The book presents an original and engaging argument for the necessity for further analysis into choices democracies make prior to engaging in conflict, and the impact of the media and the public on decision makers, writes Gemma Bird
Global Democratic Theory analyses a number of theories related to democracy at different levels of g...
The language used to describe conflict situations, whether military, political, or personal, has the...
Books reviewed: Haslam, Jonathan No virtue like necessity: realist thought in International Relation...
In Foreign Pressure and the Politics of Autocratic Survival, authors Abel Escribà-Folch and Joseph W...
Susan Carruthers’ book succeeds in exposing the multifaceted and constantly shifting relationship be...
In Going to War in Iraq: When Citizens and the Press Matter, Stanley Feldman, Leonie Huddy and Georg...
For those immersed in grand International Relations (IR) theory couched in the structural/ functiona...
Britain is often revered for its extensive experience of waging ‘small wars’. Its long imperial hist...
Matthew Partridge finds that Oliver Daddow and Jamie Gaskarth’s strong collection of essays on Blair...
Matthew Partridge reviews an edited collection of works set to be a fixture on the reading lists of ...
There are currently between twenty and thirty civil wars occurring worldwide, while at a global leve...
This book provides an authoritative and systematic analysis of the politics of so-called ‘deeply div...
By setting contemporary British foreign policy into its historical context, this book provides fresh...
Institutions do not decide whom to destroy or to kill, whether to make peace or war; those decisions...
In this study of democratization, Joshua Kurlantzick proposes that the spate of retreating democraci...
Global Democratic Theory analyses a number of theories related to democracy at different levels of g...
The language used to describe conflict situations, whether military, political, or personal, has the...
Books reviewed: Haslam, Jonathan No virtue like necessity: realist thought in International Relation...
In Foreign Pressure and the Politics of Autocratic Survival, authors Abel Escribà-Folch and Joseph W...
Susan Carruthers’ book succeeds in exposing the multifaceted and constantly shifting relationship be...
In Going to War in Iraq: When Citizens and the Press Matter, Stanley Feldman, Leonie Huddy and Georg...
For those immersed in grand International Relations (IR) theory couched in the structural/ functiona...
Britain is often revered for its extensive experience of waging ‘small wars’. Its long imperial hist...
Matthew Partridge finds that Oliver Daddow and Jamie Gaskarth’s strong collection of essays on Blair...
Matthew Partridge reviews an edited collection of works set to be a fixture on the reading lists of ...
There are currently between twenty and thirty civil wars occurring worldwide, while at a global leve...
This book provides an authoritative and systematic analysis of the politics of so-called ‘deeply div...
By setting contemporary British foreign policy into its historical context, this book provides fresh...
Institutions do not decide whom to destroy or to kill, whether to make peace or war; those decisions...
In this study of democratization, Joshua Kurlantzick proposes that the spate of retreating democraci...
Global Democratic Theory analyses a number of theories related to democracy at different levels of g...
The language used to describe conflict situations, whether military, political, or personal, has the...
Books reviewed: Haslam, Jonathan No virtue like necessity: realist thought in International Relation...