Browsing School of Politics and International Relations by Title
Now showing items 45-64 of 798
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“A Band Aid on a Bullet Wound”: Cosmopolitan Desire in a Pluriversal World
(Bloomsbury Publishing, 2023-01-26) -
'Better in kung fu movies than in political parties': Labour's Factionalism and a Reappraisal of Eric Hobsbawm's Political Thought
(2020-10)This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Pike, K. and Diamond, P. (2020), ‘Better in kung fu movies than in political parties’: Labour’s Factionalism and a Reappraisal of Eric Hobsbawm’s Political ... -
Beyond De-Europeanisation: rethinking the diversity of (non)-changes of post-Brexit public policies in the United Kingdom
Academic literature on Europeanisation has remained broadly optimistic regarding the transformative impact of Europe on the domestic level until the formation of a new research agenda focused on de-Europeanisation. With ... -
Beyond Hybridity to the Politics of Scale: International Intervention and 'Local' Politics
(Wiley: 24 months, 2017-01-10) -
Beyond TRIPS: Why the WTO's Doha Round is Unhealthy
(Taylor & Francis Online, 2013-09-13)The current round of World Trade Organization (wto) negotiations—the Doha Round—has significant implications for global health which have received insufficient attention from the global health community. All too often the ... -
The biopolitics of the migration-development nexus: Governing migration in the UK
While politicians in the United Kingdom (UK) have engaged in fractious debate over the appropriate way of responding to the myriad issues arising from the so-called migration or refugee crisis in recent years, there is an ... -
The birth of sensory power: How a pandemic made it visible?
(SAGE Publications, 2020-07)<jats:p> Much has been written about data politics in the last decade, which has generated myriad concepts such as ‘surveillance capitalism’, ‘gig economy’, ‘quantified self’, ‘algorithmic governmentality’, ‘data colonialism’, ... -
Book Review: Globalizing Justice: The Ethics of Poverty and Power. By Richard W. Miller
(Wiley, 2010-11-03)