# | Title | Journal | Year | Citations |
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1 | COVID-19 and emergency eLearning: Consequences of the securitization of higher education for post-pandemic pedagogy | Contemporary Security Policy | 2020 | 484 |
2 | The coming multi-order world | Contemporary Security Policy | 2016 | 126 |
3 | Constructing Ontological Insecurity: The Insecuritization of Britain's Muslims | Contemporary Security Policy | 2012 | 124 |
4 | Resilience as the EU Global Strategy’s new leitmotif: pragmatic, problematic or promising? | Contemporary Security Policy | 2016 | 101 |
5 | Non-State Armed Actors, New Imagined Communities, and Shifting Patterns of Sovereignty and Insecurity in the Modern World | Contemporary Security Policy | 2009 | 91 |
6 | The Fourth Wave in Deterrence Research | Contemporary Security Policy | 2010 | 89 |
7 | NATO Burden-Sharing Redux: Continuity and Change after the Cold War | Contemporary Security Policy | 2010 | 82 |
8 | The making of the EU Global Strategy | Contemporary Security Policy | 2016 | 68 |
9 | Contemporary Russian Messianism and New Russian Foreign Policy | Contemporary Security Policy | 2014 | 65 |
10 | Culture, security, multilateralism: The ‘ASEAN way’ and regional order | Contemporary Security Policy | 1998 | 64 |
11 | Re-Thinking European Security Interests and the ESDP: Explaining the EU's Anti-Piracy Operation | Contemporary Security Policy | 2009 | 64 |
12 | Failed States and International Order: Constructing a Post-Westphalian World | Contemporary Security Policy | 2009 | 59 |
13 | Gangs as Non-State Armed Groups: The Central American Case | Contemporary Security Policy | 2009 | 59 |
14 | A Cyberwar of Ideas? Deterrence and Norms in Cyberspace | Contemporary Security Policy | 2012 | 57 |
15 | The increasing insecurity of security studies: Conceptualizing security in the last twenty years | Contemporary Security Policy | 1999 | 56 |
16 | When Interdependence Produces Conflict: EU–Russia Energy Relations as a Security Dilemma | Contemporary Security Policy | 2015 | 53 |
17 | Cyber security meets security politics: Complex technology, fragmented politics, and networked science | Contemporary Security Policy | 2020 | 52 |
18 | ‘Message in a bottle'? Theory and praxis in critical security studies | Contemporary Security Policy | 1995 | 51 |
19 | Resilience and the role of the European Union in the world | Contemporary Security Policy | 2020 | 49 |
20 | NATO expansion: A realist's view | Contemporary Security Policy | 2000 | 48 |
21 | Security through societal resilience: Contemporary challenges in the Anthropocene | Contemporary Security Policy | 2020 | 48 |
22 | Resilience in EU and international institutions: Redefining local ownership in a new global governance agenda | Contemporary Security Policy | 2020 | 48 |
23 | Russo–Chinese Strategic Partnership: A New Form of Security Cooperation? | Contemporary Security Policy | 2008 | 47 |
24 | War evolves into the fourth generation | Contemporary Security Policy | 2005 | 46 |
25 | The black market in small arms: Examining a social network | Contemporary Security Policy | 2006 | 46 |
26 | Contested public attributions of cyber incidents and the role of academia | Contemporary Security Policy | 2020 | 46 |
27 | Time to Move On: Reconceptualizing the Strategic Culture Debate | Contemporary Security Policy | 2012 | 45 |
28 | Mediation in Syria: initiatives, strategies, and obstacles, 2011–2016 | Contemporary Security Policy | 2016 | 44 |
29 | Reclaiming the local in EU peacebuilding: Effectiveness, ownership, and resistance | Contemporary Security Policy | 2018 | 44 |
30 | When are strategic narratives effective? The shaping of political discourse through the interaction between political myths and strategic narratives | Contemporary Security Policy | 2018 | 44 |
31 | How viable is international arms control for military artificial intelligence? Three lessons from nuclear weapons | Contemporary Security Policy | 2019 | 44 |
32 | Introduction: The Challenge of Non-State Armed Groups | Contemporary Security Policy | 2009 | 43 |
33 | The Challenge of Community-Based Armed Groups: Towards a Conceptualization of Militias, Gangs, and Vigilantes | Contemporary Security Policy | 2015 | 43 |
34 | All or nothing? The EU Global Strategy and defence policy after the Brexit | Contemporary Security Policy | 2016 | 43 |
35 | From the ESS to the EU Global Strategy: external policy, internal purpose | Contemporary Security Policy | 2016 | 43 |
36 | Peace enforcement in Africa: Doctrinal distinctions between the African Union and United Nations | Contemporary Security Policy | 2017 | 43 |
37 | Humanitarian Arms Control and Processes of Securitization: Moving Weapons along the Security Continuum | Contemporary Security Policy | 2011 | 41 |
38 | Fighting for freetown: British military intervention in Sierra Leone | Contemporary Security Policy | 2001 | 40 |
39 | Bandwagoning, Not Balancing: Why Europe Confounds Realism | Contemporary Security Policy | 2012 | 40 |
40 | Valuing and Devaluing Nuclear Weapons | Contemporary Security Policy | 2013 | 40 |
41 | Why Russia attacked Ukraine: Strategic culture and radicalized narratives | Contemporary Security Policy | 2022 | 40 |
42 | Small Arms Control and the Reproduction of Imperial Relations | Contemporary Security Policy | 2011 | 39 |
43 | EU Strategic Culture: When the Means Becomes the End | Contemporary Security Policy | 2011 | 39 |
44 | Deterrence beyond the State: The Israeli Experience | Contemporary Security Policy | 2012 | 37 |
45 | Peacebuilding as developmentalism: Concepts from disaster research | Contemporary Security Policy | 1995 | 36 |
46 | The International Health Regulations, COVID-19, and bordering practices: Who gets in, what gets out, and who gets rescued? | Contemporary Security Policy | 2020 | 36 |
47 | The Russian Interventions in South Ossetia and Crimea Compared: Military Performance, Legitimacy and Goals | Contemporary Security Policy | 2014 | 35 |
48 | The Failure of a European Strategic Culture – EUFOR CHAD: The Last of its Kind? | Contemporary Security Policy | 2011 | 34 |
49 | Security sector reform in Africa: Donor approaches versus local needs | Contemporary Security Policy | 2017 | 34 |
50 | Not lost in contestation: How norm entrepreneurs frame norm development in the nuclear nonproliferation regime | Contemporary Security Policy | 2018 | 34 |