Search

Search Constraints

Begin New Search You searched for: Topic International Relations Remove constraint Topic: International Relations Content Type Special Report Remove constraint Content Type: Special Report

Search Results

101. Seven Ironies of Reconstructing a New Security Paradigm in the Gulf

102. Ukraine’s Response to the Political Crisis in Belarus

103. 2020 Review of the United Nations Peacebuilding Architecture African Regional Consultation Report

104. Deepening Progressive Partnerships: TAYLE & PF Young Leaders

105. The Lingering Stalemate: Qatar’s Blockade Awaits a Mediation Exit

106. US Experts Consider China a Shifting and India a Stable Friend to Russia

107. US Experts Anticipate Future Decline for Russia Among the Great Powers

108. Americans Positive on South Korea Despite Trump’s Views on Alliance

109. “Engaged Opportunism”: Russia’s Role in the Horn of Africa

110. Brothers in Arms and Faith? The Emerging US-Central and Eastern Europe ‘Special Relationship’

111. Some Considerations on the Election of the BSEC Secretary General: The Georgian Perspective

112. National Security Strategy of Armenia

113. Turkey-Greece Confrontation and Georgia: Threats and Challenges

114. China-Venezuela Relations in the Twenty-First Century: From Overconfidence to Uncertainty

115. China’s Response to Sudan’s Political Transition

116. Migration: Solid Nations and Liquid Transnationalism? The EU’s Struggle to Find a Shared Course on African Migration 1999-2019

117. The Importance of WTO Reform from a Transatlantic Perspective

118. The Use of Aid to Counter China's "Djibouti Strategy" in the South Pacific

119. Modernizing the Land-Based Leg of the Nuclear Triad: Myths and Facts

120. The Cornerstone and the Linchpin: Securing America’s Northeast Asian Alliances

121. China’s Economic Slowdown: Root Causes, Beijing’s Response and Strategic Implications for the US and Allies

122. “Turkey Dream” and the China-Turkish Cooperation under “One Belt and One Road” Initiative

123. Current Status and Prospect of Sino-Indonesian Cooperation under the Background of the “Belt and Road”

124. “One Belt One Road” and the Opportunities It Could Bring to the UK

125. Reflections from Singapore

126. Human Rights from the International Relations

127. The Strategic Role of Land Forces: A French Perspective

128. Military Activities in the EEZ: A U.S.-China Dialogue on Security and International Law in the Maritime Commons

129. Trump’s Trade Wars: A New World Order?

130. Israel’s Policy in the Eastern Mediterranean

131. Strategic estrangement between South Korea and Japan as a barrier to trilateral cooperation

132. Indo-Pacific immune systems to enable healthy engagement with the Chinese state and China's economy

133. A new Sino-Russian high-tech partnership

134. The European Union as a Security Actor: Perspectives from the maritime domain

135. Strategic Annual Report 2019 : Battles over Techno-hegemony: Japan's Course

136. Rejecting Retreat

137. Both Russian and American Publics Sense a Transatlantic Rift

138. Chicago’s Global Strategy Part II: A Blueprint for Implementation

139. Russians Want Crimea; Prefer Luhansk and Donetsk Independent

140. Social Capital between State and Society in Morocco: An Outside-in Reflection

141. Global Compact for Migration: Security Constraints versus Humanitarian Morality in the Case of Morocco

142. Political Entrepreneurship in International Peace Mediation

143. The Avoidable War: Reflections on U.S.-China Relations and the End of Strategic Engagement

144. NATO at Seventy: Filling NATO’s Critical Defense-Capability Gaps

145. Intelligence Oversight Priorities for the 116th Congress

146. A Realistic Path for Progress on Iran

147. The threats to the European Union’s economic sovereignty

148. Preparing for uncertainty

149. Redefining Europe’s economic sovereignty

150. A strategic agenda for the new EU leadership

151. Effectiveness of cohesion policy: learning from the project characteristics that produce the best results

152. How to improve European Union cohesion policy for the next decade

153. Estimating the cost of capital for wind energy investments in Turkey

154. To the Seas Again Maritime Defence and Deterrence in the Baltic Region

155. Going Past Monopoly: Developing a Balanced Baltic Sea Regional Gas Market

156. Expanding Equity And Inclusion In Urban Development Through Transatlantic Exchange

157. 1989 with Chinese Characteristics

158. The Mixed Fruits of Poland’s Freedom

159. From Triumph to Travail: The EU's 1989 Legacy

160. The #MeToo Movement Has Gone Global

161. The Wests's Turkey Conundrum

162. Normal is Over

163. Tackling radicalisation among the youths in Libya

164. Guiding Principles for a New Israeli Foreign Policy Paradigm

165. The U.S.-Japan Alliance: Significance and Role

166. The Chinese Communist Party’s Foreign Interference Operations: How the U.S. and Other Democracies Should Respond

167. After the West? A Positive Transatlantic Agenda in a Post-Atlantic Age

168. U.S.-Russian Relations, 1989-2019: Self-Awareness and History

169. EU and Latin America A Stronger Partnership?

170. Good Foreign Policy Makes for Good Domestic Policy//Una Buena Política Exterior Contribuye a Una Buena Política Interior

171. The Chinese Perception of the U.S.-China-ROK Triangle

172. Chinese Views of Korean History in the Cold War Era

173. Chinese Views of Korean History in the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries

174. The U.S.-Japan-ROK Trilateral: Better at Deterrence than Diplomacy?

175. South Korea’s Strategic Approach to China (or Lack of It)

176. U.S.-Taiwan Relations in a Sea of Change

177. America First: The Past and Future of an Idea

178. Modernizing conventional arms control in the Euro-Atlantic region

179. Multilateral Damage The impact of EU migration policies on central Saharan routes

180. Political Warfare by Russia

181. Trump, America and Eastern Europe

182. Stalled Europeanization in Post-Sovereignty EU? Greek Politics in Hard Times

183. Crisis and the Greek Asylum System in the Framework of the EU-Turkey Agreement: Legal and Political Aspects

184. The Role of Russia in the Middle East and North Africa Region. Strategy or Opportunism

185. Industry Matters: Smarter Energy Use is Key for US Competitiveness, Jobs, and Climate Efforts

186. A new Direction in U.S- Russia Relations?

187. Allied and Lethal: Islamic State Khorasan’s Network and Organizational Capacity in Afghanistan and Pakistan

188. U.S. sanctions on Russia and its impact on India

189. A global framework for tracing Beneficial Ownership

190. ‘On the Deck of the Titanic’: Arab Politics in Israel and the 2019 Elections

191. Turkey’s counterterrorism strategy an assesment of the fight against DAESH

192. Mice that Roar: Patrol and coastal combatants in ASEAN

193. Proposed Public Charge Rule Would Significantly Reduce Legal Admissions and Adjustment to Lawful Permanent Resident Status of Working Class Persons

194. Perspectives on the Content and Implementation of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly, and Regular Migration

195. The EU and Australia: Shared Opportunities and Common Challenges

196. What’s Left of the Soviet Union Warsaw East European Review Editorial Discussion

197. Using Public Space in Kharkiv by Protesters in 2013-2014

198. Ten Challenges of Brazilian Foreign Policy

199. Might and Right in World Politics

200. The Summer of Our Discontent: Sects and Citizens in Lebanon and Iraq