Internationale Beziehungen

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Ethnic Conflict and International Relations.

Authors Stavros T. Constantinou, Stephen Ryan
Year 1992
Journal Name International Migration Review
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2 Journal Article

On International Migration and International Relations

Authors Myron Weiner
Year 1985
Journal Name Population and Development Review
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4 Journal Article

New Roles for Diasporas in International Relations

Authors Robin Cohen
Year 2005
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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5 Journal Article

New Roles for Diasporas in International Relations

Authors Robin Cohen
Year 2005
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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6 Journal Article

International Migration, International Relations and Foreign Policy

Authors Christopher Mitchell
Year 1989
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 27
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7 Journal Article

ETHNIC-GROUPS IN INTERNATIONAL-RELATIONS - SMITH,P

Authors JY MUCKLE
Year 1992
Journal Name SLAVONIC AND EAST EUROPEAN REVIEW
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8 Journal Article

REFUGEES AND INTERNATIONAL-RELATIONS - LOESCHER,G, MONAHAN,L

Authors T WATERS
Year 1991
Journal Name Disasters
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9 Journal Article

The Russian Diaspora in International Relations: ‘Compatriots’ in Britain

Authors Andy Byford
Year 2012
Journal Name Europe-Asia Studies
Citations (WoS) 7
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11 Journal Article

Migration and International Relations: Cooperation and Control in the European Community

Authors James F. Hollifield
Year 1992
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 33
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16 Journal Article

Study on International Relations and Training of Diplomatic Personnel in Brazil and Bolivia

Authors Santos Johnatan Da Costa, Alla Borzova, Maria Luisa Claure Quiroga
Journal Name Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Education, Language, Art and Inter-cultural Communication (ICELAIC 2019)
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22 Journal Article

Constructing the “Domestic Abroad”: Re-examining the Role of Diasporas in International Relations

Authors Robert W. Glover
Year 2012
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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26 Journal Article

Constructing the “Domestic Abroad”: Re-examining the Role of Diasporas in International Relations

Authors Robert W. Glover
Year 2007
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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27 Journal Article

Migration, International Relations and the New Europe: Theoretical Perspectives from Institutional Political Sociology

Authors Martin O. Heisler
Year 1992
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 16
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28 Journal Article

The Turkish Diaspora in Germany

Authors Wesley D. Chapin
Year 1996
Journal Name Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies
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30 Journal Article

Border crossings as soft power: international relations, digital diplomacy and the “border control museum complex”

Authors Ruben Zaiotti
Year 2023
Journal Name International Journal of Migration and Border Studies
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31 Journal Article

Border crossings as soft power: international relations, digital diplomacy and the 'border control museum complex'

Authors Ruben Zaiotti
Year 2023
Journal Name International Journal of Migration and Border Studies
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32 Journal Article

The International Politics of Law-enforcement Cooperation

Description
The proposal includes three studies in the field of international relations. These studies examine the political dimensions of international cooperation in law enforcement. Study 1 explores why states succeed or fail to cooperate against smuggling along a shared border. The goal is to explain why Jordan has cooperated with Israel in combating smugglers of goods and persons, whereas Egypt has been less cooperative. Based on fieldwork in the Israel-Egypt and Israel-Jordan border areas, the study links governments' domestic political concerns to their efforts against smuggling. Study 2 examines the Israeli efforts against intellectual property piracy of American and European goods. Based on fieldwork in Israel, this study explains why Israel's enforcement of intellectual property rights is ineffective. Study 3 examines international cooperation among courts in combating parental child-abduction. This study explains the origin and evolution of the unique international regime that tackles child abduction. The study also explains why many countries have been reluctant to join this regime. The study involves fieldwork in Europe and the United States as well as interviews with judges at international judicial conferences. The three studies advance the analysis of the politics of law enforcement within the field of international relations. These studies also offer important insights for policy.
Year 2011
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35 Project

Tourism geopolitics: roots and branches

Authors Jamie Gillen
Year 2024
Citations (WoS) 6
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39 Journal Article

"Securing Europe, Fighting its Enemies: The making of a security culture in Europe and beyond, 1815-1914"

Description
'This project examines the development of a European security culture as the sum of mutually shared perceptions on “enemies of the states,” “vital interests,” and corresponding practices, between 1815 and 1914. By studying seven distinct instances of supranational security cooperation and their professional agents we will analyze how this European security culture emerged as early as 1815 as an open process of convergence and divergence, and of inclusion and exclusion. The team consists of the PI, 3 PhDs, 1 Post-Doc, and a research assistant. The postulated existence of a shared European security culture in the 19th century may seem counterintuitive. Historians and scholars of international relations generally view the first half of this age through the lenses of “balance of power” and hegemony, and the second half as shaped by bellicose nationalism rather than collective security. European security cooperation and culture is generally situated after 1918, or 1945, as a reaction to the horrors of war and motivated by economic considerations. Nevertheless, after 1815 several concrete transnational security regimes were forged, (partly) designed to deal with “enemies of the states,” such as the Commissions on the Rhine and the Danube (to fight smugglers), the European Commissions on Syria and China (to fight colonial rebels), the Anti-Piracy and Anti-Anarchism Campaigns, and others. These security regimes, dictated by the threats and interests, were highly dynamic, encompassing a growing corpus of professional agents from different branches (police, judicial, military), and evolving from military interventions into police and judicial regimes. They were midwife to a veritable European security culture. This important development has not received the attention it deserves within the framework of the history of international relations and international studies. Our hypothesis is that the development of this culture (threat/interest perceptions and practices) was dependent on four determinants: 1) the quality of the epistemic community (agents), 2) their threat/interest demarcations (subject/object), 3) the level of juridification and the use of military/police force (norms), and 4) innovations in the information, communication, and transportation technologies (technology). These determinants explain variance and change, ranging from inclusion to exclusion of groups and interests, and from juridical convergence between the European states/societies regarding the security practices in some cases to a total dissolution in other cases. This project pioneers a new multidisciplinary approach to the combined history of international relations and internal policy, aiming to “historicize security.” Using new material, we are comparing seven different security regimes where Europe engaged globally, that stretched across the political and commercial domain, affected urban and maritime environments, and reached around the world to the Ottoman Empire and China.'
Year 2014
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44 Project

AFRICA's ‘INFRASTRUCTURE GLOBALITIES’: Rethinking the Political Geographies of Economic Hubs from the Global South

Description
Power beyond the state is most prevalent in economic infrastructure hubs with high technology and multiple global actors. Here, investors from emerging powers challenge traditional theory and practice. Chinese and Brazilian companies are now the most important bilateral investors in Africa. They apply existing rules and practices, and introduce new practices of governance and business-society relations that compete with Western norms. But their impact is not properly understood in theories of transnational governance. This project will rethink transnational governance by focusing on the margins of international relations to explain how models and experiences of actors from the Global South redefine the governance of economic hubs. Seemingly in the margins of international political economy, and neglected in International Relations, in Africa new forms of power and governance are invented and tested. Here states are weaker and experiments with multiple non-state actors and modes of governance tolerated. The fringes of theory-building in the discipline, the hubs of transnational economic infrastructure, and everyday practices of cross-border management can be theorized as arenas of the production, contestation and change of transnational governance. INFRAGLOB combines analysing the ideas driving Chinese and Brazilian management of large-scale port and mining projects with multi-sited ethnographic research of exemplary cases in Mozambique and Tanzania, establishing how these concepts are enacted, negotiated and disregarded in practice. It rethinks publics by mapping controversies that connect Africa, Brazil and China, and establishes how interactions and frictions between diverse practitioners and standards change broader transnational governance of business-community relations and security. ‘Infrastructure globalities’ will provide a unique understanding of how the Global South changes practices of governance and business-society relations in a multipolar world.
Year 2018
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48 Project

"Rural Development, Food Security and Political Stability in Iraq"

Description
'RUDEFOPOS-IRAQ will assess what role food security and rural development have played in the politics of current and former regimes in Iraq, how such politics have played out in the prevalent networks of patronage and rent distribution and how they have affected international relations of the country, most notably during the Oil-for-Food Program episode of the 1990s and in the hydropolitics with Turkey and Syria. Iraq is the only country in the Middle East of which domestic archives exist. The archives of the Iraqi government and the Baath party were brought to the US after 2003. RUDEFOPOS-IRAQ will take advantage of these exceptional sources in addition to newspaper, data by international organizations, grey material and interviews. It will then link back its specific findings with the existing literature about Iraq’s political economy and international relations in general. To examine challenges to food security on a household level comparative surveys in rural and urban communities will be undertaken. Iraq offers an interesting case study in the Middle East, not only because sanctions and war have affected food security and economic development like in no other country in the region. In terms of per capita resource endowments it stands between the oil rich Gulf states and semi-rentier states like Egypt or Syria that have to rely on modest and dwindling oil production and indirect participation in oil rent flows via migrant remittances and aid payments. Iraq is also of great importance to the European Union, not only because of its political instability, but also because of its economic potential. It has the fastest growing oil exports in the Middle East, is a potential source of natural gas for the planned Nabucco pipeline and holds 9 percent of the world’s phosphate reserves.'
Year 2013
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49 Project
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