New Issue of IPSR Published - June 2022
Publication date: Mon, 06 Jun 2022
The latest issue of the International Political Science Review (IPSR) for June 2022 (Volume 43, Number 3) includes a special collection on Brexit with seven articles titled The Brexit effect: Political implications of the exit of the United Kingdom from the European Union. The collection is guest edited by Gianfranco Baldini and Nicola Chelotti. Also included in the issue are three regular articles and a thank you note to all reviewers in 2021.
The special collection explores how Brexit has impacted the territorial integrity of the UK, its political parties, parliament and critical areas of governance such as security cooperation and financial regulation. The first of the additional articles by Yildirim et al., explores agenda dynamics and policy processes in military regimes using case study data from Turkey, while the second article by Park and Choi looks at the effects of broad and narrow UN sanctions on domestic populations. And finally, Yates uses a qualitative life-story-and-family-history method to compare two republican family dynasties in North Korea and Syria.
IPSA members can access the full IPSR archive dating back to 1980 through the My IPSA menu. IPSA’s flagship journal, IPSR, is published by SAGE and is committed to publishing peer-reviewed material that makes a significant contribution to international political science.
Special Issue: The Brexit effect: Political implications of the exit of the United Kingdom from the European Union
The Brexit effect: Political implications of the exit of the United Kingdom from the European Union
Gianfranco Baldini and Nicola Chelotti
Back to the Westminster model? The Brexit process and the UK political system
Gianfranco Baldini, Edoardo Bressanelli and Emanuele Massetti
Brexit and party change: The Conservatives and Labour at Westminster
Richard Hayton
Brexit and the future of the UK constitution
Stuart White
Brexit and the union: Territorial voice, exit and re-entry strategies in Scotland and Northern Ireland after EU exit
Nicola McEwen and Mary C Murphy
Rule maker or rule taker? Brexit, finance and UK regulatory autonomy
Scott James and Lucia Quaglia
When politics trumps strategy: UK–EU security collaboration after Brexit
Benjamin Martill and Monika Sus
Articles
Agenda dynamics and policy priorities in military regimes
T Murat Yildirim, Alper T Bulut and Emel Ilter
Are smart sanctions smart enough? An inquiry into when leaders oppress civilians under UN targeted sanctions
Jiyoun Park and Hyun Jin Choi
Dynastic rule in Syria and North Korea: Nepotism, succession, and sibling rivalry
Douglas A Yates
Thank You to Reviewers