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2nd Annual PAIS Research Conference

2nd Annual PAIS Research Conference - Thursday 30 June 2016

The Department of Politics and International Studies (PAIS) invite you to a one-day research conference for researchers across the discipline of political science and international relations.

The aim of the conference is to provide an opportunity for researchers in PAIS at all career levels to celebrate their research and receive useful feedback on work in progress.

PAIS Research Conference 2016 Programme

2nd Annual PAIS Research Conference 2016 poster

Tue 21 Jun 2016, 11:01 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Research

PAIS appoints new Research and Teaching Fellow in Middle East Politics

Sara SalemWe are delighted to introduce Sara Salem as the new Research and Teaching Fellow in Middle East Politics in PAIS. Sara will be supporting Dr Nicola Pratt’s AHRC-funded project, ‘Politics and Popular Culture in Egypt: Contested Narratives of the 25 January Revolution and its Aftermath’, and teaching a module on Middle East Politics. She will join us in September 2016 from the Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus University, where she is currently completing her PhD in International Political Economy.

Tue 21 Jun 2016, 09:57 | Tags: Staff Research

Richard Aldrich Appears on BBC Booktalk

recently appeared on BBC Booktalk, alongside co-author Rory Cormac, talking to Mark D'Arcy about their new book The Black Door: Spies, Secret Intelligence and British Prime Ministers, on the relationships between prime ministers and the intelligence agencies.

Richard Aldrich Booktalk

Fri 17 Jun 2016, 10:51 | Tags: Staff Research

Ragnar Weilandt Writes on Why Austria Almost Elected a Fascist President

In an , PAIS PhD researcher explains three very Austrian causes that explain why the country almost elected a fascist president.

Wed 15 Jun 2016, 11:04 | Tags: Staff PhD Postgraduate Undergraduate

Vincenzo Bove Gives Seminar at the European Commission

has recently given a seminar on "International Migration and the Security Environment" at the European Commission - Joint Research Centre (JRC).

Seminar Abstract:

The recent decades have seen a substantial increase in global migration. This phenomenon critically challenges the territorial state as a bounded entity and it is a key issue on the security agenda of many countries. We explore two consequences of migration on national and international security: terrorism and military intervention. On one hand, migration inflows can lead to the diffusion of policies, ideologies and behavior, including terrorism. Using spatial-econometric analyses, we find that terrorism “at home” increases with a larger number of immigrants from countries with terrorism, suggesting that migrants can be an important vehicle through which terrorism diffuses. Yet, our results also indicate that migrant inflows per se actually lead to a lower level of terrorist attacks. On the other hand, migrants can be a bridge between homeland and hostland and shape foreign policies of the host country. Using a nearly-exhaustive dataset on civil wars and military interventions since 1945, we find that migrants act a conduit for foreign military intervention across country pairs.

Wed 15 Jun 2016, 10:27 | Tags: Staff PhD Research

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