# | Title | Journal | Year | Citations |
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1 | The Responsibility to Protect: Ending Mass Atrocity Crimes Once and for All | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2009 | 72 |
2 | The Responsibility to Protect: Ending Mass Atrocity Crimes Once and for All | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2009 | 30 |
3 | The Rise of Populism and the Crisis of Globalisation: Brexit, Trump and Beyond | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2017 | 24 |
4 | International Governance and Local Resistance in Kosovo: the Thin Line between Ethical, Emancipatory and Exclusionary Politics | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2011 | 24 |
5 | Policy Coherence for Development: Five Challenges | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2010 | 23 |
6 | The Rise of Populism and the Crisis of Globalisation: Brexit, Trump and Beyond | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2017 | 23 |
7 | States’ Due Diligence Obligations with regard to International Non–State Terrorist Organisations Post–11 September 2001: the Heavy Burden that States must bear | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2005 | 21 |
8 | Public Networked Discourses in the Ukraine-Russia Conflict: ‘Patriotic Hackers’ and Digital Populism | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2017 | 21 |
9 | EU Voting Behaviour in the UN General Assembly, 1990–2002: the EU's Europeanising Tendencies | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2005 | 18 |
10 | Unravelling the Paradox of 'The Responsibility to Protect' | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2009 | 16 |
11 | Whitehall and the Iraq War: the UK's Four Intelligence Enquiries | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2005 | 14 |
12 | Transitional Justice in Burma/Myanmar: Crossnational Patterns and Domestic Context | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2015 | 14 |
13 | Intelligence and Controversial British Interrogation Techniques: the Northern Ireland Case, 1971–2 | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2009 | 12 |
14 | Sinn Féin and the European Arena: ‘Ourselves Alone’ or ‘Critical Engagement’? | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2005 | 11 |
15 | Irish Climate-Change Policy from Kyoto to the Carbon Tax: a Two-level Game Analysis of the Interplay of Knowledge and Power | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2007 | 11 |
16 | Bringing Domestic Institutions back into an Understanding of Ireland's Economic Crisis | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2010 | 10 |
17 | The European Union's Role in the Fight Against Terrorism | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2005 | 9 |
18 | Not a Nice Surprise: An Analysis of the Debate Surrounding the 2001 Referendum on the Treaty of Nice in the Republic of Ireland | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2002 | 8 |
19 | The Myth of ‘the Myth of Irish neutrality’: Deconstructing Concepts of Irish Neutrality using International Relations Theories | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2006 | 8 |
20 | First Landmines, now Small Arms? The International Campaign to Ban Landmines as a Model for Small-Arms Advocacy | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2006 | 8 |
21 | The United States and post-Agreement Northern Ireland, 2001–6 | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2007 | 8 |
22 | Lessons from the Irish Collapse: Taking an International Political Economy Approach | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2010 | 8 |
23 | From Identity Politics to Identity Change: Exogenous Shocks, Constitutional Moments and the Impact of Brexit on the Island of Ireland | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2017 | 8 |
24 | Public Networked Discourses in the Ukraine-Russia Conflict: ‘Patriotic Hackers’ and Digital Populism | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2017 | 8 |
25 | The Rise and Fall and Rise of Academic Selection: The Case of Northern Ireland | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2021 | 8 |
26 | Irish Diplomacy on the UN Security Council 2001–2: Foreign Policy–making in the Light of Day. | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2004 | 7 |
27 | The 1974–5 Threat of a British Withdrawal from Northern Ireland | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2006 | 7 |
28 | Northern Ireland and the International Dimension: the End of the Cold War, the USA and European Integration | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2002 | 6 |
29 | The ‘War on Terrorism’—Perspectives from Radical Islamic Groups | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2005 | 6 |
30 | The Madrid Bombings in the Domestic and Regional Politics of Spain | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2005 | 6 |
31 | 'A Crisis of Affluence': the Politics of an Economic Breakdown in Iceland | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2010 | 6 |
32 | The Role of Political Ideas in Multi-Party Elections in Tanzania: Refuting Essentialist Explanations of African Political Systems | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2013 | 6 |
33 | Three Connections between Rising Economic Inequality and the Rise of Populism | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2017 | 6 |
34 | Unravelling the Paradox of 'The Responsibility to Protect' | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2009 | 6 |
35 | The Republic of Ireland's Policy Towards Northern Ireland: The International Dimension as a Policy Tool | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2002 | 5 |
36 | Perceptions of 'Siege Mentality': Northern Irish Protestants and White South Africans in the New Political Dispensation | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2002 | 5 |
37 | The new Dynamics of Indian Foreign Policy and its Ambiguities | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2007 | 5 |
38 | A Comparative Critique of the Practice of Irish Neutrality in the 'Unneutral' Discourse | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2008 | 5 |
39 | EU Voting Behaviour in the UN General Assembly, 1990-2002: The EU's Europeanising Tendencies | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2005 | 5 |
40 | The Myth of 'The Myth of Irish Neutrality': Deconstructing Concepts of Irish Neutrality using International Relations Theories | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2006 | 5 |
41 | Unionism, Identity and Irish Unity: Paradigms, Problems and Paradoxes | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2021 | 5 |
42 | New Conceptual Framework for Sustainability | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2016 | 4 |
43 | Cross-Border Cooperation Health in Ireland | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2021 | 4 |
44 | Pulpit to Public: Church Leaders on a Post-Brexit Island | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2021 | 4 |
45 | Ghost Provinces, Mislaid Minorities: the Experience of Southern Ireland and Prussian Poland Compared, 1918–23 | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2002 | 4 |
46 | Toward Tractability: the 1993 South African Record of Understanding and the 1998 Northern Ireland Good Friday Agreement | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2002 | 4 |
47 | From 11 September 2001 to the War in Iraq: Irish Responses to the Global ‘War on Terrorism’ | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2005 | 4 |
48 | Biafra to Lomé: the Evolution of Irish Government Policy on Official Development Assistance, 1969–75 | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2007 | 4 |
49 | From Conflict to Ownership: Participatory Approaches to the Re-integration of Ex-Combatants in Sierra Leone | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2011 | 4 |
50 | New Media and Democratisation | Irish Studies in International Affairs | 2012 | 4 |