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1. What Allies Want: Reconsidering Loyalty, Reliability, and Alliance Interdependence

2. Paradoxes of Professionalism: Rethinking Civil-Military Relations in the United States

3. Normalization by Other Means—Technological Infrastructure and Political Commitment in the North Korean Nuclear Crisis

4. Counterterrorism and Preventive Repression: China’s Changing Strategy in Xinjiang

5. China in a World of Orders: Rethinking Compliance and Challenge in Beijing's International Relations

6. Dangerous Confidence? Chinese Views on Nuclear Escalation

7. Home, Again: Refugee Return and Post-Conflict Violence in Burundi

8. The Domestic Politics of Nuclear Choices

9. How to Enlarge NATO: The Debate inside the Clinton Administration, 1993–95

10. Weaponized Interdependence: How Global Economic Networks Shape State Coercion

11. “We Have Captured Your Women”: Explaining Jihadist Norm Change

12. Cautious Bully: Reputation, Resolve, and Beijing's Use of Coercion in the South China Sea

13. The End of War: How a Robust Marketplace and Liberal Hegemony Are Leading to Perpetual World Peace

14. Bound to Fail: The Rise and Fall of the Liberal International Order

15. A Flawed Framework: Why the Liberal International Order Concept Is Misguided

16. Proliferation and the Logic of the Nuclear Market

17. Buying Allies: Payment Practices in Multilateral Military Coalition-Building

18. Power and Profit at Sea: The Rise of the West in the Making of the International System

19. India's Counterforce Temptations: Strategic Dilemmas, Doctrine, and Capabilities

20. The Demographic Transition Theory of War: Why Young Societies Are Conflict Prone and Old Societies Are the Most Peaceful

21. Bad World: The Negativity Bias in International Politics

22. Why China Has Not Caught Up Yet: Military-Technological Superiority and the Limits of Imitation, Reverse Engineering, and Cyber Espionage