Trending in #InternationalRelations:
https://t.co/oZJcFu4XGK
1) The war in Ukraine & the poverty of expertise in IR theory (@jird_jour)
2) How African Regional Interventions are Perceived on the Ground (@intpeacekeeping)
3) Duterte's Assaults on Civil Society in the Philippines
4) Social reproduction theory & the capitalist ‘form’ of social reproduction (@npejournal)
5) Visualising state biographical narratives: Chinese & North Korean propaganda (@BritJPIR)
📝Don't miss this new BJPIR article
'Visualising state biographical narratives: A rhetorical analysis of Chinese and North Korean propaganda photographs' by @OlliHellmann & @OppermannIB
🔓Available in #OpenAccess here: https://t.co/j0UEN7x239
🗣️ Open Ph.D. Position at the @waikato on Collective memories of historical deforestation in Aotearoa New Zealand.
For more information, please visit: https://t.co/IhDMwadJxN
#Phd#Opportunity#MSA
🌱Do you want to do a PhD on collective memories of deforestation? @HistoryKateS and I offer a fully funded scholarship @waikato. First deadline: 25 September. More info here: https://t.co/VtdyqH6Wor
@BDStanley 2014 was definitely my Krautrock phase. Remember reading Stubbs’ book, which came out that year. Perhaps that comment referred to something else. I blindly (deafly?) followed a lot of terrible Quietus recommendations at the time.
@BDStanley You certainly weren’t a fan of Krautrock when I played it on our Chilean road trip. I can’t remember your exact words but it was something along the lines of “falling down a flight of stairs.”
New paper in @memorystudies: Collective memory of environmental change and connectedness with nature: Survey evidence from Aotearoa New Zealand. https://t.co/9GmCR5FspJ
New paper in @memorystudies: Collective memory of environmental change and connectedness with nature: Survey evidence from Aotearoa New Zealand. https://t.co/9GmCR5FspJ
@1NRSmith You might like this too. Blue/white dominate as football club colours in former Prussia, red/white in the rest of Germany. Not sure why though.
@1NRSmith Köln. Which (unlike Dortmund) used to be strongly catholic and was thus very unhappy about Prussian (protestant) annexation. Hence no “Borussias” in that part of Germany I guess.
@1NRSmith Not in core Prussia, but the Rhineland (and I think Dortmund) became part of Prussia after Vienna Congress in 1815. Other Borussia clubs in the west include Mönchengladbach and Münster.