Volume 2, Issue 2

 

Cross-Cutting Issues in International Capital

Miroslava Filipovic

For many decades, particularly since the 1970s, markets have been praised as the most effective economic mechanisms, and the more market actors there are, the better the mechanisms work, making the world economy an ideal stage for the interplay of market forces. Different streams of liberalism and the ideas stemming from them, have emphasized the critical importance...

 

Collective Security and Unilateral Decisions - Security Prospects for the post-Soviet Space

David Erkomaishvili

Unlike anywhere else within the international community, the post-Soviet space (pSs) is unique since the states within it are bound together not only because of common history and culture, but also due to political geography and largely uniform self-perceptions. The Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) – the cultural, political, economic and security successor of the USSR – has important and even a strategic advantage over comparable organizations.

 

China's Energy Security and Geo-Economic Interests in Central Asia

Liyan Hu and Ter-Shing Cheng

Energy security, a relatively new term in international relations jargon, implies states (or other political communities) securing adequate and reliable energy supplies at stable prices. Currently, this involves securing so-called primary energy supplies which include, coal, petroleum, natural gas, hydro-electricity as well as a variety of other, alternative resources.

 

The Russian Minority in Post-Communist Politics: a Case Study of Ukraine, Moldova and Chechnya

Scott Romaniuk

From the moment the republics of the Soviet Union proclaimed their independence in 1991, the face of the Soviet ethno-cultural demographic changed significantly. Soviet dissolution was the primary expedient for the creation of the Russian diaspora, as twenty-five million Russians found themselves located in freshly created states that were re-designed as their new political homelands.

 

Establishing the Norm of Humanitarian Intervention in International Relations

Sarka Matejkova

International relations are presently in the midst of impressive change. Whether discussing traditional geopolitics, political and economic globalisation, international institutions, the rise of religious extremism, energy security, or enviro-politics, it is sure that the 21st century offers new challenges, and thus presents international relations scholars with new problematics to consider and address.

 

Pakistan at 61: An Assessment of Challenges and Opportunities

Abubakar Siddique

Sixty-one years after its independence in 1947, Pakistan still faces fundamental questions of identity, governance, state and nation-building. Despite being the only nuclear-armed Muslim country – raising Pakistan’s international political importance – more than one third of the Pakistani population still lives in extreme poverty.

 

Water and the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict

Mohammed T. Obidallah

Economically, the Middle Eastern region is primarily agricultural, which is being practiced in an arid and desert-like environment. Water is a highly politicized and naturally scarce resource in the region, and there have always been conflicts over the ownership and use of water resources. Modern history has shown that even as water supplies in the Middle East are limited, unequal use and overuse...

 


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Peer-Reviewed Articles
Volume 4, Issue 1


The Use and Effectiveness of Migration Controls as a Counter-Terrorism Instrument in the European Union

Towards Supranational Governance in EU Counter-Terrorism? ? The Role of the Commission and the Council Secretariat

Western Values and Strategic Interests? Evaluating Potential Georgian Membership in NATO

What We Talk About When We Talk About Democracy Assistance: The Problem of Definition in Post-Conflict Approaches to Democratisation

Full Table of Contents

 

Editor’s Note

The Idea of Europe

Europe has evolved beyond a simple geographic location; it is more than a set of institutions or a common economic area. Instead, Europe is a pervasive Idea based on notions of citizenship (re: political and social inclusion), human rights and justice, shared economic growth and prosperity and responsibility.


Dropping the Anchor

CEJISS Editorial

The Convention on Cluster Munitions Comes into Force

The Convention on Cluster Munitions that prohibits all usage, stockpiling, production, and transfer of cluster munitions was adopted by 107 states on 30 May 2008 in Dublin. It was signed on 03 December 2008 and it entered into force on 01 August 2010.


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Book Reviews

The hook

The Invisible Hook: The Hidden Economics of Pirates