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1. ntroduction to the Special Issue Anxiety and Change in International Relations

2. Anxiety, Ambivalence and Sublimation: ontological in/security and the world risk society

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

4. Is Terrorism a Unique Form of Violence? An Assessment of the Academic Critique

5. Thinking through the Event: Alain Badiou versus Michael Hardt & Antonio Negr

6. The institutionalized Buen Vivir: a new hegemonic political paradigm for Ecuador

7. Mobilizing Resources and Signaling Intentions: a Neoclassical Realist Analysis of Japan’s Domestic and International Instrumentalization of the Senkaku Islands Dispute and China’s Maritime Assertiveness

8. Public Security and Public Order – Conceptual and Institutional Scope

9. Systemic Analysis of Politics in the Light of Reconstruction of Structural Functionalism of Jeffrey C. Alexander

10. Security Studies in International Relations: Evolution, Approaches and Contemporary Challenges

11. Erratic Behaviour of the United Nations and Global Governance in. Africa: The State as a Smokescreen for World Security

12. Reflections on Russell Kirk

13. Extremism, The American Founding, and Russell Kirk’s The Roots of American Order

14. A Sympathetic Reading of Emerson’s Politics

15. Bad World: The Negativity Bias in International Politics

16. A Few Problems with Mouffe’s Agonistic Political Theory

17. Local Self-Government as a Problem of Political Theory

18. The Political Import of Deconstruction—Derrida’s Limits?: A Forum on Jacques Derrida’s Specters of Marx after 25 Years, Part I

19. Building Transnational Feminist Alliances: Reflections on the Post-2015 Development Agenda

20. From Binary to Intersectional to Imbricated Approaches: Gender in a Decolonial and Diasporic Perspective