The E-International Relations Newsletter
4 May 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.
Nationalism, Populism, and Institutional Decline: The Parallel Paths of Trump and Netanyahu
– Neta Oren
Why the Pandemic Treaty Must Reclaim Human Rights and Equity
– Salvador Santino Regilme
The Perilous Context of Trump’s Policy
– Bülent Gökay and Vassilis K. Fouskas
The Joys and Harms of Military Caregiving
– Julia Welland
The Future of German Feminist Foreign and Development Policy
– Karoline Färber
Faith in Transition: A Week Inside a Gender Surgery Clinic
– Mehrdad Alipour
Review – China’s Rising Foreign Ministry
– Sarwar Mina
ECOWAS at 50: Looking Forward
– Adeleke Olumide Ogunnoiki
Muslims as Sufferers in the Liberal World Order
– Shafi Md Mostofa
The Window Is Closing for a Federal Syria
– Hamit Ekinc
Australia’s Election and ASEAN’s Expectations
– Raka Pamungkas
The Ghibli Lens: When Algorithms Chase the Artist’s Spark
– Carmel Maria Jose
How Terrorism Fuels Indo-Pakistani Rivalries
– Sachini Geethanjalee
Who Believes in Gulf Futurism?
– Ahmed Elbenni
Turkey’s Continuing Autocratic Turn
– Bahram P. Kalviri
The Return of Erik Prince
– Rishab Rathi
The US-Vietnam Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in its Second Year
– Julian McBride
The Politics of Endurance: Sanctions Resilience in Cuba and Iran
– Ninon de Buchet
Christian Academics Seek an International Relations Revival
– Craig R. Myers
On this week’s episode of the Thinking Global Podcast, Professor Noah Zerbe discusses the global politics of food, the economy, technology, globalisation, and more.
Finally, we are excited to announce that E-International Relations will be attending the 2025 British International Studies Association (BISA) Conference in Belfast – from 17–20 June. Alongside participating in the roundtable on open access publishing in international studies, sponsored by the European Journal of International Security, we are bringing Thinking Global to the conference. Read more here.






