strategic hierarchies.
When I arrived at the Pentagon in 2009, the Obama administration was just getting its footing as...
Who, if anyone, rules the world? Answering a question like that requires grappling with both the...
Earlier this week, a boat carrying migrants fleeing Afghanistan sank in the English Channel,...
On February 21, the Federal Supreme Court of Iraq ruled on a set of cases pertaining to the...
Now that the myth of “theory-practice gap” has been largely refuted what role might IR and journals like International Affairs play in crafting a “reparative praxis”?
The takeaway from last night’s State of the Union address is that Biden’s language...
The ongoing war in Gaza has stretched on for over two months after the horrific October 7 attack...
The International Affairs Centenary Special Issue on “Race and Imperialism in International Relations: Theory and Practice” was published two years ago in the aftermath of the global Black Lives Matter movement; it marked an atypical period of introspection by many scholars, departments, and journals of International Relations on the general paucity of attention given to matters of race and imperialism in IR research and teaching.
Carol Cohn is the G.O.A.T. Back in 1987, she wrote what is still the best gendered take on the...
With a symbolically successful COP28 and substantively significant investments in clean energy...
Despite existing international regulations advising countries to coordinate and minimize border...