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Academic Journals
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- 1From:American Educational History Journal (Vol. 49, Issue 1-2) Peer-ReviewedCURRENT CONCERNS REFLECT HISTORICAL PRECEDENTS While globalization is developing in some areas, isolationism has allegedly started budding anew in the United States. Elements driving a sense of isolationism include...
- 2From:Perceptions (Vol. 25, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThis study intends to analyse the rise of Donald Trump to the presidency of the U.S. as a symptom of the economic aftershocks to the 2008 financial crisis at the global and domestic levels. In response to the financial...
- 3From:Sustainability (Vol. 15, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedCentral Asia borders China and was the first stop of China’s opening to the west. Studying the evolving status of agricultural products in the global value chain since China and Kyrgyzstan established diplomatic...
- 4From:All Azimuth: A Journal of Foreign Policy and Peace (Vol. 12, Issue 1)This essay is based on the author's long-time observation of the International Relations discipline and the repeated crises it has experienced. The piece identifies 'event-drivenness ' as the structural reason behind...
- 5From:Hoover Digest (Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIf the Middle East is the graveyard of American foreign policy in this century, then Syria has been the ghostly denizen rising repeatedly to torment US policy, from Barack Obama's 2013 chemical weapons "red line" to...
- 6From:Hoover Digest (Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIt's no secret that the United States' relations with its Gulf Arab partners have suffered greatly under the first years of the Biden administration. As Yousef al-Otaiba, the United Arab Emirates ambassador in...
- 7From:Hoover Digest (Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTwo years into its tenure, the Biden administration studiously avoids having a Syria policy. The dangers that compelled the Obama and Trump administrations to adopt a hands-on approach to Syria, however, are still...
- 8From:Journal of Political Studies (Vol. 29, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedByline: Salma Naz Keywords: Crises, Crisis Management, Mediation, Perception Introduction In 1947 India and Pakistan emerged on the map of the world as sovereign states consisting of about 1.3 billion...
- 9From:Journal of Political Studies (Vol. 29, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedByline: Dr. Bibi Saira and Dr. Aisha Javed Keywords: Energy security, Energy Policy, Foreign Policy, Energy resources, Energy crisis, Iran Pakistan Gas Pipeline Introduction Energy is a fundamental issue for the...
- 10From:Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education (Vol. 14, Issue 5 SI) Peer-ReviewedThis paper examines how international education (IE), as an important tool of public diplomacy (PD) and soft power (SP), faces unique challenges as issues of national security (NS) become more prominent in this era of...
- 11From:Parameters (Vol. 52, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedTo buttress stability in the Indo-Pacific, the United States must understand how India sees the region and the world. The theories and ideas of Kautilya, a leading but little-studied Indian philosopher, provide...
- 12From:Renewal (Vol. 30, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedWe cannot separate Labour's social and economic ambitions from the way in which it intends to exercise and distribute power. Where power and authority lie--across the union, in nations and in localities--and how they are...
- 13From:Journal of African Foreign Affairs (Vol. 9, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedChina's growing engagement with South Africa is receiving much attention from members of the public, foreign policy analysis (FPA) scholars and political pundits. Since the adoption of Pretoria Declaration in 2000 and...
- 14From:Journal of African Foreign Affairs (Vol. 9, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedPandemics, like diseases, natural catastrophes, and crisis circumstances, have frequently confronted governments with a double-edged sword in the context of historical and contemporary international relations....
- 15From:Acta Historica Tallinnensia (Vol. 28, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn terms of population, the Republic of Estonia was the smallest country to gain independence after the First World War. While according to President Woodrow Wilson's policies, the United States was considered a...
- 16From:Acta Historica Tallinnensia (Vol. 28, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe purpose of this article is to examine the main stages on the way to obtaining recognition for the Republic of Latvia from the United States, paying specific attention to the period from 1921 to 1922. After...
- 17From:Trames (Vol. 26, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe purpose of the study is to develop scientifically based recommendations for implementation internationally--legal security mechanisms monitoring threats and finding ways to overcome challenges to national security....
- 18From:American DiplomacyAs relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC) loom ever larger for the U.S., DACOR's annual conference in 2022 focused on "Balancing Competing Interests in U.S. Relations With China." The Washington-based...
- 19From:International journal of communication (Online) (Vol. 16) Peer-ReviewedAlthough public diplomacy is widely practiced, the scope of its theory is limited mostly to Western countries. Addressing this limitation requires empirical evidence on non-Western countries, but beyond case studies, it...
- 20From:Strategic Review for Southern Africa (Vol. 44, Issue 2) Peer-Reviewed1. Introduction For over a decade the Indo-Pacific has emerged as a new construct--an intellectual device--to interpret and comprehend the changing geopolitical dynamics in Asia and beyond. It is aptly viewed as a...