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Military escalation and diverging regional strategies in the Middle East

March 11, 2026

🔮 Why the 'nihilist penguin' has become a new symbol for the alt-right 

March 10, 2026

🌈 Abortion law reform in Germany amid democratic backsliding

March 10, 2026

🌈 A radical feminist kinship for democratic futures 

March 5, 2026

🌈 Digital activism: reshaping the fight against gender-based violence

March 5, 2026
March 4, 2026

☢️ US accusations of Chinese nuclear testing reshape arms control 

Syeda Saba Batool The US has accused China of carrying out a 'yield-producing' nuclear test in 2020 – but the global test-ban monitor found no supporting evidence. Syeda Saba Batool argues that the dispute matters anyway: such allegations can be used to pressure China into talks – and to normalise a possible US return to testing Read more
March 4, 2026

Old terrorism, new extremes, and Maslow’s Hammer

Valarie Findlay In recent years, many nations have reprioritised efforts to address extremism and violence emerging from social, political, and religious views and beliefs. Yet, says Valarie Findlay, despite decades of research, governments and institutions still struggle with the definitions, methods, and criteria for preventing extremism Read more
March 3, 2026

Why gender equality is stalling in the Western Balkans

Klaudia Koxha Gender equality is a fundamental EU value and a condition for the accession of new members. Yet political parties in Western Balkan candidate countries rarely prioritise it. Klaudia Koxha explains why: parties respond when Brussels and voters agree, but go quiet when their positions clash, especially on LGBTQ+ rights Read more
March 3, 2026

🦋 Data, power, and the future of democratic theory

Yida Zhai The Science of Democracy 2.0 challenges current uses of the term 'democracy'. Yida Zhai argues that these uses are not universal but culturally specific. This, he says, makes them inadequate for describing the political realities of the human species as a whole Read more
March 2, 2026

Why Russia now relies on war with Ukraine

Eban Raymond Since 2014, Russian society has become increasingly reliant on militaristic forms of self-expression. Eban Raymond argues that Russian national identity is beset by a lack of security and depends on defining itself in opposition to Ukraine, perpetuating armed aggression and making a durable peace a distant dream Read more

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Advancing Political Science
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