News
Is regulation always bad for trust? Or can regulation and trust sometimes reinforce one another?
Thalia Gerzso has a new policy brief out
Alfred Moore edits a new book
Gyda Sindre has written a paper which discusses the prospects for political integration of armed groups in the context of contemporary dynamics of armed conflict.
Professor Indrajit Roy has co-edited a Special Collection titled "Multiplexity 2.0: Power and plurality in a post-liberal world" just published in the prestigious Chatham House journal International Affairs. In addition to co-authoring the introduction to the collection, he has also contributed an article titled "Assering Southern agency: The moralistic realism of multiplexity" to the collection.
A newly published report “Civil War Paths: A Research Programme on Civil War as a Social Process” detailing key findings of the Civil War Paths project funded by the UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship “Understanding Civil War from Pre- to Post-War Stages: A Comparative Approach” is now available to read.
Edited by José Gutiérrez Danton and Francisco Gutiérrez-Sanín, Criminality, Political Power and Conflict, discusses historically grounded processes by which politics and criminality has been built as separated spheres of human activity through conflict and state-building.
Dr Bernardo Rangoni and Professor Mark Thatcher have published a new article in New Political Economy titled Re-politicising merger policy: regulating foreign takeovers in Britain and Italy.