What comes after American hegemony? If you are interested in this question & you are The Hague on December 10, come join us to hear about @manjeetsp.bsky.social & Amitav Acharya's book yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300... More information about the event : www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/events/20... 1/2
academic.oup.com/edited-volum...
Please feel free to access The Oxford Handbook of Norms Research in International Relations edited by @sassangholiagha.bsky.social @philorchard.bsky.social @antjewiener.bsky.social
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A study of why the ancient Mediterranean and Indian Ocean took different paths to peace and stability and its lessons for international order today In thi...
yalebooks.yale.edu
academic.oup.com/book/62001/c...
New book OPEN ACCESS
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This chapter introduces #deepcontestation and explains the distinction between normal contestation, which permits gradual adaptation, and deep contestation, which rejects foundational norms and threatens systemic stability.
@scripts-berlin.eu
Thrilled to share this: An alternative macrohistory of the LIO and the emerging decentered world order. Many thanks to the editors, David Lake, Thomas Risse, and especially @antjewiener.bsky.social! Open access: doi.org/10.1093/9780...
Abstract. Norms research in International Relations (IR) has developed sufficiently over the past 35 years to become its own subdiscipline within the field
NEW PUB: #DeepContestations of the Liberal International Order @academic.oup.com #OpenAccess
@manjeetsp.bsky.social
@ndeitelhoff.bsky.social
@kathrynsikkink.bsky.social
@scripts-berlin.eu
@esrah.uni-hamburg.de
@politikuhh.bsky.social
@uni-hamburg.de
@hugheshall.bsky.social
Many thanks to Jaeyoung Kim for a very generous review of my book, Divergent Worlds, with Amitav Acharya in Contemporary Southeast Asia @yalepress.bsky.social
bookshop.iseas.edu.sg/publication/...
Abstract. This introductory chapter examines the Liberal International Order (LIO), its evolution since the Second World War, and its present state of deep
Podcast! Wonderful chatting with Wrenn Yennie Lindgren, Senior Research Fellow @nupinytt.bsky.social on the passing of the liberal international order & what follows the end of American hegemony. (Southeast) Asian history can help us navigate our global future! www.nupi.no/en/news/navi...
“The world without hegemony” — A long-form article based on my book with Amitav! Many thanks to Sam Haselby! @yalepress.bsky.social
Is the liberal international order coming to an end, and what follows the era of American hegemony? In this episode of The World Stage, Senior Research Fellow Wrenn Yennie Lindgren (NUPI) sits down wi...
www.nupi.no
Antje Wiener
Antje Wiener
Antje Wiener
Happy to announce the 1st ever @isanet.bsky.social conference in South Asia in August 2026. Hosted in Colombo, Sri Lanka, we welcome proposals from scholars based in and/or studying South Asian politics & international relations, but also broader global themes ofc www.isanet.org/Conferences/...
Truly thrilled and honored that our book is the co-winner of ISA's T. V. Paul Best Book in Global International Relations Award! @yalepress.bsky.social @isanet.bsky.social yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300...
A study of why the ancient Mediterranean and Indian Ocean took different paths to peace and stability and its lessons for international order today In thi...
Southeast Asian history shows us that there are other pathways to international order and that, contrary to Western modes of thinking, a hegemonic power is not required for stability
As Pax Americana ends, a multipolar order is emerging. The history of Southeast Asia holds lessons for what’s to come