| Differentiation Theory and the Global South as a Metageography of International Relations |
4 |
| The Degrowth Movement: Alternative Economic Practices and Relevance to Developing Countries |
3 |
| Performance Beyond Economic Growth: Alternatives from Growth-Averse Enterprises in the Global South |
2 |
| Alternative Media and the Securitization of Climate Change in Turkey |
2 |
| Resisting Biopolitics: Hannah Arendt as a Thinker of Automation, Social Rights, and Basic Income |
2 |
| The Urge to Purge: Forecasting Erdogan's Political Survival Following the Failed Coup |
2 |
| Active Borders and Transnationalization of the Public Sphere in Europe: Examining Territorial and Symbolic Borders as a Source of Democratic Integration, Positive Identity, and Civic Learning |
1 |
| New Rules for New Tools? Exploitative and Productive Lawfare in the Case of Unpiloted Aircraft |
1 |
| Political Responsibility as a Virtue: Nussbaum, MacIntyre, and Ricoeur on the Fragility of Politics |
1 |
| The State's Changing Role Regarding the Kurdish Question of Turkey: From Consistent Tutelage to Volatile Securitization |
1 |
| Reassessing Turkey's Soft Power: The Rules of Attraction |
0 |
| Turkish Foreign Policy and the Role of the TGNA: Cases of Syria (and Iraq) Motions |
0 |
| The Crisis and Change in Turkish Foreign Policy After July 15 |
0 |
| Reactions of the American Jews to Trump's Jerusalem Embassy Move: Continuation of the Historical Pattern? |
0 |
| Defeat in Interstate War and the Probability of Political Liberalization |
0 |
| Security Practices and the Production of Center-Periphery Figurations in Statebuilding |
0 |
| Why Transnational Class and State? A Response to Ian Taylor |
0 |
| Classical English School Theory and the Ottoman/Turk: Reimagining an Exclusionary Eurocentric Narrative |
0 |
| Affective Naturalization: Practices of Citizenship Conferment |
0 |
| Exploring Prospects for Agonistic Encounters in Conflict Zones: Investigating Dual Narrative Tourism in Israel/Palestine |
0 |
| Resilience in Fukushima: Contribution to a Political Economy of Consent |
0 |