Publishing innovative scholarly work that makes a significant contribution – theoretical, empirical, or both – to our understanding of international security.
Read my latest article published in Security Studies @SecStudies_Jrnl, where I present a novel alignment framework that best captures warfighting capabilities and how great powers align:
https://t.co/19uMTc00LR.
"China and Hegemony—An Exchange," featuring essays from @amysarahking, @mapfelschorle, and @limdarrenj and G. John Ikenberry.
https://t.co/7NpXtTrFnS
https://t.co/7FBGeRXpJz
https://t.co/dLxP67DYK1
"Algorithmic Aversion? Experimental Evidence on the Elasticity of Public Attitudes to 'Killer Robots,'" by @OndrejRosendorf, @MichalSmetana3, and @mVranka.
https://t.co/ZPJXfgDYtN
"Is Multi-Method Research More Convincing Than Single-Method Research? An Analysis of International Relations Journal Articles, 1980–2018," by @antonpeez.
https://t.co/B6rDaPtj8W
"Trivializing Terrorists: How Counterterrorism Knowledge Undermines Local Resistance to Terrorism," by @DrSarahPhillips and @Ndawsari.
https://t.co/8gRIHtWXLO
Exited that my new @SecStudies_Jrnl article is out! “Escaping Paralysis: Strategies for Countering Asymmetric Nuclear Escalation”
Read it here: https://t.co/tO9O8vPSO6
"Whose War is it Anyway? Explaining the Black-White Gap in Support for the Use of Force Abroad," by @naimagreenriley and @AndrewMLeber.
https://t.co/NlztSn1eu1
"Volk Theory: Prejudice, Racism, and German Foreign Policy Before and Under Hitler," by Brian Rathbun and Nina Srinivasan Rathbun.
https://t.co/mchqHQiCTi