| Bad science: International organizations and the indirect power of global benchmarking |
18 |
| The emergence of environmental stewardship as a primary institution of global international society |
14 |
| Norm structure, diffusion, and evolution: A conceptual approach |
13 |
| Change in international practices |
11 |
| Diplomacy, agency, and the logic of improvisation and virtuosity in practice |
11 |
| International misrecognition: The politics of humour and national identity in Israel's public diplomacy |
11 |
| Gender and bias in the International Relations curriculum: Insights from reading lists |
10 |
| 'Behead, burn, crucify, crush': Theorizing the Islamic State's public displays of violence |
10 |
| Toward a political economy of complex interdependence |
10 |
| Reflective practices at the Security Council: Children and armed conflict and the three United Nations |
9 |
| Deep theorizing in International Relations |
8 |
| The infrastructural power of the military: The geoeconomic role of the US Army Corps of Engineers in the Arabian Peninsula |
8 |
| Narrating success and failure: Congressional debates on the Iran nuclear deal' |
8 |
| Subverting economic empowerment: Towards a postcolonial-feminist framework on gender (in)securities in post-war settings |
7 |
| Scopic regimes and the visual turn in International Relations: Seeing world politics through the drone |
7 |
| Implementation in practice: The use of force to protect civilians in United Nations peacekeeping |
7 |
| Theorizing the role of executive heads in international organizations |
7 |
| The rise of linear borders in world politics |
6 |
| Resilience, resistance, infrapolitics and enmeshment |
6 |
| Internal colonisation: The intimate circulations of empire, race and liberal government |
6 |
| Saving face in diplomacy: A political sociology of face-to-face interactions in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations |
6 |
| Failing worse? Science, security and the birth of a border technology |
6 |
| Hegemonic-order theory: A field-theoretic account |
6 |
| Plotting stories after war: Toward a methodology for negotiating identity |
5 |
| Global climate adaptation governance: Why is it not legally binding? |
5 |
| Taking interaction seriously: Asymmetrical roles and the behavioral foundations of status |
5 |
| Casting for a sovereign role: Socialising an aspirant state in the Scottish independence referendum |
5 |
| A capitalising foreign policy: Regulatory geographies and transnationalised state projects |
5 |
| Everyday sovereignty: International experts, brokers and local ownership in peacebuilding Liberia |
4 |
| The developmental state in global regulation: Economic change and climate policy |
4 |
| Mughal hegemony and the emergence of South Asia as a region for regional order-building |
4 |
| Introducing Sufism to International Relations Theory: A preliminary inquiry into epistemological, ontological, and methodological pathways |
4 |
| Enabling autocracy? Peacebuilding and post-conflict authoritarianism in the Democratic Republic of Congo |
4 |
| Interactions between hard and soft power: The institutional adaptation of international intellectual property protection to global power shifts |
4 |
| When pathogens determine the territory: Toward a concept of non-human borders |
4 |
| Norm emergence as agenda diffusion: Failure and success in the regulation of cluster munitions |
4 |
| The road (not) taken? How the indexicality of practice could make or break the New Constructivism' |
3 |
| Discerning states' revisionist and status-quo orientations: Comparing China and the US |
3 |
| Beyond geo-economics': Advanced unevenness and the anatomy of German austerity |
3 |
| Risky dis/entanglements: Torture and sexual violence in conflict |
3 |
| Symbols and world politics: Towards a long-term perspective on historical trends and contemporary challenges |
3 |
| Do international institutions matter? Socialization and international bureaucrats |
3 |
| From subjects to objects: Knowledge in International Relations theory |
3 |
| Norm transformation and the institutionalization of targeted killing in the US |
3 |
| On the fungibility of economic power: China's economic rise and the East Asian security order |
3 |
| The case for a history of global legal practices |
3 |
| Framing, resonance and war: Foregrounds and backgrounds of cultural congruence |
3 |
| Weapons of mass participation: Social media, violence entrepreneurs, and the politics of crowdfunding for war |
2 |
| Foreign policy anarchy in multiparty coalitions: When junior parties take rogue decisions |
2 |
| Territorial sovereignty and the end of inter-cultural diplomacy along the Southern frontier |
2 |