Results 121 to 130 of about 50,394 (244)
Non‐Members in a Tight Spot: How Norway Navigated Autonomy in EU Pandemic Management
ABSTRACT This study offers new insights into how closely integrated non‐member states navigate tensions between autonomy and dependence when urgent policy responses are required within complex supranational frameworks. It does so by exploring how these non‐members exercise their “wriggle room”—a tailored sub‐category of the broader concept of autonomy ...
Sjoerd Alexander de Winter
wiley +1 more source
The Securitization Cycle: Vietnamese Migration in The Czech Republic
ABSTRACT This article examines how securitized governmentality shapes Czech migration policy, particularly for Vietnamese migrants. Grounded in a humanizing approach and drawing upon the Paris School securitization theory and governmentality, this research explores how security‐driven logics become embedded in institutional practices, shaping migration
Novotna Lucie +3 more
wiley +1 more source
For the Times They Are A‐Changin': Towards a ‘Homeland Economics’ Paradigm of the European Union?
Abstract There is an ongoing academic debate on whether geopolitical aspirations are reshaping the paradigm of the EU's neoliberal industrial and trade policy. The scrutiny has intensified with China's new economic power, the Trump and Biden administrations, Covid‐19 and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. However, the theory of paradigm changes expects that
Henrik Brockenhuus‐Schack +1 more
wiley +1 more source
The ISCIP Analyst, Volume II, Issue 14 [PDF]
This repository item contains a single issue of The ISCIP Analyst, an analytical review journal published from 1996 to 2010 by the Boston University Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and ...
Cavan, Susan +8 more
core +9 more sources
Abstract This article examines the phenomenon of ‘co‐ordinative Europeanisation’, a mode of governance characterised by close collaboration between European Union (EU) institutions and national executives. It argues that, despite the significant practical advantages that this form of governance affords in times of crisis, co‐ordinative Europeanisation ...
Jonas Bornemann
wiley +1 more source
The European Union in a Geo‐Economic World: Towards a New Inter‐Institutional Balance?
Abstract The EU's ‘geo‐economic turn’ has led to a blurring of the boundaries between EU trade and security policies. Against this background, this article examines whether a new institutional balance is emerging in the field of EU economic security policies, in particular, between the Commission, the Council and the European Parliament as the three ...
Thomas Conzelmann, Sophie Vanhoonacker
wiley +1 more source
Abstract What are the long‐term effects of populism on foreign policy? This aspect has not been addressed yet by the burgeoning literature on the international consequences of populism. In this contribution, we hypothesise that the two distinctive features of populist foreign policy‐making, mobilisation/politicisation and personalisation/centralisation,
Sandra Destradi, Emidio Diodato
wiley +1 more source
Subsidies, Net Zero Transition and Public Debt: An Analysis for the Oil and Gas Industry in Brazil
Abstract Despite awareness of the challenges in promoting the decarbonization of the economy, explicit fossil fuel subsidies have increased considerably worldwide in the past decade, reaching an all‐time high at US$1 trillion in 2022. Considering the net‐zero transition and the increase of modern public debt, this article assesses the most relevant ...
Fernando Inti Leal +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The ISCIP Analyst, Volume IV, Issue 7 [PDF]
This repository item contains a single issue of The ISCIP Analyst, an analytical review journal published from 1996 to 2010 by the Boston University Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and ...
Cavan, Susan +8 more
core +2 more sources

