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1. North Cranks up Nukes—and Slams Down the Phone

2. Confrontation Muted, Tensions Growing

3. India’s Ongoing “Strategic Correction to the East” during 2022

4. Regional Overview: Indo-Pacific as the 'Epicenter',

5. Coalitions of the Week: BRICS, ASEAN, the G20

6. The Demise of Diplomatic Ambiguity: Parsing South Korea’s Estrangement From China

7. Party Ties: Vietnam, Cuba and China’s Relations with Other Marxist-Leninist States

8. Beyond Arms and Ammunition: China, Russia and the Iran Back Channel

9. Estados Unidos y África. Historia de una no-política

10. Towards Guanxi? Reconciling the “Relational Turn” in Western and Chinese International Relations Scholarship

11. Ontological Insecurity, Anxiety, and Hubris: An Affective Account of Turkey-KRG Relations

12. China Makes a Move in the Middle East: How Far Will Sino-Arab Strategic Rapprochement Go?

13. INDIA-CHINA STRATEGIC COMPETITION IN THE INDIAN OCEAN

14. Turkey’s Response to Syrian Mass Migration: A Neoclassical Realist Analysis

15. The Silence of non-Western International Relations Theory as a Camouflage Strategy: The Trauma of Qing China and the Late Ottoman Empire

16. U.S. Trade Policy toward China: Learning the Right Lessons

17. The Sino–U.S. National Identity Gap and Bilateral Relations

18. The Pandemic as a Geopolitical Game Changer in the Indo-Pacific: The View from Japan

19. How COVID-19 Has Affected the Geopolitics of Korea

20. China, ASEAN, and the Covid-19 Pandemic

21. The Pandemic as a Geopolitical Gamechanger in the Indo-Pacific: The View from China

22. Tianxia (All-Under-Heaven): An Alternative System or a Rose by another Name?

23. Opciones estratégicas de Rusia desde la óptica del neorrealismo ofensivo

24. Modern Migration Pattern in Indonesia: Dilemmas of a Transit Country

25. Searching for Legitimacy? The Motivations behind Inter-Korean Dialogue during the Mid-1980s

26. U.S.-China Relations and the Need for Continued Public Diplomacy

27. The Implications of the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor for Pakistan–European Union Relations

28. Joint U.S.-Korea Academic Studies 2020

29. ASEAN’s Looming Anxiety

30. Is China’s Innovation a Threat to the South Korea-China Economic Relationship?

31. Strategic Ambivalence: Japan’s Conflicted Response

32. China’s Economic Rise amid Renewed Great Power Competition, America’s Strategic Choices

33. Japanese Views of South Korea: Enough is Enough

34. South Korean Views of Japan: A Polarizing Split in Coverage

35. The Case of United States Views of Its Ties with China

36. Putin’s Strategic Framework for Northeast Asia

37. Xi Jinping’s Geopolitical Framework for Northeast Asia

38. The Chinese School, Global Production of Knowledge, and Contentious Politics in the Disciplinary IR

39. Geopolitics and the Constitution in Light of the Democratic Constitutional State

40. The two Koreas´ Relations with China: Vision and Challenge

41. U.S.-China Relations: The Way Forward

42. The evolution of China’s Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: from a revisionist to status-seeking agenda

43. Working hand in hand to create a brighter future for China and Poland

44. Three boards: security, economy and the new unknown. The complicated relationship between China and Central and Eastern Europe

45. China’s Role in Inter-Korean Relations

46. Global Image of Pakistan: Significance of Public Diplomacy

47. Can the European Union Save Multilateralism?

48. The Relationship between the United Nations Command and Japan: 1950 to 2018

49. North Korea’s Sharp Power and the Divide Over Korean Identities

50. Just a Dash? China’s Sharp Power and Australia’s Value Diplomacy

51. China's Sharp Power and South Korea's Peace Initiative

52. Sino-Russian Relations, South Korea, and North Korea

53. Challenges for the Republic of China: Diplomatic Relations within Latin America after the Regime Rotation in 2016

54. The Ukrainian Crisis as a Case Study of Different Policymaking Styles of Russia and China

55. China’s rise in English school perspective

56. Reintroducing friendship to international relations: relational ontologies from China to the West

57. The Genealogy of Culturalist International Relations in Japan and Its Implications for Post-Western Discourse

58. Chinese Concepts and Relational International Politics FacebookLinkedInTwitterMendeleyEmail

59. Why India Won’t Play Its ‘Tibet Card’

60. Abraham Lincoln, Hillary Clinton, and Liu Xiaobo

61. Worlding the Study of Normative Power: Assessing European and Chinese Definitions of the “Normal”

62. The Strategic Case for South Korea to Join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership

63. Chinese Views of Korean History in the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries

64. The U.S.-Japan-ROK Trilateral: Better at Deterrence than Diplomacy?

65. Shift of Power from West to East and Rise of China

66. China’s Role and the Potential of Pak-China Cooperation in Regional Organizations

67. Explaining India’s Foreign Policy: From Dream to Realization of Major Power

68. Migration governance and the migration industry in Asia: moving domestic workers from Indonesia to Singapore

69. Why is there no Non-Western International Relations Theory? Ten years on

70. Waging Insurgent Warfare: Lessons from the Vietcong to the Islamic State, by Seth G. Jones

71. A World in Transition: the Rise of Populism and the Fall of Multilateralism? (Full Issue)

72. Transcending Hegemonic International Relations Theorization: Nothingness, Re-Worlding, and Balance of Relationship

73. The Trump Administration, U.S.-Korean Economic Relations, and Asian Regionalism

74. Reinforcing U.S.-ROK Economic Relations through a Better Understanding of the KORUS FTA

75. Intro | U.S.-ROK Economic Relations Left Uncertain Amid Leadership Changes

76. The Communicative Dimension and Security in Asia-Pacific: A communicative-viewing proposal for reform of the Japanese Intelligence Services

77. North Korea in South Korea–Japan relations as a source of mutual security anxiety among democratic societies

78. The Dispatch (Spring 2016)

79. Will China Allow North Korea to Collapse?

80. Racing toward Tragedy? China's Rise, Military Competition in the Asia Pacific, and the Security Dilemma

81. David Martin Jones, Nicholas Khoo and MLR Smith, Asian Security and the Rise of China: International Relations in an Age of Volatility

82. The “Rise” of China in the Eyes of Russia: A Source of Threats or New Opportunities?

83. The Economy-Security Nexus in Northeast Asia

84. The Political Contexts of Religious Exchanges: A Study on Chinese Protestants' International Relations

85. The role of French private military companies in the security privatization sector: Specific features of the French approach and a comparison with Anglo-Saxon private military companies

86. Book Reviews: International Relations theory

87. A North Korean Spring?

88. The Dollar’s Influence in East Asia: Benevolent or Overbearing? A Comparative Answer in the U.S. Economic Aid and the Dollar Standard

89. South Korean National Identity and its Strategic Preferences

90. China-Russia Relations:Coping with Korea

91. The absence of non-western IR theory in Asia reconsidered

92. When security met politics: desecuritization of North Korean threats by South Korea's Kim Dae-jung government

93. International Relations studies in Asia: distinctive trajectories

94. Something old, something new, something borrowed: rerepresentations of anarchy in International Relations theory

95. The Politics of Anti-Westernism in Asia

96. Bibliography of Periodical Literature

97. The European Union's Asia strategies: Problems of foreign policy and international relations

98. Intellectual legacies, ethical policies and normative territories: Situating the human rights issue in EU–Asia relations

99. Historical beliefs and the perception of threat in Northeast Asia: colonialism, the tributary system, and China–Japan–Korea relations in the twenty-first century

100. Teaching international relations in Southeast Asia: historical memory, academic context, and politics – an introduction