Cyprus crisis: swan-song of the Eurozone
By Vassilis Fouskas and Constantine Dimoulas* Harsh measures imposed on Cypriot political and financial authorities to address bank failures reveal, once again, that the entire architecture of the EU...
View ArticleFurther distance between EU and Turkey might jeopardise PKK-Turkish...
By Zeynep Kaya The short-term fate of EU-Turkey accession talks will be determined with the publication of the European Commission’s Progress Report on Turkey on the 23 October 2013. The Turkish...
View ArticleExplaining the Riddle of Turkish Foreign Policy in Syria: Dilemmas, Risks and...
By Athanasios Manis Since the humanitarian crisis in Kobani made its way to world media outlets, the Turkish government has been under constant international and domestic pressure to either intervene...
View ArticleSyria’s Refugees: When did the West Become so Heartless?
By Christopher Phillips Syrian migrants rescued – Image from UNHCR. Recently I went to see Miss Saigon at the West End, a tragic musical set in the years after the Vietnam War. In one scene, the lead...
View ArticleFortress Europe: Cause or Consequence of Europe’s ‘Migrant Crisis’?
By Catherine Briddick Europe, it seems, is facing a ‘migration crisis’. This crisis is ‘testing’ for, amongst others, the British public, because, as our Prime Minister David Cameron explained in an...
View ArticleThe International Politics of the Refugee Crisis
By Vassilios Paipais Refugees roaming Greece’s central highways heading for the Greek borders Last Wednesday, Vienna hosted a meeting of Balkan countries involving Albania, Bosnia, Croatia, Kosovo,...
View ArticleRead All About It (Or Not): The Trouble with the Turkish Press
By Kate Cyr Istanbul’s 2013 Gezi Park protests unearthed muddy tales of corruption, bias, and authoritarianism that powerful conglomerates and the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) would have...
View ArticleEurope’s Human Rights Crisis
By Natasha Saunders Fidelity to one’s principles is measured by how they are honoured in times of crisis. Hannah Arendt – a refugee who fled Nazi Germany and became one of the most influential...
View ArticleThe EU-Turkey Deal: Ambiguities and Future Scenarios
By Pınar Dinç and Irem Aydemir The Arab Spring started the fire in 2011, and ever since the whole MENA region has been in turmoil. The civil war in Syria has quickly become a global one with the...
View ArticleCyprus crisis: swan-song of the Eurozone
By Vassilis Fouskas and Constantine Dimoulas* Harsh measures imposed on Cypriot political and financial authorities to address bank failures reveal, once again, that the entire architecture of the EU...
View ArticleFurther distance between EU and Turkey might jeopardise PKK-Turkish...
By Zeynep Kaya The short-term fate of EU-Turkey accession talks will be determined with the publication of the European Commission’s Progress Report on Turkey on the 23 October 2013. The Turkish...
View ArticleExplaining the Riddle of Turkish Foreign Policy in Syria: Dilemmas, Risks and...
By Athanasios Manis Since the humanitarian crisis in Kobani made its way to world media outlets, the Turkish government has been under constant international and domestic pressure to either intervene...
View ArticleSyria’s Refugees: When did the West Become so Heartless?
By Christopher Phillips Syrian migrants rescued – Image from UNHCR. Recently I went to see Miss Saigon at the West End, a tragic musical set in the years after the Vietnam War. In one scene, the lead...
View ArticleFortress Europe: Cause or Consequence of Europe’s ‘Migrant Crisis’?
By Catherine Briddick Europe, it seems, is facing a ‘migration crisis’. This crisis is ‘testing’ for, amongst others, the British public, because, as our Prime Minister David Cameron explained in an...
View ArticleThe International Politics of the Refugee Crisis
By Vassilios Paipais Refugees roaming Greece’s central highways heading for the Greek borders Last Wednesday, Vienna hosted a meeting of Balkan countries involving Albania, Bosnia, Croatia, Kosovo,...
View ArticleRead All About It (Or Not): The Trouble with the Turkish Press
By Kate Cyr Istanbul’s 2013 Gezi Park protests unearthed muddy tales of corruption, bias, and authoritarianism that powerful conglomerates and the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) would have...
View ArticleEurope’s Human Rights Crisis
By Natasha Saunders Fidelity to one’s principles is measured by how they are honoured in times of crisis. Hannah Arendt – a refugee who fled Nazi Germany and became one of the most influential...
View ArticleThe EU-Turkey Deal: Ambiguities and Future Scenarios
By Pınar Dinç and Irem Aydemir The Arab Spring started the fire in 2011, and ever since the whole MENA region has been in turmoil. The civil war in Syria has quickly become a global one with the...
View ArticleTurkish populism as a “Theory-reconstructing” case study
By Yaprak Gürsoy Although there is consensus that the AKP is a populist party it does not directly resemble European or Latin American cases of populism. By exploring the case of Turkey and its...
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