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An update from the European Journal of International Security
Our journal European Journal of International Security (EJIS) bring you their latest updates.
We are delighted to announce that EJIS Vol.10 No.3 has been released. It holds three new articles, as well as a five-paper special section on 'Threat Perception and International Security'.
Janice Gross Stein's Radical uncertainty and pragmatism: Threat perception and response brings a pragmatic perspective to the analysis of threat perception by joining perception (or knowledge) together with response (or action), and explores threat perception and response under the condition of radical uncertainty.
Eitan Oren's How leaders perceive security dangers: The neglected dimension of unfolding experience develops a "danger framework" by integrating a framework developed by linguist Ray Jackendoff to describe the experience of language with the study of danger in International Relations, and by employing an interpretive textual analysis technique to danger descriptions made by world leaders embedded in different historical and cultural settings constructing different security dangers.
Duncan Depledge and Tamiris Santos' article The UK Ministry of Defence and the transition to ‘low-carbon warfare’ A multilevel perspective on military change has proven especially timely and makes a valuable contribution to understanding why the struggle for military change often unfolds in non-linear ways.
EJIS has also published a spate of brilliant new (and open access) articles over the last month, including the incredibly popular Sand in the gears: Sabotage in world politics by Joshua Rovner, Rory Cormac, and Lennart Maschmeyer, Atomic responsiveness: How public opinion shapes elite beliefs and preferences on nuclear weapon use by Michel Smetana, Lauren Sukin, Stephen Herzog, and Marek Vranka, and Karen-Anna Eggen and Jyri Lavikainen's Implementing a new tool: Russia’s strategic use of migrants towards Norway and Finland 2015/16.
Take a look at the full list of papers.
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