The latest issue of the International Studies Quarterly (vol. 63, n°2, June 2019) is out.
Terrorism, Violence, and Civil Wars
Helge Holtermann, Diversionary Rebel Violence in Territorial Civil WarTransnational Processes
Margaret J. Foster, David A. Siegel, Pink Slips from the Underground: Changes in Terror Leadership
Jack Paine, Economic Grievances and Civil War: An Application to the Resource Curse
Sharan Grewal, Military Defection During Localized Protests: The Case of Tataouine
Anette Stimmer, Beyond Internalization: Alternate Endings of the Norm Life CycleState Propaganda and Oppression
Margaret e. Peters, Immigration and International Law
David Ciplet, Means of the Marginalized: Embedded Transnational Advocacy Networks and the Transformation of Neoliberal Global Governance
Jeff D. Colgan, Nicholas L. Miller, Rival Hierarchies and the Origins of Nuclear Technology Sharing
Daniel Krcmaric, Information, Secrecy, and Civilian TargetingIPE
Mark Shirk, The Universal Eye: Anarchist “Propaganda of the Deed” and Development of the Modern Surveillance State
Nick Dietrich, Charles Crabtree, Domestic Demand for Human Rights: Free Speech and the Freedom-Security Trade-Off
Matthew D. Fails, Fuel Subsidies Limit Democratization: Evidence from a Global Sample, 1990-2014Statebuilding
Bernd Beber, Michael J. Gilligan, Jenny Guardado, Sabrina Karim, The Promise and Peril of Peacekeeping Economies
Timm Betz, Tariff Evasion and Trade Policies
José Kaire, Compensating Autocratic Elites: How International Demands for Economic Liberalization Can Lead to More Repressive Dictatorships
Alexander Lee, Jack Paine, What Were the Consequences of Decolonization?International Relations Scholarship
Subhasish Ray, History and Ethnic Conflict: Does Precolonial Centralization Matter?
Christopher Whyte, Can We Change the Topic, Please? Assessing the Theoretical Construction of International Relations Scholarship
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