About this book series

Ample empirical evidence points to recent power shifts in multiple areas of international relations taking place between industrialized countries and emerging powers, as well as between states and non-state actors. However, there is a dearth of theoretical interpretation and synthesis of these findings, and a growing need for coherent approaches to understand and measure the transformation. The central issues to be addressed include theoretical questions and empirical puzzles: How can studies of global power shift and the rise of ‘emerging powers’ benefit from existing theories, and which alternative aspects and theoretical approaches might be suitable? How can the meanings, perceptions, dynamics, and consequences of global power shift be determined and assessed? This edited series will include highly innovative research on these topics. It aims to bring together scholars from all major world regions as well as different disciplines, including political science, economics and human geography. The overall aim is to discuss and possibly blend their different approaches and provide new frameworks for understanding global affairs and the governance of global power shifts.

All titles in this series are peer-reviewed. 

This book series is indexed in Scopus.
Electronic ISSN
2198-7351
Print ISSN
2198-7343
Series Editor
  • Xuewu Gu

Book titles in this series

  1. Cyber Sovereignty

    International Security, Mass Communication, and the Future of the Internet

    Authors:
    • Lev Topor
    • Copyright: 2024

    Available Renditions

    • Hard cover
    • eBook

Abstracted and indexed in

  1. SCOPUS