What might we miss when Indigenous-led prayer camps for land and water protection are understood as simply a language of “protest”?
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Nepal’s September 2025 protests should be required reading for anyone who still believes social media regulation is politically neutral.
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Beyond contributing to the literature on Confucius Institutes and China’s global presence, this new study published in Third World Quarterly offers broader lessons for global cultural diplomacy.Â
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The article highlights the role of more-than-human agents — including Earth’s medicines, ancestors and sacred entities — in these spaces, moving beyond state-centric and human-centred understandings of “protest”.
🎙️ We're delighted to sponsor the conference keynote at #BISA2026!
Professor Kimberly Hutchings @qmucu.bsky.social will speak on Violence and the Meaning of Peace on 3 June, 17:00–18:30.
📍 Visit the TWQ & @globalsouthshub.bsky.social stand.
More info: indico.bisa.ac.uk/event/579/ti...
New piece by Elif Karaçimen in Third World Quarterly.
How are development finance institutions reshaping agriculture and food systems?Â
A sharp, empirically grounded read.
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New in Third World Quarterly🌍📚
Exploring the complex relationship between corruption and informal welfare systems using Pakistan as a case study.
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As #BISA2026 comes to an end, TWQ is pleased to make its special issue, “The Gaza Genocide and the Crisis of the Global North”, guest edited by Ibrahim Fraihat and Abeer Al-Najjar, free to access for June and July. Â
đź”— Access the issue here:
⏰ Reminder: #Kassahun_Checole PrizeÂ
Early Career Researchers (ECRs), including African writers and scholars writing on African contexts.
Articles accepted for publication by 1 July 2026 will be considered for the prize.
TWQ is recruiting a Coordinating Lead Editor.
đź“… Application Deadline: 01 July 2026
➡️ Read more and apply: