International Affairs
Volume 100, Issue 5 (September 2024)
Contents
Special section: The effects of global populism
1. The effects of global populism: assessing the populist impact on international affairs
2. Populist hyperpersonalization and politicization of foreign policy institutions
3. Anti-populism and the Trump trauma in US foreign policy
4. Explaining populist securitization and Rodrigo Duterte's anti-establishment Philippine foreign policy
5. Left populism and foreign policy: Bernie Sanders and Podemos
6. Do populists escalate international disputes?
7. The ambiguous impact of populist trade discourses on the international economic order
8. The Trump effect: the perpetuation of populism in US–China trade
9. Populism and foreign policy: India's refugee policy towards the Rohingya
10.Populist international (dis)order? Lessons from world-order visions in Latin American populism
11.Beyond exit: how populist governments disengage from international institutions
12.Institutional change, sovereigntist contestation and the limits of populism: evidence from southern Europe
Articles
1. Strategic ambiguity and chemical warfare in Ukraine
2. Why will China and Russia not form an alliance? The balance of beliefs in peacetime
3. When socialization fails: breaking the habit of engagement with China
4. A new multipolar order: combined development, state forms and new business classes
5. The future of UN peace operations: pragmatism, pluralism or statism?
6. Atlas asunder? Neo-liberal think tanks and the radical right
7. China in global digital trade governance: towards a development-oriented agenda?
Policy papers
1. Goodbye, Wolf Warrior: charting China's transition to a more accommodating diplomacy
2. A ‘natcon takeover’? The New Right and the future of American foreign policy