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1. PLA Logistics and Sustainment: PLA Conference 2022

2. Imperfect Partners: The United States and Southeast Asia

3. How the War in Ukraine is Changing the Space Game

4. Tasks for North Korea Policy After the Washington Declaration

5. North Korea’s Outlook on the New Cold War

6. China’s Stance on North Korea’s “New Cold War” Narrative

7. Re-Declared “Frontal Breakthrough”: North Korea’s Nuclear First Line in 2023 and Its Limitations

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

9. Confrontation Muted, Tensions Growing

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

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

12. Sustaining Congressional Engagement with Southeast Asia

13. Korea Matters for America/America Matters for Korea (2023)

14. Two Peripheries: The Ukraine War's Effect on North Korea-Russia Relations

15. United Kingdom Engagement with North Korea

16. From Coy to Cold Shoulder - The European Union and North Korea

17. From Close Allies to Distant Comrades: The Ups and Downs of the Vietnam-North Korea Relationship

18. North Korea-Guyana Relations in the Burnham Era

19. A Monumental Relationship: North Korea and Namibia

20. Japan Matters for America/America Matters for Japan (2023)

21. Economic Sanctions During Humanitarian Emergencies: The Case of North Korea

22. The Dragon and the Bear in Africa: Stress-Testing Chinese-Russian Relations

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

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

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

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

27. Italy’s Pivot to the Indo-Pacific – Towards a Value-driven Foreign Policy?

28. Analysis of Chinese Response Patterns to Diplomatic Friction and Its Influencing Factors

29. Cross-Strait and U.S.-Taiwan Relations from the Kuomintang Point of View

30. Understanding and Countering China's Approach to Economic Decoupling from the United States

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

32. Inter-Korean Reconciliation and the Role of the U.S.: Facilitator or Spoiler?

33. South Korea's Public Diplomacy during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Seeking Status as an Authority in Global Governance

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

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

36. Taking the low road: China's influence in Australian states and territories

37. US-China Mutual Vulnerability: Perspectives on the Debate

38. US-South Korea and the Philippines: Towards a Trilateral Security Initiative

39. China’s increased presence in Latin America: Win-win relations or a new dependency? A state of the art

40. EU- Pacific talks: U.S.-Japan relations - new leaders, new chance to restore the old relationship

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

42. What now for Australia-China relations?

43. Russia’s Energy Strategy in the Northeast Asian Region and New Korea-Russia Cooperation: Focusing on the Natural Gas and Hydrogen Sectors

44. Pariah or Partner? Clarifying the U.S. Approach to Cambodia

45. The Future of U.S.-North Korea Relations After the 2022 U.S. Midterm Elections

46. Global Health Diplomacy as a Path to De-escalatory Engagement with North Korea

47. Analysis of North Korea’s Nuclear Force Policy Act: Intentions and Drawbacks

48. The Road to Denuclearization of the DPRK: The DPRK’s Strategy and the ROK-U.S. Response Plan

49. America’s Alliance First vs. DPRK’s “neo-Cold War” First: An Assessment on US-DPRK Relationship

50. President Yoon's Trip to Madrid: Rethinking Seoul's Policies toward Moscow, Beijing, Tokyo, and Pyongyang

51. After Hegemony: Japan’s role and dilemma in maintaining the rules-based order

52. Taiwan Matters for America/America Matters for Taiwan

53. New Opportunities for the United States-Kingdom of Thailand Alliance in the Indo-Pacific

54. INDIA-CHINA STRATEGIC COMPETITION IN THE INDIAN OCEAN

55. Strategic Foresight in Chin: The other missing dimension

56. Russian Relations with Central Asia and Afghanistan after U.S. Withdrawal

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

58. The Impact of the Repression in Xinjiang on China’s Relations with Other Countries

59. The Vision Group on U.S.-ROK Relations: Insights and Recommendations

60. Limits of Public Diplomacy and Soft Power: Lessons from the THAAD Dispute for South Korea's Foreign Policy

61. Adapting the U.S.-South Korea Alliance to an Indo-Pacific Regional Architecture: Challenges and Prospects

62. Advancing South Korea-Southeast Asia Security Ties: Between Opportunities and Challenges

63. 2021 Report on American Attitudes towards the U.S.-ROK Alliance and North Korea Policy

64. Abe Shinzo: Diplomat-in-Chief

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

66. Answering Beijing’s Growing Assertiveness beyond the Senkakus: Balancing Japan-China Relations

67. Can China Practice Major Power Diplomacy in the Middle East?

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

69. Hun Sen's Mistake? The Domestic Political Ramifications of His Chinese Shelter

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

71. A Principled Middle Power Diplomacy Approach For South Korea to Navigate the U.S.-China Rivalry

72. South Korea as a Fourth Industrial Revolution Middle Power?

73. Between a Rock and a Hard Place: How Should South Korea Manage its Relations with the United States and China?

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

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

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

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

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

79. Xi Jinping’s Evergrande Dilemma

80. A Strategic US Approach to India’s COVID-19 Crisis

81. Regaining the Digital Advantage: A Demand-Focused Strategy for US Microelectronics Competitiveness

82. China’s Gambit for Total Information Dominance: A US-Australia Response

83. Europe's China Chimera

84. Fear and Insecurity: Addressing North Korean Threat Perceptions

85. How China Regards its Future in the World

86. China’s grand industrial strategy and what it means for Europe

87. Tangled Threats: Integrating U.S. Strategies toward China and North Korea

88. Partners, Competitors, or a Little of Both? Russia and China in the Arctic

89. Is America Really Back?

90. Hedging by Default: The Limits of EU “Strategic Autonomy” in a Binary World Order

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

92. The Belt and Road Initiative and the Internationalisation of China's Scientific Power: The Case of Italy

93. Consistent Inconsistency: What One Thirty-year-old Cable Reveals About U.S.-DPRK Relations

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

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

96. 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

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

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

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

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