All Stories

  1. The limits of weaponised interdependence after the Russian war against Ukraine
  2. Applying Identity Capital to Trade Negotiations
  3. Conclusion
  4. Generalizing Identity Capital for Explaining Trade and Populism
  5. Globalization Meets National Identity during the Doha Round
  6. Identity Capital and Fields
  7. Identity Capital and the Rise of Far-Right Populism after 2008
  8. Introduction
  9. Race and Structural Power Asymmetries in Liberalizing Brazil
  10. Religion as an Instrument for Trade Policy in India
  11. Shaping Nations and Markets
  12. Whiteness and the Rise of Protectionism in the United States
  13. Geopolitical and economic interests in environmental governance: explaining observer state status in the Arctic Council
  14. Dispositional Balancing and Hegemonic Order: US Response to China’s Financial Statecraft
  15. Domestic Institutional Design and the National Interest in Trade Negotiations
  16. The impact of new actors in global environmental politics: the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development meets China
  17. The Limits of Collective Financial Statecraft: Regional Development Banks and Voting Alignment with the United States at the United Nations General Assembly
  18. Who joins counter-hegemonic IGOs? Early and late members of the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
  19. Emerging Powers and their views on the future of WTO
  20. When Procedural Legitimacy Equals Nothing: Civil Society and Foreign Trade Policy in Brazil and Mexico
  21. The ‘Eastern Brother’: Brazil’s View of India as a Diplomatic Partner in World Trade
  22. Public and private: change and continuity in economy through two meta-fields in society
  23. Is Politics Behind Trade? The Impact of International Trends and Diplomatic Action on Brazil's Exports during Globalisation
  24. Invisible legacies: Brazil's and South Korea's shift from ISI towards export strategies under authoritarian rule
  25. The unavoidable instability of politics
  26. The ‘Eastern Brother’