ISSN: 1354-0661, Online ISSN: 1460-3713
The European Journal of International Relations (EJIR) is the peer-reviewed flagship journal of the ECPR Standing Group on International Relations (SGIR) and the European International Studies Association (EISA). A joint committee of the SGIR and the European International Studies Association is responsible for the management and success of the journal. In keeping with the wide range of scholarly interests represented by the SGIR membership, the journal is broadly representative of the field of International Relations as it has evolved in Europe (see Aims and Scope). Since the establishment of the journal in 1995, the EJIR has become a major and independent voice in International Relations scholarship. Building on its European origins, it has developed over more than two decades to epitomize cutting edge theoretical debates and theoretically-informed empirical analysis that reflects the best of the global International Relations community
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Research Article
Challenging anti-Western historical myths in populist discourse: re-visiting Ottoman Empire–Europe interaction during the 19th century
Senem Aydın-Düzgit, Bahar Rumelili, Alp Eren Topal
Civil war as a social process: actors and dynamics from pre- to post-war
Anastasia Shesterinina
Interests, ideologies, and great power spheres of influence
Evan N. Resnick
The art of uncommitment: the costs of peacetime withdrawals from alliance commitments
Dov H. Levin, Tetsuro Kobayashi
The corruption of international society? General and complete disarmament from the perspective of the practitioners
Laust Schouenborg
Blended Diplomacy: The Entanglement and Contestation of Digital Technologies in Everyday Diplomatic Practice
Rebecca Adler-Nissen, Kristin Anabel Eggeling
Inequality and legitimacy in global governance: an empirical study
Hortense Jongen, Jan Aart Scholte
The shadow of sanctions: reputational risk, financial reintegration, and the political economy of sanctions relief
Benjamin Raynor
Intergovernmentalism and the crisis of representative democracy: The case for creating a system of horizontally expanded and overlapping national democracies
Joachim Blatter, Johannes Schulz