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Begin New Search You searched for: Political Geography United States Remove constraint Political Geography: United States Content Type Journal Article Remove constraint Content Type: Journal Article Publishing Institution Istituto Affari Internazionali Remove constraint Publishing Institution: Istituto Affari Internazionali Publication Year within 25 Years Remove constraint Publication Year: within 25 Years

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1. Bracing for Cold Peace. US-Russia Relations after Ukraine

2. The European Endowment for Democracy and Democracy Promotion in the EU Neighbourhood

3. Is the US-China Climate Agreement a Game-changer?

4. Iran-US Relations in the Light of the Nuclear Negotiations

5. Can the World Afford to Condone the 'Divided States of Syria'?

6. Geopolitical Implications of the US Unconventional Energy Revolution

7. The World's Second Oldest Profession: The Transatlantic Spying Scandal and its Aftermath

8. "Forgotten" Directions in the Study of Transnational Networks

9. Internet Privacy: Who Sets the Global Standard?

10. America's Mega-Regional Trade Diplomacy: Comparing TTP and TTIP

11. The Future of US-China Relations: From Conflict to Concert

12. What Syria Has to Teach Neo-Conservatives and Liberals about US Foreign Policy

13. The Awakened Arab World and its New Landscape

14. The Loneliness of Israel. The Jewish State's Status in International Relations

15. Time for Tough Love in Transatlantic Relations

16. The 'TTIP-ing Point': How the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Could Impact European Defence

17. Developing a New Type of Relationship Between China and the US

18. US and EU Human Rights and Democracy Promotion since the Arab Spring. Rethinking its Content, Targets and Instruments

19. Financial Regionalism in East Asia

20. China's Rise as an International Factor: Connecting the Dots

21. Chinese Overseas Investment in the European Union

22. US No. 1, China No. 2, or Will it Be the Other Way Round?

23. Transatlantic Relations Four Years Later: The Elusive Quest for a Strategic Vision

24. Transatlantic Democracy Promotion and the Arab Spring

25. Power, Leadership and US Foreign Policy

26. Iraq's Long Road to National Reconciliation

27. The International Dimension of the Arab Spring

28. The United States and Latin America: The Neighbourhood has Changed

29. Learning From a Troubled Experience – Transatlantic Lessons from the Nuclear Standoff with Iran

30. Palestinian-Israeli Negotiations: An Objective in Themselves

31. A Package Not Delivered: US Incentives and Israel's Settlement Freeze

32. How to Renew Transatlantic Relations in the 21st Century

33. Recent Publications

34. The 2010 NPT Review Conference: Some Breathing Space Gained, But No Breakthrough

35. A Deeply Fractured Regime: Assessing the 2010 NPT Review Conference

36. China-US Relations, Tending Towards Maturity

37. A Rejoinder: Building 'Positive, Cooperative and Comprehensive' China-US Relations

38. China Central? Australia's Asia Strategy

39. American Primacy by Default: Down but Not Out

40. The Domestic Conditions for a Paradigmatic Change in US Foreign Policy

41. Combating WMD Terrorism: The Short-Sighted US-led Multilateral Response

42. The Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism: Big Potential, Limited Impact?

43. Using Criminal Justice to Foster US-EU Cooperation on Counter-terrorism

44. Less Words and More Deeds in Constructing Europe

45. The Effect of US Policy in the Middle East on EU-Turkey Relations

46. Whither Missile Defence?

47. US Military Bases in Italy: In Keeping with International Law? Still Needed?

48. Reviving Liberalism. A New Course for US Foreign Policy

49. World Order Re-founded: The Idea of a Concert of Democracies

50. Ancient and Modern Empires: The United States as the New Rome

51. An EU Outlook on the Future of the Kyoto Protocol

52. Analytical Perspectives on the War in Lebanon

53. The US and the EU: An Alliance with no Alternative

54. A New Bi-continental Approach to Transatlantic Defence Cooperation

55. The US: Dangerous to the World or to Itself?

56. Italy's Growing Burden of Choice in Security Policy