The E-International Relations Newsletter
13 July 2025
Here’s your digest of the publications on E-International Relations over the past fortnight. This newsletter, and all of our content, will always be free. If you are able to support our work you can sign up for the paid tier if you have not yet done so.
Outsider Geopolitics: To Be, or Not to Be, in the Arctic
– Eda Ayaydin and Andreas Raspotnik
Israel, Iran and the New Middle Eastern Chessboard
– Habib Badawi
The Right to Be Simulated: Digital Twins and the Rise of Geo-Algorithmic Inequality
– Angelo Valerio Toma
The Limits of Israel’s Degradation Strategy Against Iran’s Network State
– Andreas Krieg
Interview – Joseph J. Kaminski
China’s Global Hegemony Strategy
– Fatih Beyaz
Review – The International Arbitration of Territorial Disputes
– Trinidad Cruz
Argentina’s Javier Milei Shows his Teeth
– Richard M. Sanders
Israeli Genocides in Gaza
– Mehmet Rakipoğlu
Interview – Olukayode Bakare
Gendered Exclusion: Rethinking Taiwan’s Marginalisation
– Joseph Black
Israel, the Ultimate Realist
– Bailey Schwab
Sovereignty Performed, Regionalism Denied: What the Thai-Cambodian Clash Reveals
– Aniello Iannone
Why ‘Global’ Conferences Aren’t Global
– Ann-Murray Brown
Beyond Superpowers: Forging a Resilient Future for East Africa Through Diversified Partnerships
– Sinmyung Park
Confucius Institutes in Argentina and China’s Soft Power Strategy
– Mauricio Percara
Review – Russia’s Overlooked Invasion
– Martin Larys
Political Conclusions of the 2025 BRICS Summit
– Luis Gouveia Jr
Beyond Neo-Ottomanism in Turkey’s Syria Strategy
– Anil Can Özgün
International Students Are a High-Return Investment for the United States
– Mohammad Javad Mousavizadeh
Oligarchic Constitutionalism in Europe? A Warning from Within
– Salvador Santino Regilme
Trump, Tariffs and the Australian Federal Election
– Patrick Leslie
We would also like to remind you of our annual Article Award, sponsored by Edinburgh University Press, Polity, Sage, Bloomsbury, Manchester University Press, Palgrave Macmillan and Bristol University Press.
The award welcomes articles on the widest range of topics from early careers scholars and research students, with the aim of sparking debate that will contribute towards real-world outcomes. It comes with a prize of publication, and £1500 in academic books and subscriptions.
Could we kindly request that you share this link around your departments/schools, colleagues, friends, and to anyone you feel would be interested in this exciting opportunity? Readers of this newsletter are most welcome to enter if eligible.





