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国际关系英文论文代写核心期刊推荐

发表时间:2016-06-12 13:52:47 作者:zhouzhengmao 阅读:107次

国际关系英文论文代写核心期刊推荐

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International Organizaton, Vol. 71, No. 1
      1. Sarah Blodgett Bermeo, “Aid Is Not Oil: Donor Utility,Heterogeneous Aid, and the Aid-Democratization Relationship,” pp. 1-32.
      2. Nadav G. Shelef, “Unequal Ground: Homelands andConflict,” pp. 33-63.
      3. Simone Dietrich, “Donor Political Economies and the Pursuit of AidEffectiveness,” pp. 65-102.
      4. Austin Carson, “Facing Off andSaving Face: Covert Intervention and Escalation Management in the Korean War,” pp.103-131.
      5. David B. Carter, “Provocation and the Strategy of Terrorist andGuerrilla Attacks,” pp. 133-173.
      6. James Ashley Morrison, “Shocking Intellectual Austerity: TheRole of Ideas in the Demise of the Gold Standard in Britain,” pp. 175-207.
      7. Desha M. Girod and Jennifer L. Tobin, “Take the Money andRun: The Determinants of Compliance with Aid Agreements,” pp. 209-239.

European Journal of International Relations, March 2016, Vol. 22, No. 1
      1. Lorenzo Zambernardi, “Politics is tooimportant to be left to political scientists: A critique of the theory–policynexus in International Relations,” pp. 3-23.
      2. Jonathan Graubart,“Arturo Jimenez-Bacardi, David in Goliath’s citadel: Mobilizing the Security Council’snormative power for Palestine,” pp. 24-48.
      3. Xavier Guillaume, Rune S. Andersen and JuhaA. Vuori, “Paint it black:Colours and the social meaning of the battlefield,” pp. 48-71.
      4. Shahar Hameiri and Lee Jones, “Rising powers andstate transformation: The case of China,” pp. 72-98.
      5. Tom Lundborg, “The limts of history sociology: Temporalborders and the reproduction of the “modern” political present,” pp. 99-121.
      6. Anthony King, “The female combat soldier,” pp. 122-143.
      7. SeanonS.Wong, “Emotions and the communication ofintentions in face-to-face diplomacy, “pp. 144-167.
      8. James Brassett, “British comedy, global resistance: RussellBrand, Charlie Brooker and Stewart Lee,” pp. 168-191.
      9. Susanne Therese Hansen, “Taking ambiguityseriously: Explaining the indeterminacy of the European Union conventional armsexport control regime,” pp. 192-216.
      10. Philip Liste, “Geographical knowledge at work: Humanrights litigation and transnational territoriality,” pp. 217-239.

International Studies Quarterly, Vol 60, Issue 1
      1. Paul F. Diehl,“Exploring Peace: Looking Beyond War and Negative Peace,” pp. 1-10.
      2. CynthiaWeber, “Queer Intellectual Curiosity as International Relations Method:Developing Queer International Relations Theoretical and MethodologicalFrameworks,” pp. 11-23.
      3. Sean M.Zeigler, “Competitive Alliances and Civil War Recurrence,” pp. 24-37.
      4. Jeffery M.Kaplow, “The Negotiation Calculus: Why Parties to Civil Conflict Refuse to Talk,”pp. 38-46.
      5. BarakMendelsohn, “Israel and Its Messianic Right: Path Dependency and StateAuthority in International Conflict,” pp. 47-58.
      6. RiskMitigation, “Regime Security, and Militias: Beyond Coup-proofing, Sabine C.Carey, Michael P. Colaresi, and Neil J. Mitchell,” pp. 59-72.
      7. AlexandreDebs, “Living by the Sword and Dying by the Sword? Leadership Transitions inand out of Dictatorships,” pp.73-84.
      8. Michael L.Ross and Erik Voeten, “Oil and International Cooperation,” pp. 85-97.
      9. Joe Weinberg,“European Union Member States in Cross-National Analyses: The Dangers ofNeglecting Supranational Policymaking,” pp. 98-106.
      10. James H.Lebovic and Elizabeth N. Saunders, “The Diplomatic Core: The Determinants ofHigh-Level US Diplomatic Visits, 1946-2010,” pp. 107-123.
      11. Brain C.Rathbun, Joshua D.Kertzer, Jason Reifler, Paul Goren and Thomas J. Scotto, “TakingForeign Policy Personally: Personal Values and Foreign Policy Attitudes,” pp.124-137.
      12. Richard C.Eichenberg, “Gender Difference in American Public Opinion on the Use ofMilitary Force”, 1982-2013, pp. 138-148
      13. Sara Meger, “TheFetishization of Sexual Violence in International Security”, pp. 149-159.
      14. Ana CarolinaGarriga, “Human Rights Regimes, Reputation, and Foreign Direct Investment,” pp.160-172
      15. Geoff Dancyand Veronica Michel, “Human Rights Enforcement From Below: Private Actors andProsecutorial Momentum in Latin America and Europe,” pp. 173.

Journal of Conflict Resolution, VOL. 60, NO. 1
      1. Nam Kyu Kim, “RevisitingEconomic Shocks and Coups,” pp. 3-31.
      2. ClaudeBerrebi, Jordan Ostwald, “Terrorism and the Labor Force: Evidence of an Effecton Female Labor Force Participation and the Labor Gender Gap,” pp. 32-60.
      3. Dennis T. Kahn,Varda Liberman, Eran Haplerin and Lee Ross, “Intergroup Sentiments, PoliticalIdentity, and Their Influence on Respnses to Potentially Ameliorative Proposalsin the Context of an Intractable Conflict,” pp. 61-88.
      4. “Are MigrantsMore Extreme Than Locals After War? Evidence From a Simultaneous Survey ofMigrants in Sweden and Locals in Bosnia,” pp. 89-117.
      5. JonathanHall, “Policy Selection in the Face of Political Instability: Do States Divert,Repress, or Make Concessions?, Graeme A. M. Davies,” pp.118-142.
      6. AlastairSmith, “Leader Turnover, Institutions, and Voting at the UN General Assembly,”pp. 143-163.
      7. Mark S.Manger and Mark A. Pickup, “The Coevolution of Trade Agreement Networks andDemocracy,” pp. 164-191.

Journal of Conflict Resolution, VOL. 60, NO. 2
      1. WalterEnders, Gary A. Hoover and Todd Sandler, “The Changing Nonlinear Relationshipbetween Income and Terrorism,” pp. 195-225.
      2. MatthiasBasedau, Birte Pfeiffer and Johannes Vüllers, “Bad Religion? Religion,Collective Action, and the Onset of Armed Conflict in Developing Countries,” pp.226-255.
      3. Anthony S.Marcum and Jonathan N. Brown, “Overthrowing the ‘Loyalty Norm’: ThePrevalence and Success of Coups in Small-coalition Systems,” 1950 to 1999, pp.256-282.
      4. ClionadhRaleigh, “Pragmatic and Promiscuous: Explaining the Rise of CompetitivePolitical Militias across Africa,” pp. 283-310.
      5. CharlesButcher and Isak Svensson, “Manufacturing Dissent: Modernization and theOnset of Major Nonviolent Resistance Campaigns,” pp. 311-339.
      6. Kurt A.Ackermann, Jürgen Fleiß and Ryan O. Murphy, “Reciprocity as an IndividualDifference,” pp. 340-367.
      7. StephanieDornschneider and Nick Henderson, “A Computational Model of CognitiveMaps: Analyzing Violent and Nonviolent Activity in Egypt and Germany,” pp.368-399.

Journal of Conflict Resolution, VOL.60, NO. 2
      1. AlexandreDebs and Jessica Chen Weiss, “Circumstances, Domestic Audiences, andReputational Incentives in International Crisis Bargaining,” pp. 403-433.
      2. ChungshikMoon and Mark Souva, “Audience Costs, Information, and Credible CommitmentProblems,” pp. 434-458.
      3. Shakun D.Mago, Anya C. Samak and Roman M. Sheremeta, “Facing Your Opponents: SocialIdentification and Information Feedback in Vontest,” pp. 459-481.
      4. Charles A.Holt, Andrew Kydd, Laura Razzolini and Roman Sheremeta, “The Paradox ofMisaligned Profiling: Theory and Experimental Evidence,” pp. 482-500.
      5. HelgeHoltermann, “Relative Capacity and the Spread of Rebellion: Insights fromNepal,” pp. 501-529.
      6. Thomas Jensen,“National Responses to Transnational Terrorism: Intelligence andCounterterrorism Provision,” pp. 530-554.
      7. EmanuelDeutschmann, “Between Collaboration and Disobedience: The Behavior of theGuantánamo Detainees and its Consequences,” pp. 555-582.

Review of International Political Economy, Vol. 23, No. 1
      1. Myles Carroll, “The new agrariandouble movement: hegemony and resistance in the GMO food economy,” pp. 1-28.
      2.James Ron, Archana Pandya and David Crow, “Universalvalues, foreign money: funding local human rights organizations in the globalsouth,” pp. 29-64.
      3.Andrew B. Kennedy, “Slouching tiger, roaring dragon: comparing India and Chinaas late innovators,” pp. 65-92.
      4. Timothy J.McKeown, “A different two-level game: foreign policy officials’ personalnetworks and coordinated policy innovation,” pp. 93-122.
      5. AbrahamNewman and Elliot Posner, “Transnational feedback, soft law, and preferences inglobal financial regulation”, pp. 123-152.
      6.Alberto Fuentes and Seth Pipkin, “Self-discovery inthe dark: the demand side of industrial policy in Latin America,” pp.153-183.

Security Studies, Vol. 25, No. 1
      1. AndrewBennett, Colin Elman and John M. Owen, “Symposium on Qualitative andMultimethod Research: Note to Readers,” pp. 1-2.
      2. Gary Goertz, “MultimethodResearch,” pp. 3-24.
      3. Hein Goemans andWilliam Spaniel, “Multimethod Research: A Case for Formal Theory,” pp. 25-33.
      4. Tanisha M.Fazal, “An Occult of Irrelevance? Multimethod Research and Engagement with thePolicy World,” pp. 34-41.
      5. Jason Seawright,“Better Multimethod Design: The Promise of Integrative Multimethod Research,”pp. 42-49.
      6. Andrea Gilli andMauro Gilli, “The Diffusion of Drone Warfare? Industrial, Organizational, andInfrastructural Constraints,” pp. 50-84.
      7. RomainMalejacq, “Warlords, Intervention, and State Consolidation: A Typology ofPolitical Orders in Weak and Failed States,” pp. 85-110.
      8. CaitlinTalmadge, “Different Threats, Different Militaries: Explaining OrganizationalPractices in Authoritarian Armies,” pp. 111-141.
      9. Scott L.Kastner, Margaret M. Pearson and Chad Rector, “Invest, Hold Up, or Accept?China in Multilateral Governance,” pp. 142-179.

World Politics, Vol. 68, No. 1
      1. AnnaGrzyMala-Busse, “Weapons of the Meek - How Churches Influence Public Policy,”pp. 1-36.
      2. Erica S.Simmons, “Market Reforms and Water Wars,” pp. 37-73.
      3. Abby Córdovaand Matthew L. Layton, “When is ‘Delivering the Goods’ Not Good Enough? - HowEconomic Disparities in Latin American Neighborhoods Shape Citizen Trust inLocal Government,” pp. 74-110.
      4. Adam MichaelAuerbach, “Clients and Communities - The Political Economy of Party NetworkOrganization and Development in India’s Urban Slums,” pp. 111-148.
      5. John D. Huberand Pavithra Suryanarayan, “Ethnic Inequality and the Ethnification ofPolitical Parties - Evidence from India,” pp. 149-188.

World Politics, Vol. 68, No. 2
      1. Wendy Hunterand Robert Brill, “‘Documents, Please’ - Advances in Social Protection andBirth Certification in the Developing World,” pp. 191-228.
      2. Tomila V.Lankina, Alexander Libman and Anastassia Obydenkova, “Appropriation andSubversion - Precommunist Literacy, Communist Party Saturation, andPostcommunist Democratic Outcomes,” pp. 229-274.
      3. Ceren Belge, “CivilianVictimization and the Politics of Information in the Kurdish Conflict in Turkey,”pp. 275-306.
      4. David E.Cunningham, “Preventing Civil War - How the Potential for InternationalIntervention can Deter Conflict Onset,” pp. 307-340.
      5. Allan Dafoeand Devin Caughey, “Honor and War - Southern US Presidents and the Effects ofConcern for Reputation,” pp. 341-381.

Review of International Studies, Vol. 42, No. 1
      1. Nicolas Guilhot, “The Kuhning of reason: Realism, rationalism, and political decisionin IR theory after Thomas Kuhn,” pp. 3-24.
      2. Samuel Knafo,“Bourdieu and the dead end of reflexivity: On the impossible task of locatingthe subject,” pp. 25-47.
      3. Matthew Fluck,“Theory, ‘truthers’, and transparency: Reflecting on knowledge in thetwenty-first century,” pp. 48-73.
      4. Milan Babík, “‘X’ ten years on: The fictions of George F. Kennan’s recent factualrepresentations,” pp. 74-94.
      5. Naomi Head, “Apolitics of empathy: Encounters with empathy in Israel and Palestine,” pp.95-113.
      6. LeonieHolthaus and Jens Steffek, “Experiments in international administration: Theforgotten functionalism of James Arthur Salter,” pp. 114-135.
      7. Shmuel Nili, “Liberalglobal justice and social science,” pp. 136-155.
      8. Astrid H.M.Nordin, “Futures beyond ‘the West’? Autoimmunity in China’s harmonious world,”pp. 156-177.
      9. Morten Skumsrud Andersen, “Semi-cores in imperial relations: The cases of Scotland andNorway,” pp. 178-203.

Review of International Studies, Vol. 42, No. 2
      1. AnnaHolzscheiter, “Representation as power and performative practice: Global civilsociety advocacy for working children,” pp. 205-226.
      2. Amin Samman, “Conjuringthe spirit of multilateralism: Histories of crisis management during the ‘greatcredit crash’,” pp. 227-246.
      3. AndrewDavenport, “The international and the limits of history,” pp. 247-265.
      4. LinusHagström and Ulv Hanssen, “War is peace: the rearticulation of ‘peace’ inJapan’s China discourse,” pp. 266-286.
      5. Jong Kun Choi,“Crisis stability or general stability? Assessing Northeast Asia’s absence ofwar and prospects for liberal transition,” pp. 287-309.
      6. AlanBloomfield, “Norm antipreneurs and theorising resistance to normative change,”pp. 310-333.
      7. Mervyn Frostand Silviya Lechner, “Two conceptions of international practice: Aristotelian praxis or Wittgensteinian language-games?,” pp. 334-350.
      8. Deniz Kuru, “HistoricisingEurocentrism and anti-Eurocentrism in IR: A revisionist account of disciplinaryself-reflexivity,” pp. 351-376.
      9. CorneliusFriesendorf, “Police assistance as foreign policy: Explaining donor practices,”pp. 377-400.

The Chinese Journal of International Politics, Vol. 9, No. 1
      1. Yan Xuetong, “Editor’sChoice: Political Leadership and Power Redistribution,” pp. 1-26.
      2. Jihyun Kim, “PossibleFuture of the Contest in the South China Sea,” pp. 27-57.
      3. Hun Joon Kim,“Will IR Theory with Chinese Characteristics be a Powerful Alternative?,” pp.59-79.
      4. MichalOnderco and Paul van Hooft, “Why is the Proliferation Security Initiative aProblematic Solution?,” pp. 81-108.

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