Other News
PAIS Awards Climate Politics Essay Prizes
To celebrate the launch of the MA in the Politics of Climate ChangeLink opens in a new windowLink opens in a new window, the Department of Politics and International Studies recently ran an essay competition.
The competition, open to any undergraduate student studying anywhere in the world, challenged entrants to submit essays on a choice of three topics: capitalism and climate change, democracy and climate change, and climate policy backlash.
PAIS would like to congratulate Leonie Cobban (University of Cambridge) and Vansika Goutham (University of Warwick) who were the respective winner and runner-up in the competition.
New publication: Akinyemi Oyawale
Akin has authored an article titled The state, Boko Haram and vernacular security: Gendering terrorism and counterterrorism in Nigeria, which is included in a Special Issue on Vernacular Security in the Security Dialogue which he also co-edited alongside Lee Jarvis and Michael Lister. You can read the article here (Open Access): https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/epub/10.1177/09670106251351869
International Partnership Fund Awarded to Akinyemi Oyawale
Akin has been awarded funds to lead an international project with two main partners in Africa. The two-year project (2025-2027) will involve a collaboration with the Centre for Media, Policy, and Accountability, Nigeria (CMPA) and The Horn of Africa Regional Environment Centre and Network (HoA-REC&N), Ethiopia on a project titled Insecurity, Migration, Environment and Resilience: Dialogues, Challenges and Everyday Politics of (In)security in Sub-Saharan Africa, to investigate how various communities and institutions negotiate these challenges, local understandings and the everyday practices which they deploy to guarantee their own safety.
New article by Alex Homolar
Alex Homolar has published a new article in the interdisciplinary journal Media, War & Conflict. ‘Narrating future war: Reimagining enmity during the collapse of bipolarity’ examines how narratives shape what matters in international relations. Focusing on elite debates on future war, the article explores how political agents within the US defence establishment reimagined the international system during the demise of the hegemonic interpretative framework that had shaped the postwar order. It argues that the reconstruction of enmity during the collapse of bipolarity should be understood as an assemblage of existing narrative elements into a new security story. The article concludes that events shape but do not determine how conceptions of what matters in international politics evolve and how future war is (re)imagined.
Read the article -> Narrating future war: Reimagining enmity during the collapse of bipolarity - Alexandra Homolar, 2025
Trump and Panama: New essay in Foreign Policy
In Foreign Policy magazine's new series "The Historical Presidency", PAIS's Tom Long and co-author Carsten-Andreas Schulz put Donald Trump's recent threats to reclaim the Panama Canal in a long-term perspective. Trump's early-term threats against Panama follow a long pattern, they argue. US governments treat the small country's sovereignty as conditional. And though Panama seemed to cave in to Trump, the isthmisan country has a long history of surprisingly successful pushback. The United States may, once again, regret overplaying its hand in the isthmian country.
Read the article -> Trump Isn't the First U.S. President to Threaten Panama's Sovereignty