International Affairs 2005 |
Title | Subject | Authors |
'Advice is judged by results not by intentions': Why Gordon Brown is wrong about Africa.(Gordon Brown) | International relations | Taylor, Ian |
British government policy in sub-Saharan Africa under new labor. | International relations | Porteous, Tom |
Citizenship, accountability and community: The limits of the CSR agenda.(corporate social responsibility) | International relations | Newell, Peter |
Combating light weapons proliferation in West Africa. | International relations | Vines, Alex |
Consistency and inconsistencies in South Africa foreign policy. | International relations | Nathan, Laurie |
Contending cultures of counterterrorism: Transatlantic divergence or convergence? | International relations | Rees, Wyn, Aldrich, Richard J. |
Corporate accountability in South Africa: The role of community mobilizing in environmental governance. | International relations | Lund-Thomsen, Peter |
Corporate social responsibility: Reinventing the meaning of development? | International relations | Blowfield, Michael |
Empire by denial: The strange case of the United States. | International relations | Cox, Michael |
Enhancing African peace and security capacity: A useful role for the UK and the G8? | International relations | Ramsbotham, Alex, Bah, Alhaji M.S., Calder, Fanny |
Globalization, corporate social responsibility and poverty. | International relations | Jenkins, Rhys |
Greetings from the cybercaliphate: Some notes on homeland insecurity. | International relations | Jones, David Martin, Smith, M.L.R. |
'International Community' after Iraq. | International relations | Buzan, Barry, Pelaez-Gonzalez, Ana |
Killing with kindness: Funding the demise of a Palestinian state. | International relations | More, Anne Le |
Lord Castlereagh's return: The significance of Kofi Annan's high-level panel on threats, challenges and change. | International relations | Prins, Gwyn |
Lydon Johnson's war? Part 2: From escalation to negotiation. | International relations | Warner, Geoffrey |
Manufacturing amnesia: Corporate Social Responsibility in South Africa. | International relations | Fig, David |
New approaches to deterrence in Britain, France, and the United States. | International relations | Yost, David S. |
New approaches to volatility: Dealing with the 'resource curse' in sub-Saharan Africa. | International relations | Shaxson, Nicholas |
Old wine in new bottles: China-Taiwan computer-based 'information warfare' and propaganda. | International relations | Rawnsley, Gary D. |
Planning post-conflict reconstruction in Iraq: What can we learn? | International relations | Rathmell, Andrew |
South Asia's arms control process: Cricket diplomacy and the composite dialogue. | International relations | Croft, Stuart |
The collapse of British foreign policy. | International relations | Wallace, William |
'The enemy is at the gate': Russia after Beslan. | International relations | Lynch, Dov |
The false developmental promise of Corporate Social Responsibility: Evidence from multinational oil companies. | International relations | Frynas, Jedrzej George |
The future of political Islam: The importance of external variables. | International relations | Ayoob, Mohammed |
The new South Africa's foreign policy: Principles and practice. | International relations | Baraber, James |
The political support system for American primacy. | International relations | Betts, Richard K. |
The politics of corporate responsibility and child labor in the Bangladeshi garment industry. | International relations | Nielsen, Michael E. |
The predicament of 'civil society' in central Asia and the 'Greater Middle East'. | International relations | Roy, Oliver |
The right that failed? The ambiguities of conservative thought and the dilemmas of conservative practice in international affairs. | International relations | Rengger, Nicholas, Hall, Ian |
The rise and fall of the NPT: An opportunity for Britain.(Non-Proliferation Treaty) | International relations | Mccgwire, Michael |
US democracy promotion in the Arab Middle East since 11 September 2001: A critique. | International relations | Dalacoura, Katerina |
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