This article challenges the common characterisation of George W. Bush’s foreign policy as “unilateral.” It argues that the Bush administration developed a new post-9/11 understanding of terrorism as a transnational, networked phenomenon shaped by the forces of globalisation. This led to a new strategic emphasis on bi- and multilateral security co-operation and counterterrorism operations, especially outside of Afghanistan and Iraq, driven by the perceived need to counter a transnational security challenge present in multiple locations. This (flawed) attempt to engage with transnational security challenges supplemented the existing internationalist pillar of the Bush administration’s foreign policy. Highlighting the transnational realm of in...
The war on terrorism has dramatically impacted the direction of U.S. foreign policy, as well as the ...
For U.S. neo-idealists, the 1990s represented a moment to be seized, a time in which the strategies ...
This paper traces the ‘securitisation’ of US foreign economic policy since the advent of the Bush ad...
This article challenges the common characterisation of George W. Bush’s foreign policy as “unilatera...
This article challenges the common characterisation of George W. Bush’s foreign policy as “unilatera...
During the 2000 presidential campaign, George W. Bush announced that he would pursue a distinctly A...
This paper traces the ‘securitisation’ of US foreign economic policy since the advent of the Bush ad...
This article challenges the presumed multilateral aversion of the George W. Bush administration. It ...
The Bush administration's foreign policy represents a distinct strategic turn towards unilateralism,...
This article traces the "securitization" of U.S. foreign economic policy in the administration of Ge...
This article traces the "securitization" of U.S. foreign economic policy in the administration of Ge...
In June of 2002, following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and the consequent military c...
Between 2002 and 2005, a relatively coherent and profoundly renewed strategic approach to internatio...
It should come as no surprise that George W. Bush arrived in Washington in 2001 with the unilaterali...
This article considers the special case of the United States' relationship with Great Britain—Americ...
The war on terrorism has dramatically impacted the direction of U.S. foreign policy, as well as the ...
For U.S. neo-idealists, the 1990s represented a moment to be seized, a time in which the strategies ...
This paper traces the ‘securitisation’ of US foreign economic policy since the advent of the Bush ad...
This article challenges the common characterisation of George W. Bush’s foreign policy as “unilatera...
This article challenges the common characterisation of George W. Bush’s foreign policy as “unilatera...
During the 2000 presidential campaign, George W. Bush announced that he would pursue a distinctly A...
This paper traces the ‘securitisation’ of US foreign economic policy since the advent of the Bush ad...
This article challenges the presumed multilateral aversion of the George W. Bush administration. It ...
The Bush administration's foreign policy represents a distinct strategic turn towards unilateralism,...
This article traces the "securitization" of U.S. foreign economic policy in the administration of Ge...
This article traces the "securitization" of U.S. foreign economic policy in the administration of Ge...
In June of 2002, following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and the consequent military c...
Between 2002 and 2005, a relatively coherent and profoundly renewed strategic approach to internatio...
It should come as no surprise that George W. Bush arrived in Washington in 2001 with the unilaterali...
This article considers the special case of the United States' relationship with Great Britain—Americ...
The war on terrorism has dramatically impacted the direction of U.S. foreign policy, as well as the ...
For U.S. neo-idealists, the 1990s represented a moment to be seized, a time in which the strategies ...
This paper traces the ‘securitisation’ of US foreign economic policy since the advent of the Bush ad...