The E-International Relations Newsletter
15 June
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.
Might Over Law: Israel’s Strike on Iran and the Future of Global Order
– Tewfik Hamel
Donald Trump’s War on Global Development
– Marianna Karakoulaki, Mia Hyun, Scarlet Vass, and Thomas Bobo
If You Want Peace, Help Ukraine with the War
– Svitlana Chernykh and Charles Miller
Can the Trump Phenomenon Be Considered Revolutionary?
– Mark N. Katz
Wargaming in the US Military: Ludic Militarism and the Production of Warfighters
– Aggie Hirst
The Philanthropy of Bill Gates Should Be Taken with Caution
– Mukesh Kapila
More Than Strategy: National Honour and Emotional Identity in Indian Foreign Policy
– Biyon Sony Joseph
Cyber Diplomacy and the Rise of the “Global South”
– André Barrinha and Arindrajit Basu
Interview – James Graham Wilson
Multiculturalism in Canada: Lacking Purpose and Intent in Law and Policy
– Di Rao
In Japan, Words Matter in Leadership
– Ikenna Steve Nweke
European Credibility and the Illusion of Normative Power
– Joseph Black
Joshua Wong and Hong Kong’s Right to Self-Determination
– Ka Hang Wong
Poland and the Case for Euroscepticism
– Alexander Brotman
Interview – Koen Slootmaeckers
Bangladesh’s Humanitarian Corridor Dilemma
– Shafi Md Mostofa and Tamim Muntasir
When International Rituals Go Wrong: Ritual Failure and the 2025 Munich Security Conference
– Simon Koschut
Why Allowing Syria Back into the International Fold was the Right Decision
– Julian McBride
A Passport to Power: June 4th and the Making of Hong Kong’s Loyalist Class
– Ka Hang Wong
Co-Learning ‘Intersectionality and Social Justice’ during Culture Wars
– Elena, Keshab Giri, Alex Godfrey, Aniela Marks Delgado, Ashton McCormick, Kitty McTernan and Carolyn O’Donnell
Something from our bookshelf – Regional Security in the Middle East: Sectors, Variables and Issues, edited by Bettina Koch and Yannis A. Stivachtis, provides a timely analysis of a region that continues to be conflict prone and challenged by factors both regional and global. Read it free on E-International Relations.




