Content
2023, Volume 11, Issue 3
- 189-199 The Janus Face of Valuation: Global Performance Indicators as Powerful and Criticized Public Measures
by Leopold Ringel - 200-212 European Think Tanks as a Channel of EU Public Diplomacy Towards Transnational Publics
by Tatyana Bajenova - 213-225 Public Legitimation by “Going Personal”? The Ambiguous Role of International Organization Officials on Social Media
by Matthias Ecker-Ehrhardt - 226-230 Merits and Challenges of Comparing the EU and Canada
by Alexander Hoppe & Lori Thorlakson & Johannes Müller Gómez - 231-240 Multiheaded Federations: The EU and Canada Compared
by John Erik Fossum - 241-250 Constitutional Abeyances: Reflecting on EU Treaty Development in Light of the Canadian Experience
by Achim Hurrelmann - 251-263 Federal Servants of Inclusion? The Governance of Student Mobility in Canada and the EU
by Alina Felder & Merli Tamtik - 264-275 Temporary Protection in Times of Crisis: The European Union, Canada, and the Invasion of Ukraine
by Catherine Xhardez & Dagmar Soennecken - 276-288 “Can You Complete Your Delivery?” Comparing Canadian and European Union Legal Statuses of Platform Workers
by Raoul Gebert - 289-299 Health Care in Federal Systems
by Katherine Fierlbeck - 300-311 Multilevel Trade Policy in the Joint‐Decision Trap? The Case of CETA
by Jörg Broschek - 312-326 Show Me the Money: Side‐Payments and the Implementation of International Agreements in Federal Systems
by Johannes Müller Gómez
2023, Volume 11, Issue 2
- 1-5 The European Union as an Actor Navigating International Regime Complexes
by Tom Delreux & Joseph Earsom - 6-16 Explaining the EU’s Uneven Influence Across the International Regime Complex in Shadow Banking
by Lucia Quaglia & Aneta Spendzharova - 17-28 Does the EU Benefit From Increased Complexity? Capital Punishment in the Human Rights Regime
by Robert Kissack - 29-38 Backdoor Bargaining: How the European Union Navigates the Food Aid Regime Complex
by Matias E. Margulis - 39-48 EU Orchestration in the Nuclear Weapons Regime Complex
by Megan Dee - 49-61 Expanding, Complementing, or Substituting Multilateralism? EU Preferential Trade Agreements in the Migration Regime Complex
by Paula Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik & Sandra Lavenex & Philipp Lutz - 62-71 Influencing the International Transport Regime Complex: The EU’s Climate Action in ICAO and IMO
by George Dikaios & Spyros Blavoukos - 72-83 Governance Through Regime Complexity: What Role for the EU in the African Security Regime Complex?
by Malte Brosig & Friedrich Plank & Yf Reykers - 84-96 European Leadership and European Youth in the Climate Change Regime Complex
by Amandine J. Orsini & Yi Hyun Kang - 97-108 Navigating Regional Regime Complexity: How and Why Does the European Union Cooperate With Regional Organizations?
by Diana Panke & Sören Stapel - 109-113 The Process of the Transfer of Hate Speech to Demonization and Social Polarization
by Luis M. Romero-Rodríguez & Bárbara Castillo-Abdul & Pedro Cuesta-Valiño - 114-126 Social Media and Otherness: The Case of #Islamterrorism on TikTok
by Sabina Civila & Mónica Bonilla-del-Rio & Ignacio Aguaded - 127-137 Demonising Migrants in Contexts of Extremism: Analysis of Hate Speech in UK and Spain
by Darren Lilleker & Marta Pérez-Escolar - 138-146 The Side Effect of Political Standing: Corporate Activism and Its Impact on Stock Returns
by Teresa Pintado Blanco & Carlota López-Aza & Joaquín Sánchez & Pablo Gutiérrez‐Rodríguez - 147-159 Dilemmas Between Freedom of Speech and Hate Speech: Russophobia on Facebook and Instagram in the Spanish Media
by David Caldevilla-Domínguez & Almudena Barrientos-Báez & Graciela Padilla-Castillo - 160-174 Spanish Political Communication and Hate Speech on Twitter During the Russian Invasion of Ukraine
by Antonio José Baladrón-Pazos & Beatriz Correyero-Ruiz & Benjamín Manchado-Pérez - 175-186 Voter’s Perception of Political Messages Against the Elite Classes in Spain: A Quasi‐Experimental Design
by Juan Enrique Gonzálvez-Vallés & José Daniel Barquero-Cabrero & Natalia Enseñat-Bibiloni - 187-197 Hate Speech and Polarization Around the “Trans Law” in Spain
by Patricia Sánchez-Holgado & Carlos Arcila-Calderón & Marcos Gomes-Barbosa - 198-209 “My Way or No Way”: Political Polarization and Disagreement Among Immigrant Influencers and Their Followers
by Daniela Jaramillo-Dent - 210-220 Southern European Journalists’ Perceptions of Discursive Menaces in the Age of (Online) Delegitimization
by David Blanco-Herrero & Sergio Splendore & Martín Oller Alonso - 221-234 Polarization in Media Discourses on Europeanization in Spain
by Ana Pérez-Escoda & Sonia Boulos & Maria-José Establés & Lucía García-Carretero - 235-248 Twitting Against the Enemy: Populist Radical Right Parties Discourse Against the (Political) “Other”
by Laura Cervi & Santiago Tejedor & Mónica Gracia Villar - 249-260 Accountability Issues, Online Covert Hate Speech, and the Efficacy of Counter‐Speech
by Fabienne Baider - 261-271 A Corpus‐Based Discourse Analysis of Liberal Studies Textbooks in Hong Kong: Legitimatizing Populism
by Yulong Li & Yuxi Wu & Mingfeng Xiao - 272-279 Local Self‐Governance and Weak Statehood: A Convincing Liaison?
by Antje Daniel & Hans-Joachim Lauth & Eberhard Rothfuß - 280-292 River Commoning and the State: A Cross‐Country Analysis of River Defense Collectives
by Jaime Hoogesteger & Diana Suhardiman & Rutgerd Boelens & Fabio de Castro & Bibiana Duarte-Abadía & Juan Pablo Hidalgo-Bastidas & Janwillem Liebrand & Nuria Hernández-Mora & Kanokwan Manorom & Gert Jan Veldwisch & Jeroen Vos - 293-304 Civil Society Versus Local Self‐Governments and Central Government in V4 Countries: The Case of Co‐Creation
by Michal Plaček & Juraj Nemec & Mária Murray Svidroňová & Paweł Mikołajczak & Éva Kovács - 305-314 Shared Streets: Choreographed Disorder in the Late Socialist City
by Sandra Kurfürst - 315-325 Strong Military and Weak Statehood: The Case of Self‐Governance Through Rasookh in Kashmir
by Touseef Yousuf Mir - 326-335 Housing as a Battlefield Between Self‐Organization and Resistance: The Case of Reclaim the City
by Antje Daniel - 336-345 Community Forest Management: Weak States or Strong Communities?
by Bas Arts & Jelle Behagel & Jessica de Koning & Marieke van der Zon - 346-356 Exploring the Relationship Between Social Movement Organizations and the State in Latin America
by Thomas Kestler - 357-367 Local Self‐Governance and the State in South Sudan: Studying Gendered Tenure Relations in Times of Uncertainty
by Janine Ubink & Bernardo Almeida - 368-379 The Evolution of Village (Self)Governance in the Context of Post‐Communist Rural Society
by Edvin Zhllima & Nicolas Hayoz & Drini Imami & Iliriana Miftari
2023, Volume 11, Issue 1
- 1-4 Democratic Backsliding and Organized Interests in Central and Eastern Europe: An Introduction
by Rafael Pablo Labanino & Michael Dobbins - 5-15 The Diversity of Actors in Reform Backsliding and Its Containment in the Ukrainian Hybrid Regime
by Michael Martin Richter - 16-27 From Exclusion to Co-Optation: Political Opportunity Structures and Civil Society Responses in De-Democratising Hungary
by Márton Gerő & Anna Fejős & Szabina Kerényi & Dorottya Szikra - 28-38 Challenges Facing Organised Interests Under a Populist Right-Wing Government in Slovenia
by Meta Novak & Damjan Lajh - 39-49 Interest Group Strategic Responses to Democratic Backsliding
by Danica Fink-Hafner & Sara Bauman - 50-64 The Representative Potential of Interest Groups: Internal Voice in Post-Communist and Western European Countries
by Joost Berkhout & Jan Beyers & Marcel Hanegraaff - 65-79 Multilevel Venue Shopping Amid Democratic Backsliding in New European Union Member States
by Rafael Labanino & Michael Dobbins - 080-84 Women Opposition Leaders: Conceptual Issues and Empirical Agendas
by Sarah C. Dingler & Ludger Helms & Henriette Müller - 085-96 Parliamentary Women Opposition Leaders: A Comparative Assessment Across 28 OECD Countries
by Sarah C. Dingler & Ludger Helms - 097-107 Gender and Strategic Opposition Behavior: Patterns of Parliamentary Oversight in Belgium
by Benjamin de Vet & Robin Devroe - 108-118 From Opposition Leader to Prime Minister: Giorgia Meloni and Women’s Issues in the Italian Radical Right
by Elisabetta De Giorgi & Alice Cavalieri & Francesca Feo - 119-129 The “Accidental Candidate” Versus Europe’s Longest Dictator: Belarus’s Unfinished Revolution for Women
by Farida Jalalzai & Steve Jurek - 130-140 Gender and Opposition Leadership in the Pacific Islands
by Kerryn Baker & Jack Corbett - 141-151 Political Pathways and Performance of Women Opposition Leaders in Indonesia and South Korea
by Nankyung Choi - 152-163 The Instrumentalization of Women Opposition Leaders for Authoritarian Regime Entrenchment: The Case of Uganda
by Aili Mari Tripp - 164-176 Women Leading the Opposition: Gender and Rhetoric in the European Parliament
by Henriette Müller & Pamela Pansardi - 177-180 Re‐Embedding Trade in the Shadow of Populism
by Kevin Kolben & Michèle Rioux - 181-192 Populism, Globalization, and the Prospects for Restoring the WTO
by Kent Jones - 193-202 Class Struggle and International Economic Institutions: The Origins of the GATT and “Embedded Liberalism”
by Rémi Bachand - 203-213 International Investment Law in the Shadow of Populism: Between Redomestication and Liberalism Re‐Embedded
by Álvaro Santos - 214-222 Trade Policy and Ecological Transition
by Mathieu Dufour - 223-236 The Multisided Threat to Free Trade: Protectionism and Fair Trade During Increasing Populism
by Sean D. Ehrlich & Christopher Gahagan - 237-248 Populist Backlash and Trade Agreements in North America: The Prospects for Progressive Trade
by Robert G. Finbow - 249-260 Trade Linkages or Disconnects? Labor Rights and Data Privacy in US Digital Trade Policy
by Jean-Baptiste Velut - 261-271 The WTO and the Covid‐19 “Vaccine Apartheid”: Big Pharma and the Minefield of Patents
by Stéphane Paquin & Kristine Plouffe-Malette - 272-279 Embedded Liberalism and Health Populism in the UK in a Post-Truth Era
by Louise Dalingwater
2022, Volume 10, Issue 4
- 1-5 Gendering De‐Democratization: Gender and Illiberalism in Post‐Communist Europe
by Matthijs Bogaards & Andrea Pető - 6-15 Reactionary Gender Constructions in Illiberal Political Thinking
by Elisabeth Holzleithner - 16-25 Not in Front of the Child: Illiberal Familism and the Hungarian Anti‐LGBTQ+ “Child Protective Law”
by Katinka Linnamäki - 26-37 Illiberal and Populist Political Narratives on Gender and Underreporting of Sexual Violence: A Case Study of Hungary
by Katalin Parti - 38-48 Resisting Genderphobia in Hungary
by Judit Takács & Katherine Fobear & Szilvia Schmitsek - 49-60 The Gendered Discourses of Illiberal Demographic Policy in Poland and in Russia
by Barbara Gaweda - 61-71 Gender Politics of “Illiberal Pragmatics” in the Polish Defense Sector
by Weronika Grzebalska - 72-83 Populist Skirmishers: Frontrunners of Populist Radical Right in Poland
by Karolina Zbytniewska - 84-94 Illiberal Discourse in Romania: A “Golden” New Beginning?
by Alina Dragolea - 95-107 In the Name of the Conservative People: Slovakia’s Gendered Illiberal Transformation
by Zuzana Maďarová & Pavol Hardoš - 108-120 On Gender and Illiberalism: Lessons From Slovak Parliamentary Debates
by Ľubomír Zvada - 121-131 Disputing “Gender” in Academia: Illiberalism and the Politics of Knowledge
by Yasmine Ergas & Jazgul Kochkorova & Andrea Pető & Natalia Trujillo - 132-134 The Role of Religions and Conspiracy Theories in Democratic and Authoritarian Regimes
by Oliver Fernando Hidalgo & Alexander Yendell - 135-145 On Conspiracy Thinking: Conspiracist Ideology as a Modern Phenomenon
by Stefan Christoph - 146-156 Religions and Conspiracy Theories as the Authoritarian “Other” of Democracy?
by Oliver Fernando Hidalgo - 157-167 Conspiracy Theory Beliefs and Political Trust: The Moderating Role of Political Communication
by Bernd Schlipphak & Mujtaba Isani & Mitja D. Back - 168-176 When Believing in Divine Immanence Explains Vaccine Hesitancy: A Matter of Conspiracy Beliefs?
by Riccardo Ladini & Cristiano Vezzoni - 177-191 Covid‐19‐Related Conspiracy Myths, Beliefs, and Democracy‐Endangering Consequences
by Gert Pickel & Cemal Öztürk & Verena Schneider & Susanne Pickel & Oliver Decker - 192-202 Links Between Conspiracy Thinking and Attitudes Toward Democracy and Religion: Survey Data From Poland
by Franciszek Czech - 203-215 Individual‐Level Predictors of Conspiracy Mentality in Germany and Poland
by Fahima Farkhari & Bernd Schlipphak & Mitja D. Back - 216-228 The Anti-Homophobia Bill (PLC 122) in Brazil: Conspiracies and Conflicts Between the Constitution and the Bible
by Diego Galego - 229-242 Religion, Conspiracy Thinking, and the Rejection of Democracy: Evidence From the UK
by Alexander Yendell & David Herbert - 243-246 For a Research Agenda on Negative Politics
by Alessandro Nai & Diego Garzia & Loes Aaldering & Frederico Ferreira da Silva & Katjana Gattermann - 247-260 How Partisanship Matters: A Panel Study on the Democratic Outcomes of Perceived Dirty Campaigning
by Franz Reiter & Jörg Matthes - 261-274 It’s All Relative: Perceptions of (Comparative) Candidate Incivility and Candidate Sympathy in Three Multiparty Elections
by Chiara Vargiu - 275-285 The Decision to Go Negative: Election Types, Candidate Characteristics, and Electoral Competition
by Huang-Ting Yan - 286-298 The Role of Gender in Parliamentary Attacks and Incivility
by Željko Poljak - 299-310 The Personality Origins of Positive and Negative Partisanship
by Alexa Bankert - 311-324 Is Protest Only Negative? Examining the Effect of Emotions and Affective Polarization on Protest Behaviour
by Luca Bettarelli & Caroline Close & Emilie van Haute - 325-335 Negative Party Identification and the Use of Party Cues in the Direct Democratic Context
by Maxime Walder & Oliver Strijbis - 336-348 Fueling Toxicity? Studying Deceitful Opinion Leaders and Behavioral Changes of Their Followers
by Puck Guldemond & Andreu Casas Salleras & Mariken van der Velden - 349-360 Who Are the “Dark” Politicians? Insights From Self-Reports of German State Parliament Candidates
by Jürgen Maier & Mona Dian & Corinna Oschatz - 361-373 Do Leader Evaluations (De)Mobilize Voter Turnout? Lessons From Presidential Elections in the United States
by Liran Harsgor & Neil Nevitte - 374-383 Loud and Negative: Exploring Negativity in Voter Thoughts About Women and Men Politicians
by Tobias Rohrbach - 384-395 Grievance Politics: An Empirical Analysis of Anger Through the Emotional Mechanism of Ressentiment
by Tereza Capelos & Mikko Salmela & Gabija Krisciunaite - 396-410 Online Trolls: Unaffectionate Psychopaths or Just Lonely Outcasts and Angry Partisans?
by Monika Verbalyte & Christoph Keitel & Krista Howard
2022, Volume 10, Issue 3
- 1-4 Constructing Ocean and Polar Governance
by Dorothea Wehrmann & Hubert Zimmermann - 5-13 Authority in Ocean Governance Architecture
by Aletta Mondré & Annegret Kuhn - 14-28 Governing a Divided Ocean: The Transformative Power of Ecological Connectivity in the BBNJ negotiations
by Ina Tessnow-von Wysocki & Alice B. M. Vadrot - 29-40 Governability of Regional Challenges: The Arctic Development Paradox
by Michał Łuszczuk & Jacqueline Götze & Katarzyna Radzik-Maruszak & Arne Riedel & Dorothea Wehrmann - 41-50 The Territorialization of the Global Commons: Evidence From Ocean Governance
by Daniel Lambach - 51-59 An Ocean Free of Nuclear Weapons? Regional Security Governance in the South Atlantic
by Frank Mattheis & Pedro Seabra - 60-69 Making Polar and Ocean Governance Future-Proof
by Hannes Hansen-Magnusson - 70-79 Ocean Governance in the Coral Triangle: A Multi-Level Regulatory Governance Structure
by Sarah A. Heck - 80-89 Fragmentation or Effective Governance? The Regime Complex of Counter-Piracy in Asia
by Anja Menzel - 90-97 Current Challenges to the Legitimacy of International Economic and Financial Arrangements
by Gerda van Roozendaal & Nienke de Deugd - 98-109 Economic Narratives and the Legitimacy of Foreign Direct Investments
by Lukas Linsi - 110-120 Embedded Neoliberalism and the Legitimacy of the Post-Lisbon European Union Investment Policy
by Bart-Jaap Verbeek - 121-130 Hiding in Plain Sight: The Legitimacy of Labour Standards Clauses in the EU–Ukraine Collaboration
by Nienke de Deugd & Gerda van Roozendaal - 131-142 EU Public Procurement Policy During Covid-19: A Turning Point for Legitimate EU Governance?
by Brigitte Pircher - 143-154 “Selective Friendship at the Fund”: United States Allies, Labor Conditions, and the International Monetary Fund’s Legitimacy
by Saliha Metinsoy - 155-166 Building Legitimacy in an Era of Polycentric Trade: The Case of Transnational Sustainability Governance
by Natalie J. Langford & Luc Fransen - 167-170 Why Ambitious and Just Climate Mitigation Needs Political Science
by Elina Brutschin & Marina Andrijevic - 171-185 Exploring Global Climate Policy Futures and Their Representation in Integrated Assessment Models
by Thomas Hickmann & Christoph Bertram & Frank Biermann & Elina Brutschin & Elmar Kriegler & Jasmine E. Livingston & Silvia Pianta & Keywan Riahi & Bas van Ruijven & Detlef van Vuuren - 186-199 Emissions Lock-in, Capacity, and Public Opinion: How Insights From Political Science Can Inform Climate Modeling Efforts
by Silvia Pianta & Elina Brutschin - 200-212 Exploring Enablers for an Ambitious Coal Phaseout
by Elina Brutschin & Felix Schenuit & Bas van Ruijven & Keywan Riahi - 213-225 Closing the Implementation Gap: Obstacles in Reaching Net-Zero Pledges in the EU and Germany
by Grischa Perino & Johannes Jarke-Neuert & Felix Schenuit & Martin Wickel & Cathrin Zengerling - 226-238 Climate Policy Ambition: Exploring A Policy Density Perspective
by Simon Schaub & Jale Tosun & Andrew Jordan & Joan Enguer - 239-250 Gender Heterogeneity and Politics in Decision-Making About Green Public Procurement in the Czech Republic
by Michal Plaček & Cristina del Campo & Vladislav Valentinov & Gabriela Vaceková & Markéta Šumpíková & František Ochrana - 251-263 Framing Climate Policy Ambition in the European Parliament
by Lucy Kinski & Ariadna Ripoll Servent
2022, Volume 10, Issue 2
- 1-5 Developing Countries and the Crisis of the Liberal International Order
by Wil Hout & Michal Onderco - 6-14 Rethinking the Multilateral Order Between Liberal Internationalism and Neoliberalism/Neoliberalisation Processes
by Karim Knio - 15-24 Twenty-First Century Military Multilateralism: “Messy” and With Unintended Consequences
by Gorm Rye Olsen - 25-39 Dimensions and Cartography of Dirty Money in Developing Countries: Tripping Up on the Global Hydra
by Rogelio Madrueño & Magdalene Silberberger - 40-49 The Palestinian Authority and the Reconfigured World Order: Between Multilateralism, Unilateralism, and Dependency Relationships
by Mar Gijón Mendigutía & José Abu-Tarbush - 50-60 China and Climate Multilateralism: A Review of Theoretical Approaches
by Hao Zhang - 61-70 China in Africa: Assessing the Consequences for the Continent’s Agenda for Economic Regionalism
by Artur Colom-Jaén & Óscar Mateos - 71-81 Cooperation Regimes and Hegemonic Struggle: Opportunities and Challenges for Developing Countries
by Sara Caria - 82-94 Multilateralism, Developmental Regionalism, and the African Development Bank
by Israel Nyaburi Nyadera & Billy Agwanda & Murat Onder & Ibrahim Abdirahman Mukhtar - 95-105 The Crisis of the Multilateral Order in Eurasia: Authoritarian Regionalism and Its Limits
by Rilka Dragneva & Christopher A. Hartwell - 106-115 Drivers and Barriers of Digital Market Integration in East Africa: A Case Study of Rwanda and Tanzania
by Stephanie Arnold - 116-127 South–South Cooperation and the Promise of Experimentalist Governance: The ASEAN Smart Cities Network
by Manuel Mejido Costoya - 128-133 Introduction: Out With the Old, In With the New? Explaining Changing EU–US Relations
by Marianne Riddervold & Akasemi Newsome - 134-143 Space Security and the Transatlantic Relationship
by Mai'a K. Davis Cross - 144-153 Making Sense of the European Side of the Transatlantic Security Relations in Africa
by Pernille Rieker - 154-164 “America is Back” or “America First” and the Transatlantic Relationship
by Gorm Rye Olsen - 165-175 A Weakening Transatlantic Relationship? Redefining the EU–US Security and Defence Cooperation
by Bjørn Olav Knutsen - 176-185 Coherence at Last? Transatlantic Cooperation in Response to the Geostrategic Challenge of China
by Kolja Raube & Raquel Vega Rubio - 186-197 The European Union, the United States, and Trade: Metaphorical Climate Change, Not Bad Weather
by Herman Mark Schwartz - 198-207 The Dollar as a Mutual Problem: New Transatlantic Interdependence in Finance
by Ingrid Hjertaker & Bent Sofus Tranøy - 208-218 Divergence Across the Atlantic? US Skepticism Meets the EU and the WTO’s Appellate Body
by Bart Kerremans - 219-228 How Much of a New Agenda? International Structures, Agency, and Transatlantic Order
by Michael Smith - 229-234 Conclusion: Out With the Old, In With the New? Explaining Changing EU–US Relations
by Akasemi Newsome & Marianne Riddervold - 235-238 Re-Visioning Borders: Mobility, Connectivity, and Spaces of Exception
by Artur Gruszczak & Roderick Parkes - 239-245 The Borders of the Law: Legal Fictions, Elusive Borders, Migrants’ Rights
by Caterina Molinari - 246-255 Internal Rebordering in the European Union: Postfunctionalism Revisited
by Artur Gruszczak - 256-266 Loops of Violence(s) Within Europe’s Governance of Migration in Libya, Italy, Greece, and Belgium
by Giacomo Orsini & Marina Rota & Océane Uzureau & Malte Behrendt & Sarah Adeyinka & Ine Lietaert & Ilse Derluyn - 267-278 Unaccompanied Adolescent Minors’ Experiences of Exception and Abandonment in the Ventimiglia Border Space
by Océane Uzureau & Ine Lietaert & Daniel Senovilla Hernández & Ilse Derluyn - 279-292 Labour Mobility and Informality: Romanian Migrants in Spain and Ethnic Entrepreneurs in Croatia
by Abel Polese & Ignacio Fradejas-García & Ružica Šimić Banović & Vlatka Škokić & Tanel Kerikmäe & José Luis Molina & Mirela Alpeza & Miranda J. Lubbers & Alberica Camerani - 293-302 Non-War Activities in Cyberspace as a Factor Driving the Process of De-Bordering
by Dominika Dziwisz
2022, Volume 10, Issue 1
- 1-4 Beyond Foreign Policy? EU Sanctions at the Intersection of Development, Trade, and CFSP
by Katharina L. Meissner & Clara Portela - 5-15 Diplomatic Realisation of the EU’s “Geoeconomic Pivot”: Sanctions, Trade, and Development Policy Reform
by Kim B. Olsen - 16-25 Does the EU Have Moral Authority? A Communicative Action Perspective on Sanctions
by Giselle Bosse - 26-35 The Design and Impacts of Individual Sanctions: Evidence From Elites in Côte d’Ivoire and Zimbabwe
by Clara Portela & Thijs Van Laer - 36-46 United in Diversity? A Study on the Implementation of Sanctions in the European Union
by Francesco Giumelli & Willem Geelhoed & Max de Vries & Aurora Molesini - 47-57 The Political Economy of the EU Approach to the Rohingya Crisis in Myanmar
by Arlo Poletti & Daniela Sicurelli - 58-67 Sanctioning Capacity in Trade and Sustainability Chapters in EU Trade Agreements: The EU–Korea Case
by María J. García - 68-78 A Post-Development Perspective on the EU’s Generalized Scheme of Preferences
by Jan Orbie & Antonio Salvador M. Alcazar III & Tinus Sioen - 79-89 Understanding the EU’s Response to LGBTI Rights Violations: Inter-Institutional Differences and Social Sanctions
by Johanne Døhlie Saltnes & Martijn Mos - 90-96 Analyzing Citizen Engagement With European Politics on Social Media
by Pieter de Wilde & Astrid Rasch & Michael Bossetta - 97-107 The Challenges of Reconstructing Citizen-Driven EU Contestation in the Digital Media Sphere
by Helena Seibicke & Asimina Michailidou - 108-120 The Polyphonic Sounds of Europe: Users’ Engagement With Parties’ European-Focused Facebook Posts
by Márton Bene & Melanie Magin & Daniel Jackson & Darren Lilleker & Delia Balaban & Paweł Baranowski & Jörg Haßler & Simon Kruschinski & Uta Russmann - 121-132 Exploring Engagement With EU News on Facebook: The Influence of Content Characteristics
by Tobias Heidenreich & Olga Eisele & Kohei Watanabe & Hajo G. Boomgaarden - 133-145 A Bird’s Eye View: Supranational EU Actors on Twitter
by Sina Özdemir & Christian Rauh - 146-160 Same Same but Different? Gender Politics and (Trans-)National Value Contestation in Europe on Twitter
by Stefan Wallaschek & Kavyanjali Kaushik & Monika Verbalyte & Aleksandra Sojka & Giuliana Sorci & Hans-Jörg Trenz & Monika Eigmüller - 161-171 At the Digital Margins? A Theoretical Examination of Social Media Engagement Using Intersectional Feminism
by Charlotte Galpin - 172-184 All About Feelings? Emotional Appeals as Drivers of User Engagement With Facebook Posts
by Anna Bil-Jaruzelska & Cristina Monzer - 185-196 Pandemic Populism? How Covid-19 Triggered Populist Facebook User Comments in Germany and Austria
by Daniel Thiele - 197-209 The Informational Consequences of Populism: Social Media News Use and “News Finds Me” Perception
by Pablo González-González & Hugo Marcos-Marné & Iván Llamazares & Homero Gil de Zúñiga - 210-219 Empowering the People’s Truth Through Social Media? (De)Legitimizing Truth Claims of Populist Politicians and Citizens
by Michael Hameleers - 220-229 Advocating for Platform Data Access: Challenges and Opportunities for Academics Seeking Policy Change
by Katharine Dommett & Rebekah Tromble - 230-234 Carbon Pricing Under Pressure: Withering Markets?
by Lars H. Gulbrandsen & Jørgen Wettestad - 235-245 Governance of Fragmented Compliance and Voluntary Carbon Markets Under the Paris Agreement
by Hanna-Mari Ahonen & Juliana Kessler & Axel Michaelowa & Aglaja Espelage & Stephan Hoch - 246-255 On the Process of Including Shipping in EU Emissions Trading: Multi-Level Reinforcement Revisited
by Jørgen Wettestad & Lars H. Gulbrandsen - 256-264 Beyond Control: Policy Incoherence of the EU Emissions Trading System
by Maximilian Willner & Grischa Perino - 265-274 China’s Carbon Market: Potential for Success?
by Gørild Heggelund & Iselin Stensdal & Maosheng Duan - 275-289 Carbon Pricing in the US: Examining State-Level Policy Support and Federal Resistance
by Easwaran Narassimhan & Stefan Koester & Kelly Sims Gallagher - 290-301 Anchoring Policies, Alignment Tensions: Reconciling New Zealand’s Climate Change Act and Emissions Trading Scheme
by Tor Håkon Jackson Inderberg & Ian Bailey
2021, Volume 9, Issue 4
- 1-4 Climate Change and Security: Filling Remaining Gaps
by Yasuko Kameyama & Yukari Takamura - 5-15 The United Nations Security Council at the Forefront of (Climate) Change? Confusion, Stalemate, Ignorance
by Judith Nora Hardt - 16-26 How Climate-Induced Migration Entered the UN Policy Agenda in 2007–2010: A Multiple Streams Assessment
by Elin Jakobsson - 27-42 Strengthening External Emergency Assistance for Managing Extreme Events, Systemic, and Transboundary Risks in Asia
by Sivapuram Venkata Rama Krishna Prabhakar & Kentaro Tamura & Naoyuki Okano & Mariko Ikeda - 43-52 Gender in the Climate-Conflict Nexus: “Forgotten” Variables, Alternative Securities, and Hidden Power Dimensions
by Tobias Ide & Marisa O. Ensor & Virginie Le Masson & Susanne Kozak - 53-64 Japan’s Climate Change Discourse: Toward Climate Securitisation?
by Florentine Koppenborg & Ulv Hanssen - 65-78 Transforming the Dynamics of Climate Politics in Japan: Business’ Response to Securitization
by Takahiro Yamada - 79-90 Climate Security and Policy Options in Japan
by Seiichiro Hasui & Hiroshi Komatsu