The Duck of Minerva
Who is behind the terrorist attack in ankara, the return of civil political discourse.
by Leah Windsor | 2 October 2024, 18.58 EDT | Various and Sundry | 0
Last night’s Vice Presidential debate was a textbook lesson in how to agree to disagree civilly....
6+1 Questions about “The Fossil-Fueled Roots of Climate Inaction in Authoritarian Regimes”
by William Kakenmaster | 26 September 2024, 09.00 EDT | 6+1 Questions , Environment & Energy | 0
What is the name of the journal article (or book) and what are its coordinates? What is the name...
Migration as the Outcome of States’ War against Nations
by Sabah Mofidi | 23 September 2024, 11.22 EDT | Human Rights , International Law | 2
While immigration has not only continued but also increased in recent years, the strict stances of...
What to Do About Clausewitz: Saving Strategic Studies From Itself
by Van Jackson | 19 August 2024, 17.36 EDT | Security , Theory & Methods | 0
“A specter is haunting strategic studies—the specter of peace.” These bizarre words are from...
by Leah Windsor | 2 October 2024, 1858 EDT | Various and Sundry
Last night’s Vice...
by William Kakenmaster | 26 September 2024, 0900 EDT | 6+1 Questions , Environment & Energy
What is the name...
by Sabah Mofidi | 23 September 2024, 1122 EDT | Human Rights , International Law
While immigration...
Jamie Frueh
by Brent Steele | 12 August 2024, 17.58 EDT | Featured , Hayseed Scholar | 0
Associate Provost and W. Harold Row Professor of Global Politics Jamie Frueh, of Bridgewater...
Bloody Carnival
by Lisa Gaufman | 15 July 2024, 09.51 EDT | Academia , Featured , Political Posting | 0
A lot of ink has been spilled and bytes spent on the reflections over Trump’s failed...
The Frontier Politics of Horizon
by Andrew Szarejko | 5 July 2024, 16.15 EDT | Featured , Nerdblogging , US Foreign Policy | 0
In the recent Settling for Less: Why States Colonize and Why They Stop, Lachlan McNamee makes a...
And All That Jezebel
by Lisa Gaufman | 5 August 2024, 17.53 EDT | Gender , Race | 0
Ah, the avalanche of racism and misogyny that came after the Kamala Harris announcement. The...
Was the Trump shooting terrorism?
by Peter Henne | 15 July 2024, 12.54 EDT | Security | 0
The implications of the attempted assassination of Donald Trump over the weekend remain unclear....
The Munich Agreement, but Negotiated by Oswald Mosley
by Dan Nexon | 12 July 2024, 11.20 EDT | Political Posting , States & Regions , US Foreign Policy | 0
When I was but a lad, it was still quite common for foreign-policy hawks to invoke “Munich” as an...
Susan Sell: The Power of Mentorship and Example
by Maria Rost Rublee | 26 April 2024, 10.40 EDT | 0
This is the fifth in our series of remembrances on the late Susan Sell. There was a terrific...
On reckoning and repair in the international: revisiting imperialism and race in IR
by Jasmine K. Gani & Jenna Marshall | 5 April 2024, 10.30 EDT | 0
THe short-term contributions of the Special Issue have been worthwhile, but there remains a continued concern and challenge that with greater attention paid to race and imperialism in IR, these issues will become co-opted into the game of academic production, sanitised as intellectual curiosities, instead of being treated as matters of life and death that need to be opposed practically and not just on paper.
6 + 1 Questions about “Compliance in the Inter-American Court of Human Rights”
by Anibal Pérez-Liñán & Angie García Atehortúa | 6 June 2024, 06.33 EDT | 0
1. What is the name of the article and what are its coordinates? Aníbal Pérez-Liñán and Angie...
6+1 Questions about “The Diplomacy of Whataboutism”
by Wilfred Chow & Dov H. Levin | 29 April 2024, 09.30 EDT | 0
Does Whataboutism work? A new article has answers.
Subfields & Subjects
The contradictions of “progressive realism,” and how to overcome them.
by Van Jackson | 13 May 2024, 05.23 EDT | 0
Labour MP David Lammy has a new piece in Foreign Affairs called, “The Case for Progressive...
Leaders’ preambles and world ordering in national security strategy documents: the (un)surprising global strategic ambitions of the US and UK
by Andrew Neal | 1 March 2024, 09.00 EST | 0
126 countries now publish a national security strategy or defense document, and 45 of these feature a leaders’ preambles. How these talk about the world, or not, is surprisingly revealing of historical global strategic hierarchies.
Ordering Power: Hegemonic Architecture in a Multipolar World?
by Van Jackson | 21 November 2023, 14.07 EST | 3
Who, if anyone, rules the world? Answering a question like that requires grappling with both the...
How do we get people to care about migrants?
by Peter Henne | 15 August 2023, 14.43 EDT | 0
Earlier this week, a boat carrying migrants fleeing Afghanistan sank in the English Channel,...
Eurovision suggests both sides on Israel-Palestine need to invest in some public diplomacy
by Peter Henne | 13 May 2024, 15.22 EDT | 1
Last year I was on a sabbatical in Edinburgh, and my family and I watched Eurovision for the first...
On the politics of decolonization theory and practice
by Heloise Weber | 5 April 2024, 10.00 EDT | 0
International institutional policy, shaped by a globally entrenched explanatory framework of development and underdevelopment, perpetuates the suppression of knowledge production aimed at challenging social, economic, and political injustices by elites across the global South
Driving while looking in the rearview mirror
by Leah Windsor | 8 March 2024, 10.04 EST | 0
The takeaway from last night’s State of the Union address is that Biden’s language...
When is it ok to express concern about persecuted Christians?
by Peter Henne | 18 December 2023, 11.19 EST | 0
The ongoing war in Gaza has stretched on for over two months after the horrific October 7 attack...
A reckoning with the traditional diplomatic community
by Patrick Quinton-Brown | 5 April 2024, 09.30 EDT | 0
Intra-elite, state-centric society is a strategic front, and ought to be defended and put to use in the continued development of a global and decolonial turn in IR.
Patriarchy and the Cult of Coercion: Pale, Male, and Stale Will Make Deterrence Fail
by Van Jackson | 21 August 2023, 18.26 EDT | 0
Carol Cohn is the G.O.A.T. Back in 1987, she wrote what is still the best gendered take on the...
Germany: Climate Disappointment of the Year
by Jeff Colgan | 29 December 2023, 09.45 EST | 2
With a symbolically successful COP28 and substantively significant investments in clean energy...
The WHO Recommends Avoiding Border Closures During Pandemics. Why Did People Want Them Closed During COVID-19 Outbreaks?
by Yoshiharu Kobayashi, Menevis Cilizoglu, Tobias Heinrich & William Christiansen | 10 July 2023, 19.22 EDT | 0
Despite existing international regulations advising countries to coordinate and minimize border...
by Brent Steele | 12 August 2024 | Featured , Hayseed Scholar | 0 Comments
Sebastian Kaempf
by Brent Steele | 11 April 2024 | Featured , Hayseed Scholar | 0 Comments
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If you can fix everything that simply must be fixed in 6 months, then I'd say maybe it's worth going for it. If you can fix all that in 4 months, and then fix medium to minor stuff for a month and revise for a month, all the better.
Writing a PhD thesis required a good deal of planning, thinking and quiet reflection. This is a process that could take between six and 12 months of essentially full-time writing, …
Most academics will admit to themselves and students that the majority of dissertations and books are written in a 6 month block of time (the remainder of the post focuses on a PhD process, but it can be easily applied to …
What many students don’t realize is how long it takes to write a PhD thesis. The process of writing can stretch out, especially when you factor in: coursework, fieldwork, and; …
If you have been organised (see below), it should not take 3 months to write a PhD thesis. It certainly shouldn’t involve leaving the lab 3 months before your hand-in date to write …
1. Selecting a Research Title to Write a PhD thesis. Choose a specific, relevant, and feasible research title aligned with your interests and the existing literature. 2. Creating a Structured Plan: Develop a detailed plan with …
Handle the admin early. The end of a PhD is surprisingly bureaucratic and typically every formal stage will involve supporting paperwork, says Russell. Forms for thesis submission, ethical ...
Creating a structured schedule helps you keep track of your deadlines, work obligations, and dissertation progress. The key here is prioritisation. A good place to start is by making a …