Danielle Gilbert wins the 2021 Merze Tate Award
Former ISCS Ph.D. student in residence Danielle Gilbert has won the 2021 Merze Tate Award from the American Political Science Association given for the best doctoral dissertation in the field of international relations, law, and...
Dr. Charles L. Glaser, Co-Director, ISCS, receives the 2021 William and Katherine Estes Award
Charles L. Glaser, George Washington University, received the 2021 William and Katherine Estes Award. Glaser has made important contributions to understanding feasible and desirable forms of nuclear arms control and ballistic missile defense in light of a constantly...
Dr. Glaser: Problems in Viewing China’s Rise as a Threat to the Liberal International Order
Dr. Glaser, professor of political science and international affairs, writes a Minerva Research Initiative blog post on whether China’s rise is a threat to liberal international order. The full article can be found...
Mylonas: After a Decade of Crisis, Greek Politics are Turning Normal and More Technocratic
Harris Mylonas, Associate Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, writes in the Washington Post blog Monkey Cage on recent elections in Greece. Read the full article...
Dr. Glaser: The G-20 is discussing the ‘international liberal order.’ That’s a bad place to start a debate.
Dr. Glaser, professor of political science and international affairs, writes for the Washington Post’s Monkey Cage on the positioning of a liberal international order in international discourse. The full article can be found...
Dr. Glaser Book Review: The Logic of American Nuclear Superiority
Dr. Glaser, professor of political science and international affairs and director of the Elliott School’s Institute for Security and Conflict Studies, is featured in an H-Diplo/ISSF roundtable on The Logic of American Nuclear Superiority by Matt Kroenig. Dr. Glaser...
Kronisch: Nonlethal Weapons Offer Victory, De-Escalation
Zachary Kronisch, Program Assistant for the Institute for Security and Conflict Studies, writes in National Defense about the potential benefits of greater policymaking emphasis on non-lethal technologies. Read the full article...
Dr. Glaser: A Flawed Framework: Why the Liberal International Order Concept Is Misguided
Dr. Glaser, professor of political science and international affairs and director of the Elliott School’s Institute for Security and Conflict Studies, writes for International Security on the concept of a liberal international order. The full article can be found...