Oxford Political Review
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OPR Announces Launch of Issue 15 ‘Home’
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This issue explores the ever-changing ideas of belonging, community, and migration in an increasingly mobile world.
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Call for Submissions – Issue 16: Nothing is Ever Always
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We now invite submissions to the Oxford Political Review’s 16th issue, under the theme of ‘Nothing is Ever Always’.
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OPR Announces Launch of Issue 14: ‘Fictions and Narratives’
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The issue explores the relationship between politics, fiction, and other narrative modes of communication and imagination.
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Call for Submissions – Issue 15: Home
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We now invite submissions to the Oxford Political Review’s 15th issue, under the theme of ‘Home’.
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OPR Announces Launch of Issue 13: ‘Language’
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The Oxford Political Review is thrilled to announce the release of its 13th issue, ‘Language.’ From the challenges of cultural diversity to the emergence of a new digital public sphere, and from the discourse of animal ethics to the linguistic politics of hostage, this issue explores the theme of language in its myriad forms. You…
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Call for Submissions – Issue 13: Language
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We now invite submissions to the Oxford Political Review’s 13th issue, under the theme of ‘Language’.
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The Taliban Takeover: Implications for South Asian Security
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The Taliban regime recently announced the formation of a caretaker government in Afghanistan. It has since gained notoriety for its inclusion of terrorists wanted by America and exclusion of ethnic minorities and women. The US expressed strong condemnations over the move. But at the same time, it and other countries in the West and beyond…
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What Bipartisanship Can Be
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The legacy of Franklin Delano Roosevelt looms large in Joe Biden’s White House. Biden invoked the New Deal repeatedly during his presidential campaign and has even hosted talks with historians analyzing the impact of F.D.R.’s reforms. On face, the two resemble each other: both were moderates elected president amidst unprecedented crises succeeding historically unpopular Republicans and eyeing…
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Caliberating the moral contours of Indian religious freedom
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On 27th November 2020, the Governor of the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh promulgated an anti-religious-conversion ordinance. This ordinance prohibits all unlawful conversions from one religion to another which take place by employment of any one or more than one of the following methods – misrepresentation, force, undue influence, allurement or by any fraudulent means…
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The UK presidency of the UN Security Council: A decisive return to the global stage?
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The UK assumed the presidency of the United Nations Security Council today, as it continues to search for a global role post-Brexit. While the country’s 2021 G7 and COP26 climate conference presidencies receive most of the media coverage concerning “Global Britain”, the opportunity to preside once every 15 months is also an important privilege of…