Book Review International Relations

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Reginald Hanfy

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Aug 3, 2024, 4:39:10 PM8/3/24
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The SAIS Review is a journal of international affairs published twice yearly by the Johns Hopkins University Press for the Johns Hopkins Foreign Policy Institute of the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, D.C. The editor welcomes articles, book reviews, and correspondence from policymakers, scholars, and other interested persons. The SAIS Review makes no effort to exact an editorial consensus. All inquiries should be directed to

Manuscript length should range from twenty to twenty-five pages (5,000 to 7,000 words), including introduction, text, conclusion, tables, figure captions/legends, and footnotes. Please include subheadings to highlight substantive divisions within the article. The SAIS Review will rely on the author to verify facts within the text. On a separate sheet please include an author identification as you would like it to appear at the foot of the title page. Please supply an abstract of 100 or fewer words with your paper. Please format the manuscript as follows:

If your manuscript were to be accepted for publication, it would be edited according to The Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition, and Webster's New Twentieth Century Dictionary (Unabridged). The editorial process focuses on organization, flow, clarity, and consistency but also reviews grammar, punctuation, spelling, and style. The SAIS Review aims to strike a balance between varied levels of knowledge among the journal's readership.

After your article has been edited, you will receive a printout for approval and any necessary clarifications or updates. If you would like reprints of your article, please contact the SAIS Review before the date of publication.

eTOC (Electronic Table of Contents) alerts can be delivered to your inbox when this or any Hopkins Press journal is published via your ProjectMUSE MyMUSE account. Visit the eTOC instructions page for detailed instructions on setting up your MyMUSE account and alerts.

Please note that in January 2022 International Politics Reviews was merged with its sister journal International Politics. All submissions and queries should be directed to International Politics.

International Politics Reviews examines important issues and developing trends in the field of international relations, illuminating major controversies and presenting new perspectives and insights. The aim of the journal is to help researchers shape the field for the future.

To this end, International Politics Reviews publishes in-depth review articles, commentaries, debates and interviews. Early career and senior academics make agenda-setting contributions to the journal. The material is designed to benefit a broad readership of students, scholars and professionals working in international relations and elsewhere in the social sciences.

The journal aspires to provide a geographically global coverage and to illuminate the diverse landscape of theories, approaches and issues currently debated in the study of international relations.

International Politics Reviews is a Transformative Journal; authors can publish using the traditional publishing route OR via immediate gold Open Access.

More information on Transformative journals: -research/transformative-journals

More information on funder and institutional requirements: -research/funding

The Nordic Review of International Studies (NRIS) publishes peer-reviewed scholarly contributions within the field of International Relations (IR), focusing specifically on Nordic perspectives. The NRIS is committed to publishing articles that examine the international sphere empirically, theoretically, or institutionally from a Nordic angle. The NRIS is edited by Dr Johanna Vuorelma (University of Helsinki), Dr Sanna Salo (Finnish Institute of International Affairs), and Dr Ville Sinkkonen (Finnish Institute of International Affairs).

The Nordic Review of International Studies (NRIS) publishes peer-reviewed scholarly contributions within the field of International Relations (IR), focusing specifically on Nordic perspectives. The NRIS is committed to publishing articles that examine the international sphere empirically, theoretically, or institutionally from a Nordic angle. The aim of the NRIS is to foster scholarly debates on international politics within and concerning the wider Nordic region. The NRIS embraces interdisciplinary approaches and appreciates a wide range of theoretical and methodological choices. The journal is published by the Finnish International Studies Association (FISA) and committed to the principles of Open Access publishing.

The aim of the NRIS is to foster scholarly debates on international politics within and concerning the wider Nordic region. The NRIS embraces interdisciplinary approaches and appreciates a wide range of theoretical and methodological choices. We publish primarily in English, but also submissions in Finnish or Swedish can be considered for publication. The NRIS is published by the Finnish International Studies Association (FISA) and committed to the principles of Open Access publishing.

Get access to reviews, historiographical essays, pedagogical articles and more. View past issues of SHAFR's publications: Diplomatic History and Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Review.

The teaching section of our website includes resources to help inform and inspire our collective efforts to innovate course content, discover new pedagogical approaches, and employ 21st century tools and technology in our teaching of the history of American foreign relations. You'll find articles for teaching, teaching assignments, course syllabi, secondary education teaching resources, lesson plans and classroom documents.

The International Studies Review is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Studies Association. Former editors-in-chief include Kelly Kadera (University of Iowa) and Laura Sjoberg (University of Florida). The journal covers research in international studies. It was established in 1957 as Mershon International Studies Review and obtained its current title in 1999, with volume numbering restarting at 1.

According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2018 impact factor of 2.076, ranking it 47th out of 176 journals in the category "Political Science" and 19th out of 91 journals in the category "International Relations".[1]

For more than 75 years, the ILR Review has been at the forefront of publishing peer-reviewed research on work and employment relations. The Review, published by SAGE Publications, is part of the Cornell University ILR School, which is regarded as the leading academic institution focused on the world of work.

The International Studies Encyclopedia, published in association with the International Studies Association (ISA), is the most comprehensive reference work of its kind for the fields of international studies and international relations. It brings together specially commissioned, peer reviewed essays, written and edited by an international team of the world's best scholars and teachers.

Robert A. Denemark received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota and has been on the faculty of the University of Delaware since 1988. His work has appeared in International Studies Quarterly, International Studies Review, International Studies Perspectives, Cooperation and Conflict, Globalizations, and the Review of International Political Economy. He is the editor of five volumes, and author or co-author of 40 other publications. His works covers many areas, including international political economy, world system history, diplomacy, terrorism, fundamentalist social movements, and migration.

Rene Marlin-Bennett received her Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and has been on the Johns Hopkins University faculty of Political Science since 2007. She spent the prior twenty years on the faculty of American University. She is the author of two books and the co-author of one. Her work has appeared in such journals as International Political Sociology, International Studies Perspectives, International Interactions, and the Journal of Information Technology and Politics. Her research interests include the global political economy of information, the body and international relations, and IR theory.

Access to the complete content on Oxford Reference requires a subscription or purchase. Public users are able to search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter without a subscription.

PRINTED FROM OXFORD REFERENCE (www.oxfordreference.com). (c) Copyright Oxford University Press, 2023. All Rights Reserved. Under the terms of the licence agreement, an individual user may print out a PDF of a single entry from a reference work in OR for personal use (for details see Privacy Policy and Legal Notice).

The Very Short Introductions series (Harvard Login) from Oxford University Press offers concise introductions to a wide variety of topics, written by established scholars in that particular field. Because they are indeed very short, they are an excellent point of entry to a new field of study. The following Very Short Introductions are available in international relations and its subfields:

The best measure of our success as a graduate program is the track record of our students. In recent years, our students have taken tenure-track faculty positions at top universities, including Cornell University, the University of Texas, and McGill University. They have also been awarded highly competitive pre- and post-doctoral fellowships at Harvard University and Princeton University. We encourage our doctoral students to focus on publishing their research, and their work continues to appear in premier journals, including the American Political Science Review, International Organization, International Security, and International Studies Quarterly.

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