Ideology in Industrial/Employment Relations
Blog: RSS-Feed soziopolis.de
Call for Abstracts für a Special Issue of Industrielle Beziehungen – The German Journal of Industrial Relations. Deadline: June 1, 2023
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Blog: RSS-Feed soziopolis.de
Call for Abstracts für a Special Issue of Industrielle Beziehungen – The German Journal of Industrial Relations. Deadline: June 1, 2023
Blog: Two Weeks Notice: A Latin American Politics Blog
Michael Shifter asks whether the damage Trump has wrought on U.S.-Latin American relations can be repaired, starting from an anecdote about how a Mexican business leader said relations would be set back 20 years.I think there are two things here that go well beyond even what a Biden administration would look like. First, history tells us that of course relations can be repaired. The relationship is just too tight, the interdependence so strong. If we can repair relations with Cuba after years of trying to destroy it, we can do so with Mexico. Even Daniel Ortega tried for a while to engage with the U.S. So this part is easy, and in fact many Latin American presidents are just waiting for someone else in the White House, in a similar way as the 2008 election.But the second is more difficult. China is now a player like never before, a process that became stronger in the 2000 and then accelerated, pedal to the metal, under Trump. That cannot be reversed no matter what the U.S. does. Shifts in trade relations are not super likely unless something happens in China. These are long-terms trends that will not change just because someone new become U.S. president. Latin American countries looked for creative ways to find autonomy from the U.S., and restoration of trust may slow that but will not stop it. Subscribe in a reader
Blog: China Dialogues
In early 2023, the Turkish government expressed exceptionally open public criticism of China concerning the rights of the Uyghur Muslim minority in China's Xinjiang region. Notably, in his end-of-year press conference in December 2022, former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mevlüt Cavuşoğlu, said that bilateral relations between Turkey and China had deteriorated because Beijing was "disturbed" … Continued
Blog: RSS-Feed soziopolis.de
Call for Papers für eine Tagung vom 30. November bis 1. Dezember 2023 in Siegen. Deadline: 10. Juli 2023
Blog: The Duck of Minerva
When I arrived at the Pentagon in 2009, the Obama administration was just getting its footing as caretakers of the War on Terror. Our focus then was truly global dominion. That meant, yes, killing and capturing whatever the intelligence process coughed up as bad guys no matter who they were or where they were. But […]
Blog: Soziopolis. Gesellschaft beobachten
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of New Benjamin Studies. Deadline: September 15, 2024
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
2023 revealed a quiet but booming relationship between Taiwan and Indonesia, and 2024 looks to be similarly robust. More educational exchanges, more technology collaboration projects, and more Indonesian migrant workers in Taiwan are planned.
Blog: blog*interdisziplinäre geschlechterforschung
I am an anthropologist from Ethiopia who is writing his doctoral thesis on gender power relations and their change and continuity in the Kambaata community in southern Ethiopia. In our field of...
Blog: Progress in Political Economy (PPE)
In my latest article (open access) for Review of International Studies I examine Indigenous resistance to neo-extractive development in Latin America and ask what this means for International Relations (IR). I contend that Indigenous resistance can disrupt traditional thinking in IR via an 'insurrection of subjugated knowledge'.
The post Challenging the Coloniality of Space in International Relations appeared first on Progress in Political Economy (PPE).
Blog: EUatOU
As someone who’s just passed the 8th anniversary of his Brexit-related podcast (do sign up, it’s gripping), I feel I’m well-placed to consider the issue in the longer run of UK-EU relations. I also feel broadly justified in summing up UK policy on the matter throughout the post-war period as “errrm”. There’ a lot of […]
The post Thinking and planning ahead in UK-EU relations appeared first on EUatOU.
Blog: Ideas on Europe
As someone who’s just passed the 8th anniversary of his Brexit-related podcast (do sign up, it’s gripping), I feel I’m well-placed to consider the issue in the longer run of UK-EU relations. I also feel broadly justified in summing up UK policy on the matter throughout the post-war period as “errrm”. There’ a lot of […]
The post Thinking and planning ahead in UK-EU relations appeared first on Ideas on Europe.
Blog: Global Politics & Law
Dear
Friends and Colleagues,
For a
few years now, many of you will have heard us mention the need for a new
section at the ISA, one in which there would be a room for historical pieces
which engage with international issues in a broad sense. We hereby ask for your
support for a new section at the ISA entitled Historical International
Relations by signing the online petition at http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/hir/, and forwarding this email to
colleagues you think will have an interest in supporting the section.
As you
may all have noticed, there seems to be an increasing interest in historical
scholarship in the discipline, an interest which is largely reflected in papers
and panels presented at the conferences. However, these historical engagements
appear in general in a host of different guises, sponsored (sometimes
halfheartedly) by different existing sections. Some are sponsored by
International Security, others by Diplomatic Studies, while more still have
found shelter in the English School Section. While some may not see this as a
problem, as it forces historical scholarship to engage with other sections of
the discipline, we nevertheless think this situation requires a new section at
the ISA.
The idea
of a new section is not for historical scholarship to colonize the ISA. We do
not see such a section becoming one of the leading sections of the ISA. Rather,
we see it as carving out a modest space for scholars who engage historically to
work together, meet, and engage with each other's work without having to
pretend to be talking about something else. This common space would allow for
conversations across sub-disciplinary boundaries, conversations which are
difficult to carry out within many of the other sections of the ISA, and it
should thus also increase the overall cohesiveness of the discipline. Rather
than fragmenting the discipline, we think a Historical International Relations
Section will contribute to increased intra-disciplinary dialogue.
It is
important for us to emphasize too that this is not meant to be a section for
international history. What we think we have identified, is that to the extent
that IR scholars engage historically, they do so as "merry amateurs" rather
than professional historians. It is this spirit of collegial openness and
inclusion as well as intellectual curiosity which we would like to foster by
creating a new section.
In
short, we see the founding of a new Historical International Relations section
as a way to create a space for this type of scholarship, but also legitimize
efforts to address IR historically, as it would make these topics interesting
in their own right, and not because of their potential relevance for the other
sections.
Thank
you for supporting the new section and for forwarding the email.
We look
forward to seeing you at the inaugural section meeting in the near future.
Best
wishes,
Benjamin
de Carvalho, NUPI
Daniel
Green, University of Delaware
Halvard
Leira, NUPI
Daniel
Nexon, Georgetown University
Andrea Paras, University of Guelph
Blog: Soziopolis. Gesellschaft beobachten
Stellenausschreibung der Universität Tübingen. Deadline: 20. März 2024
Blog: Soziopolis. Gesellschaft beobachten
Call for Papers for a Focus Issue of Industrielle Beziehungen. Deadline: January 5, 2024
Blog: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Carnegie Publications
Over the past five years, Congress has achieved a great deal for U.S. national security in its debate of and legislation on China, but there is a risk of overshooting a well-reasoned policy response and generating costly escalation.