7) We hope you enjoy the new issue of International Security!
Fall 2025: direct.mit.edu/isec/issue
@intsecurity
International Security is America's leading peer-reviewed journal of security affairs. It provides sophisticated analyses of contemporary, theoretical, and historical security issues. International Security is edited at @belfercenter.bsky.social.
7) We hope you enjoy the new issue of International Security!
Fall 2025: direct.mit.edu/isec/issue
6) โTo Agree or Not to Agree: Hawks, Doves, and Regime Type in International Rivalry and Rapprochement,โ by @mikegoldfien.bsky.social
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
5) โBetween a Rock and a Hard Place: How Clients Evade Patronsโ Costly Strategic Demands,โ by Dong Jung Kim
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
4) โConventional Deterrence of Nuclear Use,โ by @ajmount.bsky.social
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
3) โU.S. Space Power and Alliance Dynamics in the Cold War,โ by @aaronbateman.bsky.social
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
This article is Open Access.
2) Articles from the issue include:
โThe Rules-Based International Order: A Historical Analysis,โ by Marc Trachtenberg
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
This article is ungated thanks to @mitpress.bsky.social.
1) ***Announcement***
The new Fall 2025 issue is online!
Read articles by Marc Trachtenberg, @aaronbateman.bsky.social, @ajmount.bsky.social, Dong Jung Kim, and @mikegoldfien.bsky.social
direct.mit.edu/isec/issue
@mitpress.bsky.social @belfercenter.bsky.social
This is an intriguing new @intsecurity.bsky.social article on China as essentially a status quo power challenging US assumptions of high aggression
direct.mit.edu/isec/article...
A USโUSSR limited war was unlikely due to land theater & limited precision, yet USโChina tensions, centered on a maritime theater with precision & non-kinetic weapons, make a limited regional nuclear war over Taiwan more likely, argue Henrik Hiim & รystein Tunsjรธ @intsecurity.bsky.social 10/10
Worth a read
Great piece on Iraq in this season's issue of @intsecurity.bsky.social @belfercenter.bsky.social
Terrific issue. @belfercenter.bsky.social
@drjlhazelton.bsky.social @belfercenter.bsky.social @mitpress.bsky.social @ssp-mit.bsky.social
We hope you enjoy the new issue of International Security!
Summer 2025: direct.mit.edu/isec/issue
โThe U.S.-China Stability-Instability Paradox: Limited War in East Asia,โ by Henrik Hiim and รystein Tunsjรธ
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
โAccess Denied? The Sino-American Contest for Military Primacy in Asia,โ by Nick Anderson and Daryl Press
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
โKeeping Pace with the Times: Chinaโs Arms Control Tradition, New Challenges, and Nuclear Learning,โ by Wu Riqiang
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
โWhat Does China Want?โ by @daveckang.bsky.social, Jackie S. H. Wong, and @zenobiachan.bsky.social
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
This article is ungated thanks to @mitpress.bsky.social.
Articles from the issue include:
โKnowing What Not to Know About Islamic State: Terrorism Studies and Public Secrecy,โ by @drsarahphillips.bsky.social and Daniel Tower
doi.org/10.1162/ISEC...
This article is Open Access.
***Announcement***
The Summer 2025 issue is online!
Read articles by @drsarahphillips.bsky.social and Daniel Tower; @daveckang.bsky.socialโฌ, Jackie S. H. Wong, and @zenobiachan.bsky.social; Wu Riqiang; Nick Anderson and Daryl Press; and Henrik Hiim and รystein Tunsjรธ
direct.mit.edu/isec/issue
Summer 2025 issue preview! @intsecurity.bsky.social โช@mitpress.bsky.socialโฌ
Phillips & Tower โก๏ธ ISIS
Kang, Wong, โช@zenobiachan.bsky.socialโฌ โก๏ธ What does China want?
Wu Riqiang โก๏ธ Chinaโs views on arms control
Anderson & Press โก๏ธ Military primacy in Asia
Hiim & Tunsjo โก๏ธ Limited war in East Asia
International Security Summer 2025 issue preview: ISIS, what does China want? China on arms control, military primacy in Asia, limited war in East Asia
Summer 2025 issue preview: ISIS, what does China want? China on arms control, military primacy in Asia, limited war in East Asia @daveckang.bsky.social @zenobiachan.bsky.social @mitpress.bsky.social @belfercenter.bsky.social @dartmouthdickey.bsky.social @intsecurity.bsky.social
@senerakturk.bsky.social's fascinating International Security article, "Not So Innocent: Clerics, Monarchs, and the Ethnoreligious Cleansing of Western Europeโ wins the Outstanding Article Award from APSA International History and Politics Section direct.mit.edu/isec/article...
@mitpress.bsky.social @belfercenter.bsky.social @apsa.bsky.social
Language Machines is out today, can be ordered from @uminnpress.bsky.social www.upress.umn.edu/978151791932... - gathering a few parergonal writings below 1/
www.nytimes.com/2025/05/23/o...
Live now. The Realist Debate Over How to Respond to China. With @stephenwalt.bsky.social @belfercenter.bsky.social @mitpress.bsky.social @dartmouthdickey.bsky.social @dartmouthartsci.bsky.social international-security.simplecast.com/episodes/7-t...
A short piece from the new issue of International Security: "Monks Behaving Badly: Explaining Buddhist Violence in Asia" thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/monks-behavi... Great piece. @intsecurity.bsky.social @pearson-edits.bsky.social @belfercenter.bsky.social @mitpress.bsky.social
7) We hope you enjoy the new issue of International Security!
Spring 2025: direct.mit.edu/isec/issue/4...
6) โLost in Transmission: Bureaucracy, Noise, and Communication in International Politics,โ by @doncasler.bsky.social and Tyler Jost.
doi.org/10.1162/isec...
This article is Open Access.