- The Department of State Report on “Mutual Assured Stability: Essential Components and Near-Term Actions” (PDF) deserves a thorough analysis.
- Japanese exports are down, but the country’s growth outlook remains better than most advanced industrial democracies.
- Josh Keating looks at the fate of academics, reporters, and dissidents identified in wikileaks cables. For the record, this is the argument I made to colleagues in order to explain the evil of wikileaks.
- Michael Cohen on Ferguson’s and Frum’s criticisms of Obama foreign policy.
- Jay provides his “mid-career reflections on non-academic work for social scientists”
- The relationship among narrative, theme, and editing in The Hunger Games (via SEK).
Daniel H. Nexon is a Professor at Georgetown University, with a joint appointment in the Department of Government and the School of Foreign Service. His academic work focuses on international-relations theory, power politics, empires and hegemony, and international order. He has also written on the relationship between popular culture and world politics.
He has held fellowships at Stanford University's Center for International Security and Cooperation and at the Ohio State University's Mershon Center for International Studies. During 2009-2010 he worked in the U.S. Department of Defense as a Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellow. He was the lead editor of International Studies Quarterly from 2014-2018.
He is the author of The Struggle for Power in Early Modern Europe: Religious Conflict, Dynastic Empires, and International Change (Princeton University Press, 2009), which won the International Security Studies Section (ISSS) Best Book Award for 2010, and co-author of Exit from Hegemony: The Unraveling of the American Global Order (Oxford University Press, 2020). His articles have appeared in a lot of places. He is the founder of the The Duck of Minerva, and also blogs at Lawyers, Guns and Money.
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