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

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1. The Air-Sea Battle 'concept': A critique

2. Russia in the new international order: Theories, arguments and debates

3. Applying constructivism to understanding EU–Russian relations

4. Russia's foreign policy towards Poland: Seeking reconciliation? A social constructivist analysis

5. Russian foreign policy in the making: The linkage between internal dynamics and the external context

6. Do leaders still decide? The role of leadership in Russian foreign policymaking

7. Interest groups in Russian foreign policy: The invisible hand of the Russian Orthodox Church

8. Using the neo-classical realism paradigm to predict Russian foreign policy behaviour as a complement to using resources

9. Geopolitics and Russian foreign policy

10. Foreign policy, bipartisanship and the paradox of post-September 11 America

11. The political economy of Anglo-American War: The case of Iraq

12. From Woodrow Wilson in 1902 to the Bush doctrine in 2002: Democracy promotion as imperialism

13. Religion, identity and American power in the age of Obama

14. Culture, identity and hegemony: Continuity and (the lack of) change in US counterterrorism policy from Bush to Obama

15. Between freedom and fear: Explaining the consensus on terrorism and democracy in US foreign policy

16. The European Union's Asia strategies: Problems of foreign policy and international relations

17. Regions in the world: The EU and East Asia as foreign policy actors

18. Intellectual legacies, ethical policies and normative territories: Situating the human rights issue in EU–Asia relations

19. A Neoconservative Revolution that wasn't Is the Bush Revolution over?

20. Foreign policy fusion: Liberal interventionists, conservative nationalists and neoconservatives — the new alliance dominating the US foreign policy establishment