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301. The EU’s North Korea Policy: From Engagement, to Critical Engagement, and to Criticism with Limited Engagement

302. North Korea’s Energy Crisis: What Are the Problems?

303. Kim Jong Un’s Two-Faced Strategy: South Korea First and U.S. Later Tactics Restoration of the Inter-Korean Hotline, the Road to an Inter-Korean Summit

304. The China Challenge Prompts Recovery of a Strained ROK-Japan Relations: Analyzing ROK-Japan Relations Through the 9th Joint Korea-Japan Public Opinion Survey

305. Is Serbia Still a Troublemaker in the Balkans?

306. Common Perceptions: Discovering the consensus between King Abdullah and Putin regarding the future of Southern Syria

307. Incessant Tension: Uncovering the Turkish attempt to bust an Israeli spy ring

308. More Harm than Good: Why Chinese Sanctions over THAAD have Backfired

309. The Opportunity is There: South Koreans’ Views of China and the Future of the US-ROK Alliance

310. Detachment by Default: the International Framework of the Karabakh Conflict

311. Systemic Reconfiguration of Capitalism: Applying Ruggie’s Critique of Waltz in Economics

312. Old Ally, New Direction: Cobra Gold and Beyond

313. For Israel’s Acceptance to the AU as Observer Reveals Continental Divides

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

315. EU – Japan Strategic dialogue: climate change cooperation as a pathway to the future

316. EU-China Engagement in Humanitarian Aid: Different Approaches, Shared Interests?

317. The 23rd EU-Ukraine Summit at a time of changes

318. China’s Influence in South Asia: Vulnerabilities and Resilience in Four Countries

319. The policy of the People’s Republic of China towards Central and Eastern Europe in 2012-2020

320. The Crisis of Ethiopian Foreign Relations

321. Global rivalry in the Red Sea: A ‘Geopolitical’ European Union should encourage cooperation in the Red Sea region

322. Staring Into the Abyss of US-China Decoupling

323. Athens and Jerusalem Have a Diplomatic Opportunity

324. Coronavirus Threatens to Drive Wedge into US-Gulf Relations

325. Gulf Security: The Arab Gulf States Have No Good Options

326. Coronavirus, China, and the Middle East

327. France and the Russian Presence in Africa

328. Palestine in Russia’s Foreign Policy

329. The Gulf Cooperation Council and the Pandemic

330. A New Horizon for the Korea-India Strategic and Sustainable Partnership under Korea's New Southern Policy

331. Framing an Indo-Pacific Narrative in India-South Korea Ties

332. Common fears, common opportunities? Czechia and Norway in the changing international context

333. The New British Colonialism: British Policy of Influence in the Arab Gulf States after the Withdrawal (1971-1991)

334. China, Africa and the WHO : a challenge for post covid19 multilateralism

335. What would no deal mean?

336. The future of the EU: new perspectives

337. Devolution post-Brexit: new frictions, old tensions

338. The Everyday Importance of International Relations: Walk a Mile in Your Own Shoes

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

340. International Opinion of the U.S. Slides from Respect to Pity

341. Negotiating the U.S.-Romania Consular Convention

342. Immigration Policy as Foreign Policy

343. China-U.K. Relations Grow More Strained Over Huawei and Hong Kong

344. Turkey's Foreign Policy in the Age of Uncertainty

345. Russian information offensive in the international relations

346. Human Rights (Syllabus Resource)

347. Feminism (Syllabus Resource)

348. Liberalism (Syllabus Resource)

349. THE HISTORY OF BRICS’ INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS (2009-2019): DISCOURSES, INNOVATION AND SENSITIVITIES

350. Sudan’s Predicament and the Israeli Connection

351. Commerce and Conflict: Navigating Myanmar’s China Relationship

352. A Roundtable on Joseph S. Nye, Jr. Do Morals Matter?: Presidents and Foreign Policy from FDR to Trump

353. A Roundtable on Monica Kim The Interrogation Rooms of the Korean War: The Untold History

354. A Roundtable on Daniel Bessner and Fredrik Logevall, “Recentering the United States in the Historiography of American Foreign Relations”

355. Roundtable on Timothy J. Lynch, In the Shadow of the Cold War: American Foreign Policy from George Bush Sr. to Donald Trump

356. Spring 2020 edition of Strategic Visions

357. In search of a European Russia strategy

358. Iraq’s adolescent democracy: Where to go from here

359. From legal to administrative subsidiarity: Diagnosing enforcement of EU border control

360. China and the EU in the Western Balkans: A zero-sum game?

361. Seven Ironies of Reconstructing a New Security Paradigm in the Gulf

362. The Middle East in an Era of Great Power Competition

363. Challenges and Opportunities in US-Taiwan Relations

364. At a Crossroads? China-India Nuclear Relations After the Border Clash

365. R2P and the Pluralist Norm-shapers

366. The Fundamental Conceptual Trinity of Cyberspace

367. Israel and the European Union: Enemies, A Love Story

368. Israel and the Environment in the Mediterranean Basin

369. Israel's Relations with Key Arab States in 2019

370. Israel’s Relations with the Middle East, Europe and the Mediterranean

371. Israeli Diplomacy in Muslim and Arab States

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

373. Ukraine’s Response to the Political Crisis in Belarus

374. 2020 Review of the United Nations Peacebuilding Architecture African Regional Consultation Report

375. Deepening Progressive Partnerships: TAYLE & PF Young Leaders

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

377. Putting A Spoke In The Wheel: Russian Efforts To Weaken U.S.-led Alliance Structures In Northeast Asia

378. ASEAN’s Looming Anxiety

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

380. Strategic Ambivalence: Japan’s Conflicted Response

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

382. Japanese Views of South Korea: Enough is Enough

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

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

385. Putin’s Strategic Framework for Northeast Asia

386. Xi Jinping’s Geopolitical Framework for Northeast Asia

387. Donald Trump’s Geopolitical Framework for Northeast Asia: Something Borrowed, Something New

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

389. International Relations (IR) Pedagogy, Dialogue and Diversity: Taking the IR Course Syllabus Seriously

390. Widening the ‘Global Conversation’: Highlighting the Voices of IPE in the Global South

391. Dialogue of the “Globals”: Connecting Global IR to Global Intellectual History

392. The Idea of Dialogue of Civilizations and Core-Periphery Dialogue in International Relations

393. Locating a Multifaceted and Stratified Disciplinary ‘Core’

394. Foregrounding the Complexities of a Dialogic Approach to Global International Relations

395. Alternatives to the State: Or, Why a Non-Western IR Must Be a Revolutionary Science FacebookLinkedInTwitterMendeleyEmail

396. Wallerstein, Arrighi, and Amin: Imperialism in Fordist Capitalism

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

398. A New Direction: A Foreign Policy Playbook on Military Restraint for the Biden Team

399. The Lingering Stalemate: Qatar’s Blockade Awaits a Mediation Exit

400. China's Pandemic Diplomacy