The E-International Relations Newsletter
8 December 2024
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.
Iran at the Crossroads Pending Trump’s Return
– Sirvan Karimi
Powering the Future: Latin America’s Geopolitical Role in the Global Energy Transition
– Axel Bastián Poque González
Building Bridges Beyond Borders: Unlocking the Role of Transnational Networks in Paradiplomacy
– Seven Erdoğan
Women’s In/Security in Kosovo’s 2025 Elections
– Lauren Lowe
Five Scenarios for the War in Ukraine Under a Trump Presidency
– Ali Mammadov
History of the Future: Classical Realism and Trump
– Haro Karkour
Interview – Sébastien Dubé
Observing Moldova’s 2024 Presidential Election
– Martin Duffy
In a Knife-edge Election, Two Different Portrayals of America
– Chris Featherstone
Review – Autocracy, Inc.
– Stephen G. F. Hall
Redefining India’s Public Expenditure for Climate Resilience
– Pavittarbir Saggu
European Strategic Autonomy: How Realism Best Explains Why It Remains a Failure
– Simon Rio
Sexual Assault Silences in War Memorialisation: The Lesson of Vivian Bullwinkel
– Amy Capuano
Somaliland’s Democratic Journey
– Martin Duffy
Interview – Marta Migliorati
Neoliberalism and the Sovereignty of the Global South
– Jyotir Sondhi
Review – Governing the Feminist Peace
– Isabel Hernandez Pepe
This fortnight we added two new episodes to the Thinking Global podcast, both part of our US elections series. In the first of these two episodes, Trita Parsi spoke about Trump’s Middle East foreign policy, US-Israel relations, the Abraham Accords, relations with Turkey, and more. In the second episode, James Goldgeier spoke about how a Trump presidency may affect NATO, Sino-US relations, transatlantic relations, European security and more.
Subscribe and listen to Thinking Global wherever you get your podcasts.
As holiday season approaches why not gift one of our books to a friend/colleague? All our books are free to read, but you can also purchase them in paperback from all good book stores (including Amazon), which is a great way to support our work and share great scholarship.
This month, in the light of the recent COP, we would like to showcase Global Climate Justice: Theory and Practice edited by Fausto Corvino and Tiziana Andina.






