| 1 | Conceptualizing epistemic violence: an interdisciplinary assemblage for IR | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 65 |
| 2 | Race and racism in international relations: retrieving a scholarly inheritance | International Politics Reviews | 2020 | 36 |
| 3 | Counterterrorism and race | International Politics Reviews | 2020 | 31 |
| 4 | Resurrecting Mudimbe | International Politics Reviews | 2020 | 27 |
| 5 | You can’t keep a bad idea down: Evolutionary biology and international relations | International Politics Reviews | 2013 | 21 |
| 6 | Critical international politics at an impasse: reflexivist, reformist, reactionary, and restitutive post-critique | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 17 |
| 7 | Global justice and race | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 16 |
| 8 | Author’s response: International politics reviews symposium on Narrative and the Making of US National Security | International Politics Reviews | 2016 | 12 |
| 9 | Dying to fight: Some reflections on zombies and war | International Politics Reviews | 2013 | 9 |
| 10 | IR as inter-cosmological relations? | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 9 |
| 11 | LGBTQ politics and International Relations: Here? Queer? Used to it? | International Politics Reviews | 2014 | 8 |
| 12 | On the pitfalls of geo-cultural pluralism in IR | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 7 |
| 13 | Lessons in coalition warfare: Past, present and implications for the future | International Politics Reviews | 2013 | 6 |
| 14 | The Global Transformation | International Politics Reviews | 2015 | 6 |
| 15 | A war worth fighting? The Libyan intervention in restrospect | International Politics Reviews | 2015 | 6 |
| 16 | Assessing young people’s political engagement: A critical and systematic literature review of the instruments used to measure political engagement | International Politics Reviews | 2016 | 6 |
| 17 | Domains of Objects, Rituals of truth: Mapping Intersections between International Legal History and the New Materialisms | International Politics Reviews | 2020 | 6 |
| 18 | Diversity for and by whom? Knowledge production and the management of diversity in international relations | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 6 |
| 19 | Discussion of the Forum | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 6 |
| 20 | The master’s ‘outlook’ shall never dismantle the master’s house | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 6 |
| 21 | The struggle for recognition, ontological security and the case of China as a rising power | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 6 |
| 22 | Making sense of girls empowerment in Sierra Leone: a conversation | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 6 |
| 23 | Comparative regionalism: Still emerging, already to be reformed? | International Politics Reviews | 2016 | 5 |
| 24 | Forum: International Relations as a geoculturally pluralistic field | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 5 |
| 25 | The external perceptions literature and the construction of gaps in European Union foreign policy | International Politics Reviews | 2014 | 4 |
| 26 | Post-Brexit Britain: Thinking about ‘English Nationalism’ as a factor in the EU referendum | International Politics Reviews | 2017 | 4 |
| 27 | The systemic challenge of global heating | International Politics Reviews | 2018 | 4 |
| 28 | Brexitology: delving into the books on Brexit | International Politics Reviews | 2019 | 4 |
| 29 | Global discipline, global thought, global culture: of category-errors and the hubris of scholastic agency | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 4 |
| 30 | Canada: Revisiting the end of the ‘middle power’ | International Politics Reviews | 2014 | 3 |
| 31 | NGOs and Climate Advocacy | International Politics Reviews | 2015 | 3 |
| 32 | Ronald R. Krebs Narrative and the Making of US National Security (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2015) | International Politics Reviews | 2016 | 3 |
| 33 | Beyond Boomerang | International Politics Reviews | 2020 | 3 |
| 34 | A case for re-thinking geo-cultural pluralism in International Relations | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 3 |
| 35 | Religion and American foreign policy in the context of the postsecular turn in world politics and the social sciences | International Politics Reviews | 2013 | 2 |
| 36 | Explaining Foreign Policy: International Diplomacy and the Russo-Georgian War by Hans Mouritzen and Anders Wivel | International Politics Reviews | 2014 | 2 |
| 37 | Uprooting homophobia: Grassroots activism in Ukraine & Russia | International Politics Reviews | 2014 | 2 |
| 38 | The Green Economy model: A promise or a reality for the Latin-American countries? | International Politics Reviews | 2017 | 2 |
| 39 | International relations: plural or postcolonial? | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 2 |
| 40 | Writing like a woman: Rita Hinden and recovering the imperial in international thought | International Politics Reviews | 2021 | 2 |
| 41 | Not created equal: Institutional constraints and the democratic peace | International Politics Reviews | 2013 | 1 |
| 42 | ‘Rethinking the Vietnam War’ by John Dumbrell | International Politics Reviews | 2013 | 1 |
| 43 | The Scandinavian International Society by Laust Schouenborg | International Politics Reviews | 2013 | 1 |
| 44 | Understanding Global Health Governance: A Review of Jeremy Youde’s Book | International Politics Reviews | 2014 | 1 |
| 45 | The Combat Soldier | International Politics Reviews | 2014 | 1 |
| 46 | Editorial | International Politics Reviews | 2014 | 1 |
| 47 | Hubris and international development: A review of Nina Munk’s The Idealist | International Politics Reviews | 2015 | 1 |
| 48 | The illusion of war: Is terrorism a criminal act or an act of war? | International Politics Reviews | 2015 | 1 |
| 49 | Alexander Dugin’s ‘times of troubles’ as paradigms of Russian history | International Politics Reviews | 2015 | 1 |
| 50 | Inside the sausage factory: Decision-making in Israel’s national security policy | International Politics Reviews | 2018 | 1 |