ISSN: 0047-1178, Online ISSN: 1741-2862
International Relations is explicitly pluralist in outlook. Editorial policy favours variety in both subject-matter and method, at a time when so many academic journals are increasingly specialised in scope, and sectarian in approach. We welcome articles or proposals from all perspectives and on all subjects pertaining to international relations: law, economics, ethics, strategy, philosophy, culture, environment, and so on, in addition to more mainstream conceptual work and policy analysis. We believe that such pluralism is in great demand by the academic and policy communities and the interested public.
We welcome articles or proposals on all topics of interest to students of world politics. Each volume will normally contain peer-reviewed research articles, and a mixture of review essays, interviews, debates and forums. Special issues will be published, and we welcome ideas.
CONTENIDO
Articles
‘Acting under Chapter 7’: rhetorical entrapment, rhetorical hollowing, and the authorization of force in the UN Security Council, 1995–2017
Johannes Scherzinger
Ontological security as temporal security? The role of ‘significant historical others’ in world politics
Kathrin Bachleitner
Shrinking planet, expanding imaginary: the imperial press system and the idea of Greater Britain
Andrew Dougall
Imagined communities: from subjecthood to nationality in the British Atlantic
Luke Cooper
Role conflict in International Relations: the case of Indonesia’s regional and global engagements
Moch Faisal Karim
Resilience to crisis and resistance to change: a comparative analysis of the determinants of crisis outcomes in Latin American regional organisations
Giovanni Agostinis
Detlef Nolte
Forum on COVID-19 and Anxiety in International Relations
Anxiety and possibility: the many future(s) of COVID-19
Bahar Rumelili
COVID-19: uncertainty in a mood of anxiety
Bahar Rumelili
Covid-19: crisis, emotional governance and populist fantasy narratives
Catarina Kinnvall
Anxiety and political action in times of the Covid-19 pandemic
Andreja Zevnik
Anxiety, humour and (geo)politics: warfare by other memes
Christopher S Browning
James Brassett