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Tribune News Network
Doha
Dr. Logan Cochrane, associate professor at the College of Public Policy (CPP), recently took part in a roundtable discussion at the International Studies Association Conference - Globalization, Regionalism, and Nationalism: Competing Forces in World Politics.
Dr. Cochrane was part of a panel with faculty from the Catholic University of Chile and Dublin City University. They represented authors and editors in the International Political Economy (IPE) series from Palgrave Macmillan, which has focused on the ‘Global South’ for more than 35 years and published over a dozen titles in the last decade.
The roundtable discussed a variety of important topics, including the Brazil, Russia, India, and China (BRICS)/Emerging Markets, conflict, development, gender, land, migration, regionalisms, supply chains, and more.
Speakers discussed the ongoing evolution of such southern voices in the third decade of the twenty-first century and identified gaps in the mini-series as approaches, networks, norms, relationships, and technologies change.
Doha
Dr. Logan Cochrane, associate professor at the College of Public Policy (CPP), recently took part in a roundtable discussion at the International Studies Association Conference - Globalization, Regionalism, and Nationalism: Competing Forces in World Politics.
Dr. Cochrane was part of a panel with faculty from the Catholic University of Chile and Dublin City University. They represented authors and editors in the International Political Economy (IPE) series from Palgrave Macmillan, which has focused on the ‘Global South’ for more than 35 years and published over a dozen titles in the last decade.
The roundtable discussed a variety of important topics, including the Brazil, Russia, India, and China (BRICS)/Emerging Markets, conflict, development, gender, land, migration, regionalisms, supply chains, and more.
Speakers discussed the ongoing evolution of such southern voices in the third decade of the twenty-first century and identified gaps in the mini-series as approaches, networks, norms, relationships, and technologies change.