Search

Search Constraints

Begin New Search You searched for: Topic International Cooperation Remove constraint Topic: International Cooperation Content Type Journal Article Remove constraint Content Type: Journal Article Publication Year within 25 Years Remove constraint Publication Year: within 25 Years Publication Year within 5 Years Remove constraint Publication Year: within 5 Years

Search Results

1. Understanding EU-NATO Cooperation: How Member States Matter

2. The impacts on the change of training architecture for UN Peacekeeping Operations in Brazil

3. Democratizing International Relations

4. The Belt and Road Initiative: Dynamics for Latin America and the Caribbean Region

5. On Designating the 14-Mile Area in the Cooperation Agreement: Missteps and Implications for Peace in South Sudan

6. Great Power Politics: The Indo-Pacific, Southeast Asia, and the Global South

7. Tensions Intensify as Taiwan-US IT Cooperation Blossoms

8. US-India Relations: Friends with Benefits

9. THE IMPACT OF COLLECTIVE MEMORY ON THAILAND’S INVOLVEMENT IN THE BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE

10. Mission Strategic Plans: A Neglected Developmental Tool

11. Pakistan's Defence Diplomacy: An Analysis of Its Evolving Strategies and Challenges From 2013 to 2022

12. From emergency to structure: ways to fight Covid-19 via international cooperation in health from Brazil

13. Prepping for COP27

14. Sino-Iranian Relations and Their Impact on South and Central Asia

15. Time to Get U.S.-Azerbaijani Relations on Track Azerbaijan’s victory in the Second Karabakh War has created a new geopolitical reality in the South Caucasus and the Caspian region.

16. Azerbaijan in the Struggle for Eurasia Restoring America’s Geostrategic Approach

17. Turkey’s Changing Posture on Russia and America

18. Impact of the War in Ukraine: What id the Future of EU- Africa Relations?

19. Views Adopted by the UN Human Rights Committee Under Article 5(4) of the Optional Protocol, concerning Communication No 2918/2016

20. Bringing the Critical Thinking Back in: A Critique of Andrew Linklater’s Theoretical Contributions to International Relations