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    • Tribute to the Life, Scholarship, and Legacy of Robert Jervis: Part I
    • Tribute to the Life, Scholarship, and Legacy of Robert Jervis: Part II
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    • H-Diplo Essay 198- Robert Jervis on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
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Publications Index

&

  • “The Skeptics Misconstrue the Cyber Revolution” (Response to Essay 17)
  • “What We Do, and Why it Matters: A Response to FKS” (Response to ISSF Forum 2)

a

  • Article Review 1 on “Same As It Ever Was: Nuclear Alarmism, Proliferation, and the Cold War”
  • Article Review 10 on “Ideology as Strategy: Military-led Modernization and the Origins of the Alliance for Progress in Bolivia.”
  • Article Review 100 on “Is International Relations a Global Discipline?  Hegemony, Insularity, and Diversity in the Field”
  • Article Review 101 on “The Emerging Military Balance in East Asia:  How China’s Neighbors Can Check Chinese Naval Expansion.”
  • Article Review 102 on Canadian Foreign Policy
  • Article Review 103 on “A Means of First Resort: Explaining “Hot Pursuit” in International Relations.”
  • Article Review 104 on China articles in International Security 42:4
  • Article Review 105 on “The International Relations of Police Power in Settler Colonialism: The ‘‘civilizing’’ mission of Canada’s Mounties.”
  • Article Review 106 on “The Other Hidden Hand: Soviet and Cuban Intelligence in Allende’s Chile.”
  • Article Review 107 on Tobias Theiler. “The Microfoundations of Diversionary Conflict.”
  • Article Review 108 on Aqil Shah. “Do U.S. Drone Strikes Cause Blowback? Evidence from Pakistan and Beyond.”
  • Article Review 109 on “Is the Enemy of My Enemy My Friend?”
  • Article Review 11 on “Graceful Decline? The Surprising Success of Great Power Retrenchment.”
  • Article Review 111 on “Democratic Accountability and Foreign Security Policy: Theory and Evidence from India.”
  • Article Review 112 on “Divided Priorities: Why and When Allies Differ Over Military Intervention.”
  • Article Review 113 on “Escalation through Entanglement: How Vulnerability of Command-and-Control Systems Raises the Risks of an Inadvertent Nuclear War.”
  • Article Review 114 on “The Future of Chemical Weapons:  Implications from the Syrian Civil War.” 
  • Article Review 115 on “A Nation of Feminist Arms Dealers? Canada and Military Exports.”
  • Article Review 116 on “The Grand Strategy of Militant Clients: Iran’s Way of War.”
  • Article Review 117 on “Killing Norms Softly: US Targeted Killing, Quasi-secrecy and the Assassination Ban.”
  • Article Review 118 on “Is Grand Strategy a Research Program? A Review Essay.”
  • Article Review 119 on “Proof of the Bomb: The Influence of Previous Failure on Intelligence Judgments of Nuclear Programs.”
  • Article Review 12 on “Cyborg Pantocrator: International Relations Theory From Decisionism to Rational Choice.”
  • Article Review 120 on “Would U.S. Leaders Push the Button? Wargames and the Sources of Nuclear Restraint.”
  • Article Review 121 on “The Hijacking of Aeroflot Flight 244: States and Statelessness in the Late Cold War.”
  • Article Review 122 on “The Power of Nations: Measuring What Matters.”
  • Article Review 123 on “Conflict and Chaos on the Korean Peninsula: Can China’s Military Help Secure North Korea’s Nuclear Weapons.”
  • Article Review 124 on “Nationalism, Collaboration, and Resistance:  France under Nazi Occupation.”
  • Article Review 125 on “The Future of the Liberal Order is Conservative: A Strategy to Save the System.”
  • Article Review 126 on “The Demographic Transition Theory of War: Why Young Societies Are Conflict Prone and Old Societies Are the Most Peaceful.”
  • Article Review 127 on “India’s Counterforce Temptations: Strategic Dilemmas, Doctrine, and Capabilities.”
  • Article Review 128 on “Vicarious Retribution in US Public Support for War against Iraq.”
  • Article Review 129 on “Why Did the United States Invade Iraq in 2003?”
  • Article Review 13 on “The Collapse of North Korea: Military Missions and Requirements.”
  • Article Review 130 on “Partner Politics: Russia, China, and the Challenge of Extending US Hegemony after the Cold War.”
  • Article Review 131 on “Hatchet or Scalpel?  Domestic Politics, International Threats, and US Military Spending Cuts, 1950-2014.”
  • Article Review 132 on “Hegemony Studies 3.0: The Dynamics of Hegemonic Order.”
  • Article Review 133 on “How to Enlarge NATO: The Debate inside the Clinton Administration, 1993–95.”
  • Article Review 134 on “Cautious Bully: Reputation, Resolve, and Beijing’s Use of Coercion in the South China Sea.”
  • Article Review 135 on “Europe and China’s Sea Disputes: Between Normative Politics, Power Balancing and Acquiescence”
  • Article Review 136 on “Proliferation and the Logic of the Nuclear Market” 
  • Article Review 137 on “Emerging Technologies and Strategic Stability.”
  • Article Review 138 on “The Sturdy Child vs. the Sword of Damocles: Nuclear Weapons and the Expected Cost of War.” 
  • Article Review 139 on “Substate Organizations as Foreign Policy Agents: New Evidence and Theory from India, Israel, and France.”
  • Article Review 14 on “Present at the Creation: Edward Mead Earle and the Depression-Era Origins of Security Studies.”
  • Article Review 140 on “Dangerous Confidence? Chinese Views on Nuclear Escalation.”
  • Article Review 141 on “Networked Cooperation: How the European Union Mobilizes Peacekeeping Forces to Project Power Abroad.” 
  • Article Review 142 on “Counterterrorism and Preventive Repression: China’s Changing Strategy in Xinjiang.”
  • Article Review 143 on “‘When Pigs Fly’: Britain, Canada and Nuclear Exports to Israel, 1958-1974.” 
  • Article Review 144 on “Was the Malvinas/Falklands a Diversionary War? A Prospect-Theory Reinterpretation of Argentina’s Decline.”
  • Article Review 145 on “Conceal or Reveal? Managing Clandestine Military Capabilities in Peacetime Competition.”
  • Article Review 146 on “Presidents, Politics, and Military Strategy: Electoral Constraints during the Iraq War.”
  • Article Review 147 on “Going Fishing versus Hunting Whales: Explaining Changes in How the US Enforces Economic Sanctions.”
  • Article Review 148 on “Peacemakers or Iron Ladies?”
  • Article Review 149 on “Security Studies in a New Era of Maritime Competition”
  • Article Review 15 on “Does Decapitation Work?” and “Targeting Top Terrorists”
  • Article Review 150- “Selective Wilsonianism”
  • Article Review 151 on “The United States and the NATO Non-extension Assurances of 1990”
  • Article Review 152 on “To Disclose or Deceive? Sharing Secret Information between Aligned States.”
  • Article Review 153 on “The Obama Administration and Syrian Chemical Weapons: Deterrence, Compellence, and the Limits of the “Resolve plus Bombs” Formula.”
  • Article Review 154- “The Durability of a Unipolar System”
  • Article Review 155 on “Leaning on Legionnaires:  Why Modern States Recruit Foreign Soldiers.”
  • Article Review 156- “White Supremacy, Terrorism, and the Failure of Reconstruction in the United States.”
  • Article Review 157- “Wargaming for International Relations Research”
  • Article Review 16 on “Confronting Soviet Power: U.S. Policy during the Early Cold War.”
  • Article Review 17 on “Unrest Assured: Why Unipolarity is not Peaceful.”
  • Article Review 18 on “The Offshore Balancing Thesis Reconsidered: Realism, the Balance of Power in Europe, and America’s Decision for War in 1917.”
  • Article Review 19 on “China’s Fear of Contagion. Tiananmen Square and the Power of the European Example.”
  • Article Review 2 on “We Cannot Go On: Disruptive Innovation and the First World War Royal Navy”
  • Article Review 20 on “Don’t Come Home, America: The Case against Retrenchment.”
  • Article Review 21 on “Testing the Surge: Why Did Violence Decline in Iraq in 2007?”
  • Article Review 22 on “Two Concepts of Liberty: U.S. Cold War Grand Strategies and the Liberal Tradition.”
  • Article Review 23 on “Israel’s War in Gaza: A Paradigm of Effective Military Learning and Adaptation.” International Security 37:2 (Fall 2012), and on “Just War Moral Philosophy and the 2008-09 Israeli Campaign in Gaza.”
  • Article Review 24 on “When Duty Calls: A Pragmatic Standard of Humanitarian Intervention.”
  • Article Review 25 on “Why States Won’t Give Nuclear Weapons to Terrorists.”
  • Article Review 26 on “Forced to be Free? Why Foreign-Imposed Regime Change Rarely Leads to Democratization.”
  • Article Review 27 on “What Really Happened in Planning for Postwar Iraq?” and “After War”
  • Article Review 28 on “New Delhi’s Long Nuclear Journey: How Secrecy and Institutional Roadblocks Delayed India’s Weaponization”
  • Article Review 29 on “Still notable: Reassessing theoretical ‘exceptions’ in Canadian foreign policy literature”
  • Article Review 3 on “The Deception Dividend: FDR’s Undeclared War”
  • Article Review 30 on “The Structure of Success: How the Internal Distribution of Power Drives Armed Group Behavior and National Movement Success”
  • Article Review 31 on “The India−Pakistan Rivalry and Failure in Afghanistan.”
  • Article Review 32 on “On Domains: Cyber and the Practice of Warfare.”
  • Article Review 33 on “Zero dark squared: Does the US benefit from more Special Operations Forces?”
  • Article Review 34 on “Are Canadians still Liberal Internationalists? Foreign Policy and Public Opinion in the Harper Era.”
  • Article Review 35 on “A Recent History of al-Qa’ida”
  • Article Review 36 on “Hans Morgenthau and the Tragedy of the Nation-State”
  • Article Review 37 on “NSA: National Security vs. Individual Rights.”
  • Article Review 38 on “The Impact of China on Cybersecurity: Fiction and Friction.”
  • Article Review 39 on “Increasing Canadian Foreign Intelligence Capability: Is it a Dead Issue?”
  • Article Review 4 on “Saddam’s Perceptions and Misperceptions: The Case of ‘Desert Storm’”
  • Article Review 40 on Canada and NORAD
  • Article Review 41 on “Stalking the Secure Second Strike: Intelligence, Counterforce, and Nuclear Strategy.”
  • Article Review 42 on “British Foreign Policy and the Arab Spring.”
  • Article Review 43 on “Is There an Oil Weapon? Security Implications of Changes in the Structure of the International Oil Market.”
  • Article Review 44 on “Pakistan’s Battlefield Nuclear Policy: A Risky Solution to an Exaggerated Threat.”
  • Article Review 45 on “The Inscrutable Intentions of Great Powers.”
  • Article Review 46 on “Assessing the significance of women in combat roles.”
  • Article Review 47 on “Soldiers, Civilians, and Multilateral Humanitarian Intervention.”
  • Article Review 48 on “The Making of a Non-Aligned Power: India’s Proliferation Drift 1964-8.”
  • Article Review 49 on “Flirting with Fascism: The 1934 Report of General Renondeau.” Intelligence and National Security 30:4
  • Article Review 5 on “Is Anybody Not an (International Relations) Liberal?”
  • Article Review 50 on “Alliance Coercion and Nuclear Restraint: How the United States Thwarted West Germany’s Nuclear Ambitions.” International Security 39:3
  • Article Review 51 on “The Korea Syndrome: An Examination of War-Weariness Theory.” Journal of Cold War Studies 17:3
  • Article Review 52 on “The Myth of Entangling Alliances.” International Security 39:4
  • Article Review 53 on “Accepting Regional Zero: Nuclear Weapon Free Zones, U.S. Nonproliferation Policy and Global Security, 1957-1968.” Journal of Cold War Studies 17:2
  • Article Review 54 on “Analytic Outreach for Intelligence: Insights from a Workshop on Emerging Biotechnology Threats.”
  • Article Review 55 on “Process Tracing: A Symposium.” Security Studies 24:2
  • Article Review 56 on “Hard Thinking about Hard and Easy Cases in Security Studies.” Security Studies 24:3 (July-September 2015)
  • Article Review 57 on “Who’s Afraid of the Bomb? The Role of Nuclear Non-Use Norms in Confrontations between Nuclear and Non-Nuclear Opponents.” Security Studies 24:4
  • Article Review 58 on “Self-deterrence: Nuclear Weapons and the enduring credibility challenge.” International Journal 71:1
  • Article Review 6 on “No First Use: The Next Step for U.S. Nuclear Policy”
  • Article Review 60 on “Rage of Honor: Entente Indignation and the Lost Chance for Peace in the First World War.” Security Studies 24:4
  • Article Review 61 on “Catalyzing Conflict: The Internal Dimension of the Security Dilemma.” Journal of Global Security Studies 1:2
  • Article Review 62 on “Status Competition and Territorial Aggression: Evidence from the Scramble for Africa.” Security Studies 25:3
  • Article Review 63 on “Deal or No Deal? The End of the Cold War and the U.S. Offer to Limit NATO Expansion.” International Security 40:4
  • Article Review 64 on Special Forum on Oil, Security Studies 25:2
  • Article Review 65 on “Where Does Canada Fit in the US-China Strategic Competition across the Pacific?”
  • Article Review 66 on “The Cold War, the developing world, and the creation of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), 1953–1957”
  • Article Review 67 on “Wither the Balancers? The Case for a Methodological Reset” and on “States, Nations, and Territorial Stability: Why Chinese Hegemony Would Be Better for International Order.”
  • Article Review 69 on “Influencing Clients in Counterinsurgency: U.S. Involvement in El Salvador’s Civil War, 1979-1992.”
  • Article Review 7 on “The Revolution in Military Affairs with Chinese Characteristics”
  • Article Review 70 on “Rethinking Rape: The Role of Women in Wartime Violence.”
  • Article Review 71 on “Soft Balancing in the Americas: Latin American Opposition to U.S. Intervention, 1898-1936.”
  • Article Review 72 on “To Arm or to Ally?: The Patron’s Dilemma and the Strategic Logic of Arms Transfers and Alliances.”
  • Article Review 73 on “Domestic Opposition and the Timing of Democratic Transitions after War.”
  • Article Review 74 on “You Never Get a Second Chance to Make a First Impression? First Encounters and Face-based Threat Perception.”
  • Article Review 75 on “Weaving Tangled Webs: Offense, Defense, and Deception in Cyberspace.”
  • Article Review 76 on Covert Communication: The Intelligibility and Credibility of Signaling in Secret
  • Article Review 77 on “Polarity Analysis and Collective Perceptions of Power: The Need for a New Approach.”
  • Article Review 78 on “Buyer Beware: How Market Structure Affects Contracting and Company Performance in Private Military Industry.”
  • Article Review 79 on “On Provocation: Outrage, International Relations, and the Franco-Prussian War.”
  • Article Review 8 on “Commerce and Complicity: Corporate Responsibility for Human Rights Abuses as a Legacy of Nuremberg”
  • Article Review 80 on “Learning to Deter. Deterrence Failure and Success in the Israel-Hezbollah Conflict, 2006-16.”
  • Article Review 81 on “You Can’t Always Get What You Want:  Why Foreign Imposed Regime Change Seldom Improves Interstate Relations.”
  • Article Review 82 on “From Israel with Deterrence: Strategic Culture, Intra-war Coercion and Brute Force.”
  • Article Review 83 on “What Is the Cyber Offense-Defense Balance? Conceptions, Causes, and Assessment”
  • Article Review 84 on “The Logic of Coercion in Cyberspace” and on “Theorizing Cyber Coercion: The 2014 North Korean Operation against Sony.”
  • Article Review 85 on “Would China Go Nuclear? Assessing the Risk of Chinese Nuclear Escalation in a Conventional War with the United States.”
  • Article Review 86 on “Does Oil Cause Ethnic War? Comparing Evidence from Process-Tracing with Quantitative Results.”
  • Article Review 87 on “The ‘Hearts and Minds’ Fallacy: Violence, Coercion, and Success in Counterinsurgency Warfare.”
  • Article Review 88 on “The New Era of Counterforce: Technological Change and the Future of Nuclear Deterrence.”
  • Article Review 89 on “Causes of the U.S. Hostage Crisis in Iran: The Untold Account of the Communist Threat.”
  • Article Review 9 on “Special Forum: Genocide, War Crimes, and International Justice”
  • Article Review 90 on “Future Warfare in the Western Pacific: Chinese Antiaccess/Area Denial, U.S. AirSea Battle, and Command of the Commons in East Asia” and on “Should the United States Reject MAD? Damage Limitation and U.S. Nuclear Strategy toward China.”
  • Article Review 91 on “Nuclear Beliefs: A Leader-Focused Theory of Counter-Proliferation.”
  • Article Review 92 on “Dangerous Days: The Impact of Nationalism on Interstate Conflict”
  • Article Review 93 on “Beyond the Buzzword: The Three Meanings of “Grand Strategy.””
  • Article Review 94 on “Advancing Without Attacking: The Strategic Game around the Use of Force.”
  • Article Review 95 on “The Extremist’s Advantage in Civil Wars.”
  • Article Review 96 on “Why U.S. Efforts to Promote the Rule of Law in Afghanistan Failed”
  • Article Review 97 on “In Plain Sight: The Neglected Linkage between Brideprice and Violent Conflict.”
  • Article Review 98 on “How Civil Wars End: The International System, Norms, and the Role of External Actors.”
  • Article Review 99 on “Rousing a Response:  When the United States Changes Policy toward Mass Killing.”
  • Article Review Forum 110 on “Why did the United States Invade Iraq in 2003?”
  • Article Review Forum 59 on “How Realism Waltzed Off: Liberalism and Decisionmaking in Kenneth Waltz’s Neorealism.”
  • Article Review Forum 68 on Nonproliferation
  • Author’s Response to Article Review 12 on “Cyborg Pantocrator: International Relations Theory from Decisionism to Rational Choice.”
  • Author’s Response to Article Review 13 on “The Collapse of North Korea: Military Missions and Requirements.”
  • Author’s Response to Article Review 83
  • Author’s Response to Article Review 87 on “The ‘Hearts and Minds’ Fallacy: Violence, Coercion, and Success in Counterinsurgency Warfare.”
  • Author’s Response to Essay 11 on Explaining the Iraq War
  • Authors’ Response to Article Review 118 on “Is Grand Strategy a Research Program? A Review Essay”
  • Authors’ Response to Article Review 71 on “Soft Balancing in the Americas: Latin American Opposition to U.S. Intervention, 1898-1936.”
  • Authors’ Response to Michael C. Horowitz’s “Adoption Capacity and the Spread of Suicide Bombing: A Response to Andrea Gilli and Mauro Gilli”

b

  • Bennett Response to Article Review 87

c

  • Commentary 4- Robert Y. Shapiro on “The Center Can Hold: Public Policy for an Age of Extremes,”

e

  • Essay 1- International Politics and Diplomatic History: Fruitful Differences
  • Essay 2 on “A Closer Look at Case Studies on Democracy, Selection Effects, and Victory”
  • Essay 24- “Did History End?”
  • Essay 3- “French Foreign Policy in the July Crisis, 1914: A Review Article”
  • Essay 50- Searching for Recognition at the ‘End of History’: If Democracy is the End of History, Why is Democracy Losing Ground?

f

  • Fitzsimmons Response to Article Review 87
  • Forum (38) on the Importance of the Scholarship of John Prados
  • Forum 1 on Marc Trachtenberg’s “Audience Costs in 1954?”
  • Forum 10 on “A Decade of EU Counter-Terrorism and Intelligence: A Critical Assessment”
  • Forum 11 on “The Great Game and Great Reforms of Asia, 1850-1950.”
  • Forum 12 on “Special Issue: Traditions of British International Thought”
  • Forum 13 on “Why Isn’t There More Scholarly Evaluation of U.S. Wars?”
  • Forum 14 on “Obama’s World: Judging His Foreign Policy Record”
  • Forum 15 on “Symposium on Counterfactual Analysis”
  • Forum 16 on “New Light on 1914?”
  • Forum 18 on Bob Woodward. Fear: Trump in the White House.
  • Forum 2 on “What We Talk About When We Talk About Nuclear Weapons.”
  • Forum 21 on “Global Nuclear Order.” Diplomacy & Statecraft 29:1
  • Forum 22 on “Aspects of the Global Nuclear Order in the 1970s”
  • Forum 25 on the Importance of White House Presidential Tapes in Scholarship
  • Forum 26 on Robert Jervis.  “Liberalism, the Blob, and American Foreign Policy: Evidence and Methodology.”  
  • Forum 27 on Rules for Rebels:  The Science of Victory in Militant History
  • Forum 28 on The Importance of Paul Schroeder’s Scholarship to the Fields of International Relations and Diplomatic History
  • Forum 29 on the 2021 German Elections
  • Forum 3 on “Audience Costs and the Vietnam War”
  • Forum 30 on the Importance of the Scholarship of Eric D. Weitz
  • Forum 31 on the Importance of the Scholarship of Ernest May
  • Forum 32 on Special Issue: “NATO: Contested Histories and Future Directions.”
  • Forum 33 on the Importance of the Scholarship of Stanley Hoffmann
  • Forum 34 (2022) on the Importance of the Scholarship of Dorothy Borg
  • Forum 35 (2022) on the Scholarship of Nancy Bernkopf Tucker
  • Forum 4 on “An INS Special Forum: Implications of the Snowden Leaks”
  • Forum 5 on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI) Report and the United States’ Post-9/11 Policy on Torture
  • Forum 6 on “Contemporary Military Contracting and the Future: Teeth, Tails, and Concerns.”
  • Forum 7 on “What Really Happened: Solving the Cold War’s Cold Cases.”
  • Forum 8 on “Special Issue: The Origins of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Regime.”
  • Forum 9 on “What Have We Learned? Lessons from Afghanistan & Iraq.”
  • Forum on Contagion and War: Lessons from the First World War

h

  • H-Diplo | ISSF Forum 36 (2002) on the Scholarship of Walter LaFeber
  • H-Diplo | ISSF Roundtable 14-5: Zegart, Spies, Lies and Algorithms: The History and Future of American Intelligence
  • H-Diplo | ISSF Roundtable 14-6 on Stewart, Governing for Revolution: Social Transformation in Civil War
  • H-Diplo | ISSF Roundtable 14-7 on Barder, Global Race War: International Politics and Racial Hierarchy
  • H-Diplo | RJISSF Review Essay 66 Brew on Thompson, Disorder: Hard Times in the 21st Century
  • H-Diplo | RJISSF Review Essay 67: Perlman on Bauer, Marianne is Watching
  • H-Diplo | RJISSF Roundtable 14-8: Schrader, Badges Without Borders
  • H-Diplo Commentary by Philip Zelikow on “‘Documentary Evidence’ and Llewellyn Thompson’s Berlin/Cuba Assessment of Soviet Motives in the October 1962 Missile Crisis.”
  • H-Diplo Commentary by Ryan Irwin on The H-Word: The Peripeteia of Hegemony and on On Grand Strategy
  • H-Diplo Essay 184- Andrew Bacevich on Becoming a Historian through the Side Door
  • H-Diplo Essay 187- Jerald A. Combs on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 188- Gerhard L. Weinberg on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 189- David A. Hollinger on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 190- A. G. Hopkins on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 193- Lloyd Gardner on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 194- Philip Nord on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 195- Emily Rosenberg on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 196- N. Piers Ludlow on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 197- Robert Bothwell on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 198- Robert Jervis on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 200- Edwin E. Moise on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 201- William B. Quandt on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 203- Cynthia Enloe on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 204- Elizabeth Schmidt on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 206- John Milton Cooper, Jr. on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 207- Justus D. Doenecke on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 208- John Lewis Gaddis on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 210- Anne Deighton on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 211- Jeffrey P. Kimball on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 212- Richard Ned Lebow on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 213- William R. Keylor on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 215- John A. Thompson on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 217- Federico Romero on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 219- Geoffrey Roberts on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 220- Richard H. Immerman on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 221- Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 223- James I. Matray on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 225- Melvin Small on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 227- Michael A. Barnhart on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 228- Kathleen Burk on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 230- Warren F. Kimball on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 232- J. Ann Tickner on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 233- Elizabeth Cobbs on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 235- James Goldgeier on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 237- William I. Hitchcock on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 238- David L. Anderson on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 241- Louise P. Woodroofe on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 242- Robert O. Paxton on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 244- Janice Gross Stein on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 246- Howard Jones on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 248- Anne L. Foster on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 250- Jonathan Haslam on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 251- Philip Zelikow on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 253- William Stueck on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 255- Tsuyoshi Hasegawa on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 257- Matthew Evangelista on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 264- Anders Stephanson on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 266- Mark A. Stoler on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 267- Shen Zhihua on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 268- Elizabeth McKillen on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 270- David C. Engerman on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 272- Akira Iriye on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 273- Martin Conway on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 274- Evelyn Hu-DeHart on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 277- Nicholas J. Cull on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 282- Kristin Hoganson on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 284- Norman M. Naimark on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 289- Jessica Elkind on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 295- Alessandro Brogi on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 295- Alessandro Brogi on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 296- Kathryn C. Statler on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars
  • H-Diplo Essay 297- David A. Bell on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 299- Jessica Chapman on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 304- Alice L. Conklin on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 307- Mary Dudziak on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 309- Adom Getachew on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 312- Valerie M. Hudson on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 313- Marc Trachtenberg on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 316- Margaret MacMillan on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 322- Audrey Kurth Cronin on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 325- Sara McLaughlin Mitchell on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 327- Lloyd E. Ambrosius on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 335- Tuong Vu on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 337: Carolyn J. Dean on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 342- Leila J. Rupp on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 346- Laurien Crump on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 348- Tanisha M. Fazal on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 350- Lawrence Freedman on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 352- Priya Satia on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 359- Steven Aftergood on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 365- Carole Fink on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 366- Mire Koikari on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 368- S.C.M. Paine on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 372- Kathryn Stoner on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 374- John Prados on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 376- Robert J. Lieber on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 378- Stephen G. Rabe on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 380- Christopher R. Browning on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 383- Waren I. Cohen on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 386- Vladislav Zubok on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 387- Charles E. Neu on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 390- Jacques E.C. Hymans on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 393- Paul Betts on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 395- Eliot A. Cohen on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 397- Sheila Fitzpatrick on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 400- Danielle Fosler-Lussier on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 435- John Lamberton Harper on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 437- Roger Dingman on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 441- James H. Lebovic on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 443- Francis M. Carroll on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 444- George C. Herring on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 448- Thomas G. Paterson on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 450- J. Samuel Walker on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 503- Isabel V. Hull on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Essay 511- Mark Atwood Lawrence on Learning the Scholar’s Craft
  • H-Diplo Review Essay 311- “Satō, America, and the Cold War”
  • H-Diplo Roundtable on The Emergence of Globalism: Visions of World Order in Britain and The United States, 1939-1950
  • H-Diplo Roundtable XX-14 on When the World Seemed New: George H.W. Bush and the End of the Cold War
  • H-Diplo Roundtable XX-15 on Republic in Peril: American Empire and the Liberal Tradition
  • H-Diplo Roundtable XX-30 on Stalin. Waiting For Hitler 1929-1941
  • H-Diplo Roundtable XXI-42 on “Recentering the United States in the Historiography of American Foreign Relations.”
  • H-Diplo Roundtable XXI-7 on Political Realism in Apocalyptic Times
  • H-Diplo Roundtable XXII-25 on After the Deportation: Memory Battles in Postwar France
  • H-Diplo Roundtable XXIII-11 on The Revolution that Failed: Nuclear Competition, Arms Control, and the Cold War
  • H-Diplo/ISSF Policy Series 2021-31: Donald Trump and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Deal
  • H-Diplo/ISSF Review Essay 63 on To the Uttermost Parts of the Earth: Legal Imagination and International Power 1300–1870
  • H-Diplo|ISSF Commentary “Fear and the Logic of Othering: Decoding the Biden Administration’s 2022 National Security Strategy”
  • H-Diplo|ISSF Commentary I-3 on the 2022 US National Security Strategy
  • H-Diplo|ISSF Commentary: Avey, “The Biden and Trump National Security Strategies: Continuity, Change, and the Implications for Scholars”
  • H-Diplo|ISSF Conference Report: “History and Memory in International Relations”
  • H-Diplo|ISSF Roundtable 14-3: Teaching Critical Approaches to International Relations
  • H-Diplo|ISSF Roundtable 14-4: Young, Guns, Guerillas, and the Great Leader: North Korea and the Third World
  • H-Diplo|RJISSF Commentary: “Japan’s New NSS: Zeitenwende or Time-Tested Tradition?”
  • H-Diplo|RJISSF Forum (39) on the Importance of the Scholarship & Legacy of Marilyn B. Young
  • H-Diplo|RJISSF Roundtable 14-13 on McCourt, The New Constructivism in International Relations Theory
  • H-Diplo|RJISSF Roundtable on Innes, Streets Without Joy
  • H-Diplo|RJISSF Roundtable on Malkasian, The American War in Afghanistan & Whitlock, The Afghanistan Papers
  • H-Diplo|RJISSF Roundtable Review 14-11 on Wolfe-Hunnicutt, The Paranoid Style in American Diplomacy
  • H-Diplo|RJISSF Roundtable Review on Lupton,  Reputation for Resolve
  • H-Diplo|RJISSF Rountable on Chung, Pride, Not Prejudice: National Identity as a Pacifying Force in East Asia

i

  • Introducing ISSF Policy Roundtables
  • ISSF Review Essay 30 on The Return of the Theorists: Dialogues with Great Thinkers in International Relations
  • ISSF Roundtable 9-10 on Power, Knowledge, and Dissent in Morgenthau’s Worldview

j

  • Journal Origins Essay (Essay 28) on “The Genesis of JoGSS (the Journal of Global Security Studies).”

o

  • Obituary for Robert Jervis (30 April 1940-9 December 2021)

p

  • Policy Forum 23 on the 2019 Kashmir Crisis
  • Policy Forum on the 2018 Italian Election
  • Policy Forum on the 2019 European Elections
  • Policy Forum on the Gender Gap in Political Science
  • Policy Roundtable 1-1 on the Chilcot Inquiry
  • Policy Roundtable 1-2 on Brexit
  • Policy Roundtable 1-3 on the International Atomic Energy Agency Statute at Sixty
  • Policy Roundtable 1-4 on U.S. Nuclear Policy
  • Policy Roundtable 1-6: Is Liberal Internationalism Still Alive?
  • Policy Roundtable 1-7: Russia and the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election
  • Policy Roundtable 1-8: Immigration and Refugee Policy in Donald Trump’s America
  • Policy Roundtable 1-9 on U.S.-China Relations and the Trump Administration
  • Policy Roundtable 12-1 on NATO Expansion in Retrospect
  • Policy Roundtable 2-1: Public Opinion and the Trump Administration’s Foreign Policy
  • Policy Roundtable 2-2: Emmanuel Macron’s Political Revolution in France
  • Policy Roundtable 2-3: The New Austrian Government and the Rise of the Far-Right in Europe
  • Policy Roundtable 2-4: The Saudi-Iranian Cold War
  • Policy Series 2-5: France’s Yellow Vests: Lessons from a Revolt
  • Policy Series 2012-3: Rethinking Vulnerability: Structural Inequality as National Insecurity
  • Policy Series 2012-8: 2016 Revisited: The Trump Presidency in Perspective
  • Policy Series 2021- Introduction from the Editors
  • Policy Series 2021-1: Trump ReTweeted
  • Policy Series 2021-10: More of the Same, and Worse: Revisiting Donald Trump and the Limits of International Law
  • Policy Series 2021-11: “America First” Meets Liberal Internationalism
  • Policy Series 2021-12: What Nationalism Ended Up Looking Like
  • Policy Series 2021-13: Trump’s Foreign Policy Legacy
  • Policy Series 2021-14: Joe Biden and the Gibbon Paradox
  • Policy Series 2021-15: U.S.-UK Relations in the Time of Trump
  • Policy Series 2021-16: Revisiting Historical Legacies of US Policy in the Middle East: The Trump Administration
  • Policy Series 2021-17: The Trump Presidency and U.S. Workers: “America First” or America Diminished?
  • Policy Series 2021-18: “Why Does Donald Trump Have So Much Trouble with the Truth? A Brief Update”
  • Policy Series 2021-19: The Ideals of 1989 Carried to the Grave
  • Policy Series 2021-2: Leo Ribuffo and “the “Paranoid Style” in American (Intellectual) Politics”
  • Policy Series 2021-20: Donald Trump and NATO: Historic Alliance Meets A-historic President
  • Policy Series 2021-21: Canada and Trump Revisited, Revisited
  • Policy Series 2021-22: The Trump Presidency: Trump 1, IR Theory 0
  • Policy Series 2021-23: Aristocracy, Oligarchy, and Donald Trump: The Age of Distrust
  • Policy Series 2021-24: American Totalitarianism in the Age of Trump
  • Policy Series 2021-25: Rendezvous with Infamy
  • Policy Series 2021-26: Trump’s Realism
  • Policy Series 2021-27: The Trump Administration and the Middle East: Not Much Change, Not Much Success
  • Policy Series 2021-28: The Denouement: Revisiting Trump as History
  • Policy Series 2021-29: Engage?  Trump and the Asia-Pacific
  • Policy Series 2021-30: The Biden Administration and Russia: Digging Out of a Deep Hole
  • Policy Series 2021-32: Transatlantic Relations after Trump: Mutual Perceptions and Historical Perspectives
  • Policy Series 2021-33: The Trump Administration’s Insidious Approach to Human Rights
  • Policy Series 2021-34: The Trump Presidency, the Question of Palestine, and Biden’s Business as Usual
  • Policy Series 2021-35: The Derangements of Sovereignty: Trumpism and the Dilemmas of Interdependence
  • Policy Series 2021-36: Globalization and U.S. Foreign Relations after Trump
  • Policy Series 2021-37: Donald Trump and the Public Relations of the Environment
  • Policy Series 2021-38: Trump’s Transactional Follies: The Consequences of Treating the Arms Trade like a Business
  • Policy Series 2021-39: Reclaiming America and Its Place in the World
  • Policy Series 2021-4: Trump to the Intelligence Community: You’re Fired
  • Policy Series 2021-40: Has Trump Changed How We Think about American Security?
  • Policy Series 2021-41: Sino-American Rivalry in the Shadow of Trump: Images and Impressions
  • Policy Series 2021-42: Trump’s Limited Legacy
  • Policy Series 2021-43: America First? The Erosion of American Status under Trump
  • Policy Series 2021-44: When Donald Met Washington: The Genesis of ‘Great Power Competition’
  • Policy Series 2021-45: Swaggering Home: Trump, Grenell, and Pompeo in Conflict with Germany
  • Policy Series 2021-46: Lifting the Veil on Racial Capitalism: American Foreign Policy Before and After Trump
  • Policy Series 2021-47: The Trump Presidency in Historical Perspective
  • Policy Series 2021-48: Fences Make Bad Hombres: Trump in Latin America
  • Policy Series 2021-49: Donald Trump and the Return of Relative Gains: Should We Rethink the Neo-Neo Synthesis?
  • Policy Series 2021-5: Disrupt and Expose, but Clarify:  Trump’s Legacy
  • Policy Series 2021-50: Joe Biden, American Democracy, and the China Challenge
  • Policy Series 2021-51: “Sh*thole Countries”: Was Trump’s Foreign Policy Racist?
  • Policy Series 2021-52: The Trump “Legacy” for American Foreign Policy
  • Policy Series 2021-53: The Trump Administration and Economic Sanctions
  • Policy Series 2021-54: Stuck: “America First” and the Middle East
  • Policy Series 2021-55: “Mr. Brexit”: Donald Trump and the UK’s Departure from the European Union
  • Policy Series 2021-56: Death Grip Handshakes and Flattery Diplomacy: The Macron-Trump Connection and Its Larger Implications for Alliance Politics
  • Policy Series 2021-57: Riding the Rollercoaster: India and the Trump Years
  • Policy Series 2021-58: Liberal Internationalism and Partisan Discontents into the Post-Trump United States
  • Policy Series 2021-59: Racialized Threats and Security Rationales in U.S. Immigration Policies
  • Policy Series 2021-6: Reflections on The Trump Years
  • Policy Series 2021-60: Trump and Russia—Less than Meets the Eye
  • Policy Series 2021-61: Militarized Policing in the Trump Era and Beyond
  • Policy Series 2021-7: The Trump Experiment Revisited
  • Policy Series 2021-9: Making Trump History
  • Policy Series 3-1- Reviewing the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in 2020
  • Policy Series: “Donald Trump and the Limits of International Law”
  • Policy Series: “Inconsistent, Incoherent, and Unpredictable: U.S. Policies in East Asia under President Donald J. Trump”
  • Policy Series: “Maximum Pressure:” The Trump Administration and Iran
  • Policy Series: “The Art of the Bluff: The U.S.-Japan Alliance under the Trump Administration”
  • Policy Series: “The Donald versus ‘The Blob’”
  • Policy Series: “The End of American Liberal Internationalism?”
  • Policy Series: “The Image Revisited”
  • Policy Series: “Trumpism, History, and the Future of U.S. Foreign Relations”
  • Policy Series: Fractured: Trump’s Foreign Policy after Two Years
  • Policy Series: Two Cheers for the Liberal World Order: The International Order and Rising Powers in a Trumpian World
  • Policy Series: A Double Standard?
  • Policy Series: A Third-Image Explanation for Why Trump Now: A Response to Robert Jervis’s “President Trump and IR Theory”
  • Policy Series: America and the World-2017 and Beyond (Introduction)
  • Policy Series: An Unquiet Grave on Long Island
  • Policy Series: Aristocracy, Oligarchy, and Donald Trump
  • Policy Series: Assessing Trump’s Emerging Counterterrorism Policy
  • Policy Series: Authentic Trump versus the Trump Administration: Donald Trump as Foreign Policy Disrupter
  • Policy Series: Beyond Cyber-Threats: The Technopolitics of Vulnerability
  • Policy Series: Canada and Donald Trump: A Midterm Reality Check
  • Policy Series: Canada and the Election of Donald Trump
  • Policy Series: Comparing Richard Nixon and Donald Trump: A Preliminary Report
  • Policy Series: Donald Trump and NATO: Historic Alliance Meets A-historic President
  • Policy Series: Donald Trump and the “Paranoid Style” in American (Intellectual) Politics
  • Policy Series: Donald Trump and the Limits of Human Rights
  • Policy Series: Donald Trump and the New Turn in Canadian Foreign Policy
  • Policy Series: Donald Trump Versus American Exceptionalism: Toward the Sources of Trumpian Conduct
  • Policy Series: Donald Trump: The View from the Asia-Pacific. Loose Nukes and Loose Cannons
  • Policy Series: Expertise and Naïveté in Decision-Making: Theory, History, and the Trump Administration
  • Policy Series: Going Rogue in the Age of Trump
  • Policy Series: Human Rights and the Trump Administration
  • Policy Series: Is Donald Trump Jimmy Carter, or is he Kaiser Wilhelm II?
  • Policy Series: Leaking about Donald Trump in the Age of False News
  • Policy Series: Lebovic on Elliott Abrams, “Trump the Traditionalist: A Surprisingly Standard Foreign Policy”
  • Policy Series: Make America Grey Again?
  • Policy Series: Neoliberalism, the Decline of Diplomacy, and the Rise of the Global Right
  • Policy Series: Political Extremism and Liberal Democracy
  • Policy Series: President Trump and IR Theory
  • Policy Series: Science under the Trump Administration in Historical Perspective, Part I
  • Policy Series: Sound and Fury, Signifying Something? NATO and the Trump Administration’s Second Year
  • Policy Series: Stability versus Flexibility in Trumpian Foreign Policy
  • Policy Series: Stalin, Trump, and the Politics of Narcissism: A Response to Rose McDermott’s “The Nature of Narcissism.”
  • Policy Series: The “Global Order” Myth
  • Policy Series: The Appeal of ‘America First’
  • Policy Series: The Clash of Global Narratives
  • Policy Series: The Election of Donald Trump and the Decline of the Expert
  • Policy Series: The Failed Promises of 1989 and the Politics of 2016
  • Policy Series: The Future of the Atlantic Alliance under President Trump
  • Policy Series: The Impact of the Trump Administration on U.S.-UK Relations
  • Policy Series: The Madman Myth: Trump and the Bomb
  • Policy Series: The Nature of Narcissism
  • Policy Series: The Significance of the Trump Presidency
  • Policy Series: The Trump Administration and Syria
  • Policy Series: The Trump Administration and the Middle East
  • Policy Series: The Unprecedented President: Donald Trump and the Media in Historical Perspective
  • Policy Series: The Waning of the Post-War Order
  • Policy Series: This is What Nationalism Looks Like
  • Policy Series: Trump and Europe – An Inauspicious Start
  • Policy Series: Trump and Historical Legacies of U.S. Middle East Policy
  • Policy Series: Trump and International Relations Theory: A Response to Robert Jervis’s “President Trump and IR Theory”
  • Policy Series: Trump and Latin America: Asymmetry and the Problem of Influence
  • Policy Series: Trump and NATO: Old Wine in Gold Bottles?
  • Policy Series: Trump The Tweeter
  • Policy Series: Trump’s Ascendancy as History
  • Policy Series: Trump’s China Policy: Bi-partisan Hardening, Uncertain Resolve
  • Policy Series: U.S.-Latin American Relations in the Age of Donald Trump
  • Policy Series: U.S.-Russian Relations in the Trump Era
  • Policy Series: Why Does Donald Trump Have So Much Trouble with the Truth?
  • Policy Series: Will Trump’s Nationalism Change American Foreign Policy? A Review Essay on Charlie Laderman and Brendan Simms’s Donald Trump: The Making of a Worldview. (Endeavor Press, 2017).
  • Policy Series: Will Trumpism increase the Danger of War in the International System?: IR Theory and the Illiberal Turn in World Politics
  • Policy Series: Workers, Donald Trump, and U.S. Foreign Policy

r

  • Reply to Author’s Response to Essay 11 on Explaining the Iraq War
  • Response to Geoffrey Roberts, Stalin, Trump, and the Politics of Narcissism: A Response to Rose McDermott’s The Nature of Narcissism
  • Response to Article Review 14 on “Present at the Creation: Edward Mead Earle and the Depression-Era Origins of Security Studies.”
  • Response to Article Review 21 on “Testing the Surge” and “Correspondence: Assessing the Synergy Thesis in Iraq”
  • Response to Article Review 28 on “New Delhi’s Long Nuclear Journey: How Secrecy and Institutional Roadblocks Delayed India’s Weaponization”
  • Response to Article Review 97 on “In Plain Sight: The Neglected Linkage between Brideprice and Violent Conflict”
  • Response to Article Review No. 20 on “Don’t Come Home, America: The Case against Retrenchment.”
  • Response to Article Review No. 22 on “Two Concepts of Liberty: U.S. Cold War Grand Strategies and the Liberal Tradition.”
  • Response to Essay 20 on Reconceptualizing Deterrence: Nudging toward Rationality in Middle Eastern Rivalries
  • Response to Forum 31 (2021) on the Importance of the Scholarship of Ernest May
  • Response to Peter Krause, “The Political Effectiveness of Non-State Violence: A Two-Level Framework to Transform a Deceptive Debate”
  • Review Essay 10 on Cutting a Fuse, not the Fuse!
  • Review Essay 11 on Explaining the Iraq War: Counterfactual Theory, Logic and Evidence
  • Review Essay 12 on Sectarianism in Iraq: Antagonistic Visions of Unity
  • Review Essay 13 on The Clash of Ideologies: Middle Eastern Politics and American Security
  • Review Essay 14 on Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome
  • Review Essay 15 on Action and Reaction in the World System: the Dynamics of Economic and Political Power
  • Review Essay 16 on The Politics and Ethics of Identity: In Search of Ourselves
  • Review Essay 17 on Cyber War Will Not Take Place
  • Review Essay 18 on Governing the World: The History of an Idea
  • Review Essay 19 on Petro-Aggression: When Oil Causes War
  • Review Essay 20 on Reconceptualizing Deterrence: Nudging toward Rationality in Middle Eastern Rivalries
  • Review Essay 21 on Arguments that Count: Physics, Computing, and Missile Defense, 1949-2012
  • Review Essay 22 on Counterinsurgency: Exposing the Myths of the New Way of War
  • Review Essay 23 on Psychology, Strategy, and Conflict
  • Review Essay 25 on Logics of War: Explanations for Limited and Unlimited Conflicts
  • Review Essay 26- Adoption Capacity and the Spread of Suicide Bombing, A Response to Andrea Gilli and Mauro Gilli
  • Review Essay 27 on The Good War: Why We Couldn’t Win the War or the Peace in Afghanistan
  • Review Essay 29 on The Bomb: South Africa’s Nuclear Program
  • Review Essay 31 on National Identities and International Relations
  • Review Essay 33 on US Foreign Policy and Defense Strategy: The Evolution of an Incidental Superpower
  • Review Essay 34 on Harold Brown: Offsetting the Soviet Military Challenge, 1977-1981
  • Review Essay 35 on Beyond Religious Freedom: The New Global Politics of Religion
  • Review Essay 36 on Tokens of Power: Rethinking War
  • Review Essay 37 on How NATO Adapts: Strategy and Organization in the Atlantic Alliance Since 1950
  • Review Essay 38 on Burdens of War: Creating the United States Veterans Health System
  • Review Essay 39 on Faces of Moderation: The Art of Balance in an Age of Extremes
  • Review Essay 4 on Hiroshima: The World’s Bomb
  • Review Essay 40 on The Art of Sanctions: A View from the Field
  • Review Essay 41 on The Increasingly United States: How and Why American Political Behavior Nationalized
  • Review Essay 42 on Insider Threats
  • Review Essay 43 on Hacking the Bomb: Cyber Threats and Nuclear Weapons
  • Review Essay 44 on Melvin Laird and the Foundation of the Post-Vietnam Military, 1969-1973
  • Review Essay 45 on Richard Ned Lebow, ed. Max Weber and International Relations.
  • Review Essay 46 on Confounding Powers: Anarchy and International Society from the Assassins to Al Qaeda
  • Review Essay 47 on Twilight of the Titans: Great Power Decline and Retrenchment
  • Review Essay 48 on Everything Trump Touches Dies: A Republican Strategist Gets Real About the Worst President Ever
  • Review Essay 5 on The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History and on Empire of Humanity: A History of Humanitarianism
  • Review Essay 51 on The Fortress: The Great Siege of Przemyśl
  • Review Essay 52 on Only the Dead: The Persistence of War in The Modern Age
  • Review Essay 53 on Divided Allies: Strategic Cooperation against the Communist Threat in the Asia-Pacific during the Early Cold War
  • Review Essay 54 on Burn In: A Novel of the Real Robotic Revolution
  • Review Essay 55 on Tortured Logic: Why Some Americans Support the Use of Torture in Counter Terrorism
  • Review Essay 56 on Social Practices of Rule-Making in World Politics
  • Review Essay 57 on Warlord Survival: The Delusion of State Building in Afghanistan
  • Review Essay 58- “The Untold Story of the World’s Leading Environmental Institution: UNEP at Fifty”
  • Review Essay 59: Nuclear France: Grandeur or Mirage?
  • Review Essay 6 on The Shadow of the Past: Reputation and Military Alliances before the First World War
  • Review Essay 60 on “Explaining Divergent Trends in Coups and Mutinies”
  • Review Essay 61 on Pedagogical Journeys Through World Politics
  • Review Essay 62 on Stories from the Field: A Guide to Navigating Fieldwork in Political Science
  • Review Essay 64 on America’s Entangling Alliances: 1778 to the Present
  • Review Essay 65 on Following the Leader: International Order, Alliance Strategies, and Emulation
  • Review Essay 7 on Liberal Leviathan
  • Review Essay 8 on A Contest for Supremacy: China, America, and the Struggle for Mastery in Asia
  • Review Essay 9 on The Clash of Ideas in World Politics
  • Review Essay on The Distinction of Peace: A Social Analysis of Peacebuilding
  • Review Forum 1 on Lessons in Disaster: McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam and on The War Council: McGeorge Bundy, the NSC and Vietnam
  • Roundtable 1-1 on “Biology and Security”
  • Roundtable 1-2 on “Politics and Scholarship”
  • Roundtable 1-3 on The Hawk and the Dove: Paul Nitze, George Kennan, and the History of the Cold War
  • Roundtable 1-4 on Vietnam’s Second Front: Domestic Politics, the Republican Party, and the War
  • Roundtable 1-5 on RAND in Southeast Asia: A History of the Vietnam War Era
  • Roundtable 1-6 on America and the Cold War, 1941-1991: A Realist Interpretation
  • Roundtable 10-1 on The Long Game: How Obama Defied Washington and Redefined America’s Role in the World
  • Roundtable 10-10 on Humiliation in International Relations: A Pathology of Contemporary International Systems
  • Roundtable 10-11 on America Abroad: The United States’ Global Role in the 21st Century
  • Roundtable 10-12 on Over the Horizon: Time, Uncertainty, and the Rise of Great Powers
  • Roundtable 10-13 on Constitutions and Conflict Management in Africa: Preventing Civil War Through Institutional Design
  • Roundtable 10-14 on The Future of War: A History
  • Roundtable 10-15 on Intelligence Success and Failure: The Human Factor
  • Roundtable 10-16 on Rebel Power: Why National Movements Compete, Fight, and Win
  • Roundtable 10-17 on The Cold War They Made: The Strategic Legacy of Roberta and Albert Wohlstetter
  • Roundtable 10-18 on Democracy in Exile: Hans Speier and the Rise of the Defense Intellectual
  • Roundtable 10-19 on American Grand Strategy and East Asian Security
  • Roundtable 10-2 on Cohen (The Big Stick), Kaufman (Dangerous Doctrine), and Lieber (Retreat and its Consequences)
  • Roundtable 10-20 on Rape During Civil War
  • Roundtable 10-21 on Cheap Threats:  Why The United States Struggles to Coerce Weak States
  • Roundtable 10-22 on Aftershocks: Great Powers and Domestic Reforms in the Twentieth Century
  • Roundtable 10-23 on Fighting for Status: Hierarchy and Conflict in World Politics
  • Roundtable 10-24 on Global Governance and Local Peace: Accountability and Performance in International Peacebuilding
  • Roundtable 10-25 onThe Logic of American Nuclear Strategy: Why Strategic Superiority Matters
  • Roundtable 10-26 on Dictators and Their Secret Police: Coercive Institutions and State Violence
  • Roundtable 10-27 on Status and the Challenge of Rising Powers
  • Roundtable 10-28 on Emotional Choices: How the Logic of Affect Shapes Coercive Diplomacy
  • Roundtable 10-29 on Restraining Great Powers: Soft Balancing from Empires to the Global Era
  • Roundtable 10-3 on Fighting for Credibility: U.S. Reputation and International Politics
  • Roundtable 10-30 on Face-to-Face Diplomacy: Social Neuroscience and International Relations
  • Roundtable 10-31 on The Hell of Good Intentions: America’s Foreign Policy Elite and the Decline of U.S. Primacy
  • Roundtable 10-32 on Taxing Wars: The American Way of War Finance and the Decline of American Democracy
  • Roundtable 10-4 on Perception and Misperception in International Politics and on How Statesmen Think: The Psychology of International Politics
  • Roundtable 10-5 on Latin America Confronts the United States. Asymmetry and Influence
  • Roundtable 10-6 on The Cybersecurity Dilemma: Hacking, Trust, and Fear Between Nations
  • Roundtable 10-7 on Losing an Enemy: Obama, Iran, and the Triumph of Diplomacy
  • Roundtable 10-8 on China’s Hegemony: Four Hundred Years of East Asian Domination
  • Roundtable 10-9 on Powerplay: The Origins of the American Alliance System in Asia
  • Roundtable 11-1 on The Evolution of the South Korea-United States Alliance
  • Roundtable 11-10 on Who Fights for Reputation: The Psychology of Leaders in International Conflict
  • Roundtable 11-11 on Unrivaled: Why America Will Remain the World’s Sole Superpower
  • Roundtable 11-12 on Active Defense: China’s Military Strategy since 1949
  • Roundtable 11-13 on Global Data Shock: Strategic Ambiguity, Deception, and Surprise in an Age of Information Overload
  • Roundtable 11-14 on When Right Makes Might: Rising Powers and World Order
  • Roundtable 11-15 on Nuclear Weapons and Coercive Diplomacy
  • Roundtable 11-16 on Diplomacy:  Communication and the Origins of the International Order
  • Roundtable 11-17 on Atomic Assurance: The Alliance Politics of Nuclear Proliferation
  • Roundtable 11-18 on Secret Wars: Covert Conflict in International Politics
  • Roundtable 11-19 on Rebranding China: Contested Status Signaling in the Changing Global Order
  • Roundtable 11-2 on The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities
  • Roundtable 11-20 on The Bomb: Presidents, Generals, and the Secret History of Nuclear War
  • Roundtable 11-21 on Nuclear Weapons and American Grand Strategy
  • Roundtable 11-3 on Ethnic Politics and State Power in Africa: The Logic of the Coup–Civil War Trap
  • Roundtable 11-4 on Trusting Enemies
  • Roundtable 11-5 on Rising Titans, Falling Giants: How Great Powers Exploit Power Shifts
  • Roundtable 11-7 on Political Survivors: The Resistance, the Cold War, and the Fight against Concentration Camps after 1945
  • Roundtable 11-8 on The Back Channel: A Memoir of American Diplomacy and the Case for Its Renewal
  • Roundtable 11-9 on Stopping the Bomb: The Sources and Effectiveness of US Nonproliferation Policy
  • Roundtable 12-10 on Feeding the Hungry: Advocacy and Blame in the Global Fight against Hunger
  • Roundtable 12-11 on Divided Armies: Inequality and Battlefield Performance in Modern War
  • Roundtable 12-12 on Orders of Exclusion:  Great Powers and the Strategic Sources of Foundational Rules in International Relations
  • Roundtable 12-13 on Peacekeeping in the Midst of War
  • Roundtable 12-14 on Power to the People: How Open Technological Innovation is Arming Tomorrow’s Terrorists
  • Roundtable 12-2 on Thucydides’s Trap? Historical Interpretation, Logic of Inquiry, and the Future of Sino-American Relations
  • Roundtable 12-3 on Planning to Fail: The US Wars in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan
  • Roundtable 12-4 on To Build a Better World:  Choices to End the Cold War and Create a Global Commonwealth
  • Roundtable 12-5 on The Picky Eagle: How Democracy and Xenophobia Limited U.S. Territorial Expansion
  • Roundtable 12-6 on The Costs of Conversation:  Obstacles to Peace Talks in Wartime
  • Roundtable 12-7 on Arguing About Alliances:  The Art of Agreement in Military-Pact Negotiations
  • Roundtable 12-8 on In the Shadow of International Law: Secrecy and Regime Change in the Postwar World.
  • Roundtable 12-9 on Information Technology and Military Power
  • Roundtable 13-1 on An Open World: How America Can Win the Contest for Twenty-First-Century Order
  • Roundtable 13-10 on Humane:  How the United States Abandoned Peace and Reinvented War
  • Roundtable 13-11 on Grand Strategy from Truman to Trump
  • Roundtable 13-12 on Restraint in International Politics
  • Roundtable 13-13 on Armed Guests: Territorial Sovereignty and Foreign Military Basing
  • Roundtable 13-2 on Strategic Instincts: The Adaptive Advantages of Cognitive Biases in International Politics
  • Roundtable 13-3 on Covert Regime Change: America’s Secret Cold War
  • Roundtable 13-4 on Black Gold and Blackmail: Oil and Great Power Politics and on The Oil Wars Myth: Petroleum and the Causes of International Conflict
  • Roundtable 13-5 on Tempting Fate: Why Nonnuclear States Confront Nuclear Opponents
  • Roundtable 13-6 on Scorecard Diplomacy: Grading States to Influence their Reputation and Behavior
  • Roundtable 13-7 on The False Promise of Liberal Order
  • Roundtable 13-8 on How Insurgency Begins: Rebel Group Formation in Uganda and Beyond
  • Roundtable 13-9 on Arms Control for the Third Nuclear Age: Between Disarmament and Armageddon
  • Roundtable 14-1 on Why Nations Rise:  Narratives and the Path to Great Power
  • Roundtable 14-2 on The Frontlines of Peace: An Insider’s Guide to Changing the World
  • Roundtable 2-1 on Neoconservatism: The Biography of a Movement
  • Roundtable 2-10 on Nuclear Apartheid: The Quest for Atomic Supremacy From World War II to the Present
  • Roundtable 2-11 on Know Your Enemy: The Rise and Fall of America’s Soviet Experts
  • Roundtable 2-12 on “Democracy and Victory”
  • Roundtable 2-13 on Cry Havoc: How the Arms Race Drove the World to War, 1931-1941
  • Roundtable 2-2 on Arsenal of Democracy: The Politics of National Security – from World War II to the War on Terror
  • Roundtable 2-3 on Empire for Liberty: A History of American Imperialism from Benjamin Franklin to Paul Wolfowitz
  • Roundtable 2-4 on “Is Liberal Internationalism in Decline?”
  • Roundtable 2-5 on International Security in Practice: The Politics of NATO-Russia Diplomacy
  • Roundtable 2-6 on From Hot War to Cold: The U.S. Navy and National Security Affairs, 1945-1955
  • Roundtable 2-7 on Vietnam at War
  • Roundtable 2-8 on How Terrorism Ends: Understanding the Decline and Demise of Terrorist Campaigns
  • Roundtable 2-9 on The Limits of U.S. Military Capability: Lessons from Vietnam and Iraq
  • Roundtable 3-1 on Cultures of War: Pearl Harbor/Hiroshima/9-11/Iraq
  • Roundtable 3-10 on The Diffusion of Military Power: Causes and Consequences for International Relations
  • Roundtable 3-11 on Worse than a Monolith: Alliance Politics and Problems of Coercive Diplomacy in Asia
  • Roundtable 3-12 on The Threat on the Horizon: An Inside Account of America’s Search for Security after the Cold War
  • Roundtable 3-13 on In Uncertain Times: American Foreign Policy after the Berlin Wall and 9/11
  • Roundtable 3-14 on Perceptions of Cuba: Canadian and American Policies in Comparative Perspective
  • Roundtable 3-15 on Intelligence and U.S. Foreign Policy: Iraq, 9/11, and Misguided Reform
  • Roundtable 3-16 on Terrorism and National Security Reform: How Commissions Can Drive Change During Crises
  • Roundtable 3-17 on Fixing the Facts: National Security and the Politics of Intelligence
  • Roundtable 3-18 on China, the United States, and Global Order
  • Roundtable 3-19 on How Wars End
  • Roundtable 3-2 on Know Your Enemy: The American Debate on Nazism, 1933-1945
  • Roundtable 3-3 on Global Dawn: The Cultural Foundation of American Internationalism, 1865-1890
  • Roundtable 3-4 on The Right Kind of Revolution: Modernization, Development, and U.S. Foreign Policy from the Cold War to the Present
  • Roundtable 3-5 on The Invention of International Relations Theory; Realism, the Rockefeller Foundation and the 1954 Conference on Theory
  • Roundtable 3-6 on “The CIA and U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1947: Reforms, Reflections and Reappraisals”
  • Roundtable 3-7 on A Cultural Theory of International Relations
  • Roundtable 3-8 on Leaders at War: How Presidents Shape Military Interventions
  • Roundtable 3-8 on Leaders at War: How Presidents Shape Military Interventions
  • Roundtable 3-9 on How We Fight: Crusades, Quagmires and the American Way of War
  • Roundtable 4-1 on The Cold War and After: History, Theory, and the Logic of International Politics
  • Roundtable 4-2 on A High Price: The Triumphs and Failures of Israeli Counterterrorism
  • Roundtable 4-3 on Harmony and War: Confucian Culture and Chinese Power Politics
  • Roundtable 4-4 on How Enemies Become Friends: The Sources of Stable Peace
  • Roundtable 4-5 on Good Fences, Bad Neighbors: Border Fixity and International Conflict
  • Roundtable 4-6, “American Force: Dangers, Delusions, and Dilemmas in National Security”
  • Roundtable 4-7 on Coalitions of Convenience: United States Military Interventions After the Cold War
  • Roundtable 4-8 on Hard Interests, Soft Illusions: Southeast Asia and American Power
  • Roundtable 4-9, “A Stability-Seeking Power: U.S. Foreign Policy and Secessionist Conflicts”
  • Roundtable 5-1 on Warlords: Strong-Arm Brokers in Weak States
  • Roundtable 5-2 on The Iraq Wars and America’s Military Revolution
  • Roundtable 5-3, “Weapons of Mass Migration: Forced Displacement, Coercion, and Foreign Policy”
  • Roundtable 5-4 on “Democracy, Deception, and Entry into War”
  • Roundtable 5-5 on Power and Willpower in the American Future: Why the United States is Not Destined to Decline
  • Roundtable 6-1 on The Arc of War: Origins, Escalation, and Transformation
  • Roundtable 6-2 on Alliance Formation in Civil Wars
  • Roundtable 6-3 on Achieving Nuclear Ambitions: Scientists, Politicians, and Proliferation
  • Roundtable 6-4 on Trust in International Cooperation: The Creation of International Security Institutions and the Domestic Politics of American Multilateralism
  • Roundtable 6-5 on The Rise & Decline of the American ‘Empire’: Power and its Limits in Comparative Perspective
  • Roundtable 6-6 on Reconstructing the Cold War: The Early Years, 1945-1958
  • Roundtable 6-7 on The Battle of Bretton Woods: John Maynard Keynes, Harry Dexter White, and the Making of a New World Order
  • Roundtable 6-8, “The Second Nuclear Age: Strategy, Danger, and the New Power Politics”
  • Roundtable 6-9, “Flawed Logics: Strategic Nuclear Arms Control from Truman to Obama”
  • Roundtable 7-1, No Use: Nuclear Weapons and U.S. National Security
  • Roundtable 7-10, Beyond the Balance of Power: France and the Politics of National Security in the Era of the First World War
  • Roundtable 7-11 on the Congress of Vienna and dialogue between IR scholars and historians
  • Roundtable 7-12 on Just and Unjust Military Intervention: European Thinkers from Vitoria to Mill
  • Roundtable 7-13 on The Great Powers and the International System Systemic Theory in Empirical Perspective
  • Roundtable 7-14 on The Pathologies of Power: Fear, Honor, Glory, and Hubris in U.S. Foreign Policy
  • Roundtable 7-15 on The Kennan Diaries
  • Roundtable 7-16 on Networks of Rebellion: Explaining Insurgent Cohesion and Collapse
  • Roundtable 7-17 on Nuclear Strategy in the Modern Era: Regional Powers and International Conflict
  • Roundtable 7-18 on Imperial Rule and the Politics of Nationalism: Anti-Colonial Protest in the French Empire
  • Roundtable 7-19 on Knowing the Adversary: Leaders Intelligence and Assessment of Intentions in International Relations
  • Roundtable 7-2, What Good is Grand Strategy: Power and Purpose in American Statecraft from Harry S. Truman to George W. Bush
  • Roundtable 7-20 on Wrong Turn: America’s Deadly Embrace of Counterinsurgency
  • Roundtable 7-3, The Struggle for Order: Hegemony, Hierarchy and Transition in Post-Cold War East Asia
  • Roundtable 7-4, Zbig: The Strategy and Statecraft of Zbigniew Brzezinski
  • Roundtable 7-5, External Intervention and the Politics of State Formation: China, Indonesia and Thailand, 1893-1952
  • Roundtable 7-6, American Allies in Time of War: The Great Asymmetry
  • Roundtable 7-7, The Triumph of Improvisation: Gorbachev’s Adaptability, Reagan’s Engagement, and the End of the Cold War
  • Roundtable 7-8, Conservative Internationalism: Armed Diplomacy under Jefferson, Polk, Truman, and Reagan
  • Roundtable 7-9, The Warrior State: Pakistan in the Contemporary World
  • Roundtable 7-9, The Warrior State: Pakistan in the Contemporary World
  • Roundtable 8-1 on Looking for Balance: China, the United States, and Power Balancing in East Asia
  • Roundtable 8-10 on The Global Transformation: History, Modernity and the Making of International Relations
  • Roundtable 8-11 on Economic Interdependence and War
  • Roundtable 8-12 on Democratic Militarism: Voting, Wealth, and War
  • Roundtable 8-13 on Gendering Global Conflict: Toward a Feminist Theory of War
  • Roundtable 8-14 on Democracy Promotion, National Security and Strategy: Foreign Policy under the Reagan Administration
  • Roundtable 8-15 on A Sense of Power: The Roots of America’s Global Role
  • Roundtable 8-16 on Restraint: A New Foundation for U.S. Grand Strategy
  • Roundtable 8-17 on The Dictator’s Army: Effectiveness in Authoritarian Regimes
  • Roundtable 8-18 on The Taming of Democracy Assistance: Why Democracy Promotion Does Not Confront Dictators
  • Roundtable 8-19 on Near and Distant Neighbors: A New History of Soviet Intelligence
  • Roundtable 8-2 on The Official History of the Joint Intelligence Committee, Vol. I: From the Approach of the Second World War to the Suez Crisis
  • Roundtable 8-3 on Theory of Unipolar Politics
  • Roundtable 8-4 on Bargaining on Nuclear Tests: Washington And Its Cold War Rivals
  • Roundtable 8-5 on Overreach: Delusions of Regime Change in Iraq
  • Roundtable 8-6 on Networks of Domination: The Social Foundations of Conquest
  • Roundtable 8-7 on Dictators at War and Peace
  • Roundtable 8-8 on Rivalry and Alliance Politics in Cold War Latin America
  • Roundtable 8-9 on Armed State Building: Confronting State Failure
  • Roundtable 9-1 on Chinese Hegemony: Grand Strategy and International Institutions in East Asian History
  • Roundtable 9-12 on Return to Cold War
  • Roundtable 9-13 on Constructive Illusions: Misperceiving the Origins of International Cooperation
  • Roundtable 9-14 on Dangerous Trade. Arms Exports, Human Rights, and International Reputation
  • Roundtable 9-15 on The Statebuilder’s Dilemma: On the Limits of Foreign Intervention
  • Roundtable 9-16 on Coercion, Survival, and War: Why Weak States Resist the United States
  • Roundtable 9-17 on Busted Sanctions: Explaining Why Economic Sanctions Fail
  • Roundtable 9-19 on Sharing Knowledge, Shaping Europe
  • Roundtable 9-2 on Diplomacy’s Value: Creating Security in 1920’s Europe and the Contemporary Middle East
  • Roundtable 9-20 on Constructing National Security: U.S. Relations with India and China
  • Roundtable 9-21 on Deceit on the Road to War: Presidents, Politics, and American Democracy
  • Roundtable 9-22 on Unclear Physics: Why Iraq and Libya Failed to Get the Bomb
  • Roundtable 9-3 on Barriers to Bioweapons: The Challenges of Expertise and Weapons Development
  • Roundtable 9-4 on The China Challenge: Shaping the Choices of a Rising Power
  • Roundtable 9-5 on Peaceland: Conflict Resolution and the Everyday Politics of International Intervention
  • Roundtable 9-6 on Narrative and the Making of US National Security
  • Roundtable 9-7 on Cyber War Versus Cyber Realities: Cyber Conflict in the International System
  • Roundtable 9-8 on Reassuring the Reluctant Warriors: U.S. Civil-Military Relations and Multilateral Intervention
  • Roundtable 9-9 on Endurance and War: The National Sources of Military Cohesion
  • Roundtable on Explanation and Progress in Security Studies: Bridging Theoretical Divides in International Relations
  • Roundtable on War and Democratic Constraint: How the Public Influences Foreign Policy

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  • State of the Field Essay: On the Unreality of Realism in International Relations

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  • Teaching Roundtable 11-6 on The Clash of Civilizations in the IR Classroom
  • The Importance of the Scholarship of Dorothy Borg, Part II
  • The Robert Jervis International Security Studies Forum
  • Tribute to the Life, Scholarship, and Legacy of Robert Jervis: Part I
  • Tribute to the Life, Scholarship, and Legacy of Robert Jervis: Part II

w

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  • Article Review 156- “White Supremacy, Terrorism, and the Failure of Reconstruction in the United States.”
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  • Article Review 155 on “Leaning on Legionnaires:  Why Modern States Recruit Foreign Soldiers.”
  • Policy Series: Comparing Richard Nixon and Donald Trump: A Preliminary Report
  • Article Review 152 on “To Disclose or Deceive? Sharing Secret Information between Aligned States.”
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