Other News
Panel on Tom Long’s new book on small states
New America, a prominent think tank in Washington, is hosting an online panel on small states in international relations, featuring Tom Long's new book, A Small States Guide to Influence in World Politics. The panel will be held at 13:30 EST/18:30 BST on 4 May 2022. The panel features Tom, Emily Wilkinson of ODI, and Wazim Mowla of the Atlantic Council. It will be moderated by Professor Jim Goldgeier.
RSVP here:
New Global Webinar Series: US FOREIGN POLICY – DE(CON)STRUCTED!
Scholars from City University London, Cambridge University and PAIS have joined together for an online global webinar series. The global webinar runs for six weeks and provides an alternative syllabus on US Foreign policy, connecting scholars from around the world with a global audience:
- America’s Exceptional Imperialism? The enlightenment, modernity and the making of American exceptionalism
- Global Racial Capitalism –violence and the forging of state, nation, and American empire
- America, Britain and White World Order
- The world and the violent American century
- American and a global empire of knowledge
- Imperial threat construction? Yellow peril politics, again?
The series is open to the public, students and academic staff.
To register:
IPCC Report on Climate Mitigation Cites PAIS scholars: Simon Caney & Caroline Kuzemko
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has just issued the
This research represents a global consensus on climate mitigation, sources of emissions, progress towards meeting targets, and the impact of national climate pledges on long-term emissions goals.
The report cites PAIS scholars, including six papers by Simon Caney and four by Caroline Kuzemko. Their work explores, and highlights the importance of, ethical considerations and political institutions respectively.
Seb Rumsby Writes for The Conversation
Postdoctoral Research Fellow Seb Rumsby has written an article for The Conversation, titled "Economic migration: the root problem is not smugglers but global inequality."
This piece is based on his ground-breaking new research on the everyday politics of undocumented Vietnamese migration to the UK, which is being funded by the Independent Social Research Foundation. Seb says: "Ever since the tragic deaths of 27 migrants in the UK-France channel in December 2021, I've been burning to write something in defence of economic migration, which is much maligned in our mainstream media. I want to join the dots between my own research of undocumented migrants with other people's research exposing the massive inequalities of our global economic system. From here, I can show how economic migrants have just as much right to seek a better life as asylum seekers."
"Economic migration is not going to go away - I'm afraid it will only be a matter of time before the next dinghy sinks in the English Channel. On the contrary, it's only going to get bigger with climate change making more of the planet uninhabitable. We can challenge the familiar narratives of 'they're coming to take us over' or 'there's not enough space for them all', but only if we appreciate how our economic system creates such crazy inequalities that makes economic migration inevitable."
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Oz Hassan publishes 'Reassessing the European' with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Oz Hassan has published a piece with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where he was previously a Visiting Scholar. Reassessing the European Strategy in Afghanistan analyses the EU’s approach to reconstruction efforts and democracy assistance following the 2001 invasion and shows why the EU approach was deeply flawed. It argues that the EU will now have to accept lower policy ambitions following the 2021 defeat and start adjusting to a post-American world - available here: