Aims and Scope

Objective:

The International Relations, Public Communications and Regional Studies is interested in a wide range of research in the field of political science and international relations in all their diversity, and seeks to reflect and encourage the variety of intellectual traditions in the field and to promote dialogue between them. The journal, published twice a year, welcomes all research methods and analytical viewpoints that advance understanding of the practices, processes, content, effects, and policy implications of international relations, public communications and regional studies.

The Journal is an established forum for scholarship and is addressed to a global scholarly community. Rigorously peer-reviewed, it publishes the best of research on the following topics:

  • theory and history of political science,
  • political institutions and processes,
  • political culture and ideology,
  • political problems of international systems and global development,
  • ethno-political science and ethno-national studies,
  • public communications
  • regional studies
  • international economic relations
  • politology

 

Readership:

 Professors, researchers, students, and practitioners of domestic and international politics and government, and of communications. 

 

Article formats:

Original articles, research reports, review essays, and book reviews.