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Search Results (237)

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36 pages, 2908 KB  
Article
Globalisation and Sustainable Development: How Economic Diplomacy Shapes SDG Performance Across Countries and Time
by Oksana Liashenko, Olena Mykhailovska, Bogdan Adamyk, Liudmyla Ladonko, Grygoriy Starchenko, Anastasiia Duka and Maksym Urakin
World 2026, 7(4), 64; https://doi.org/10.3390/world7040064 - 9 Apr 2026
Viewed by 234
Abstract
This study examines whether economic diplomacy—proxied by KOF-based indicators of political globalisation and economic policy openness—is associated with multidimensional sustainable development (SD) across 208 countries over the period 2000–2023. Using two-way fixed-effects panel models with Driscoll–Kraay standard errors, complemented by instrumental-variable and dynamic [...] Read more.
This study examines whether economic diplomacy—proxied by KOF-based indicators of political globalisation and economic policy openness—is associated with multidimensional sustainable development (SD) across 208 countries over the period 2000–2023. Using two-way fixed-effects panel models with Driscoll–Kraay standard errors, complemented by instrumental-variable and dynamic panel checks, we find a positive but modest within-country association between diplomatic embeddedness and Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) performance. The association is driven primarily by political globalisation—reflecting diplomatic networks, international organisation membership, and treaty engagement—rather than trade policy openness. De facto integration exhibits stronger links to SDG outcomes than de jure policy indicators. The relationship is concave, with diminishing marginal returns beyond a diplomacy proxy value of approximately 60. A latent-class framework identifies two institutional archetypes: the association is more pronounced and robust under stronger governance (71 countries), while it attenuates under weaker governance (85 countries). Goal-level estimates reveal systematic trade-offs—gains in inequality reduction (SDG 10) and innovation (SDG 9) alongside adverse associations with climate outcomes (SDG 13)—and a structural breakpoint around 2017 consistent with the onset of slowbalisation. The results suggest that diplomacy can support SD, but its payoff depends on governance capacity and the management of cross-goal externalities. Full article
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19 pages, 500 KB  
Article
The Politics of Buddhist Artifacts: Tribute and Bestowal Between Heian and Northern Song
by Hao Kang and Kanliang Wang
Religions 2026, 17(4), 460; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040460 - 7 Apr 2026
Viewed by 370
Abstract
During the Northern Song period, the gifting of Buddhist artifacts frequently appeared in Sino–Japanese exchanges. Although Japan had established a self-centered order with its emperor at its core and tended toward isolation, the Heian imperial court, led by the Fujiwara regents, actively dispatched [...] Read more.
During the Northern Song period, the gifting of Buddhist artifacts frequently appeared in Sino–Japanese exchanges. Although Japan had established a self-centered order with its emperor at its core and tended toward isolation, the Heian imperial court, led by the Fujiwara regents, actively dispatched monks to Song China and requested Buddhist artifacts. Although these monks were not official envoys, they reflected a trend toward diversified diplomacy in Japan. Recognizing the close ties between these monks and the Japanese rulers, the Song court used the bestowal of Buddhist artifacts to encourage them to convey messages to the Japanese court, urging Japan to send formal tribute missions and thereby incorporating this into its broader diplomatic strategy. Under the “Chanyuan Treaty System”, Buddhism served as a shared cultural foundation for transregional interaction in East Asia. By collecting and bestowing Buddhist artifacts, the Song Dynasty proclaimed its orthodox status within the Buddhist world and enhanced its diplomatic influence. However, the Heian court, upon receiving these artifacts, repurposed them to construct their own divine authority and vision of a “Land of Buddha’s Kingdom”. Thus, the very same set of Buddhist artifacts carried vastly different symbolic meanings and functions in the Northern Song–Heian diplomatic interactions. Full article
33 pages, 515 KB  
Article
From Nonviolence to Reconciliation: The Prophetic Political Ethics of War and Peace
by Harris Sadik Kirazli
Religions 2026, 17(4), 449; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040449 - 4 Apr 2026
Viewed by 314
Abstract
This article re-examines Islamic ethics of war and peace by returning to the formative Meccan–Medinan trajectory of the Prophet Muḥammad’s life, where early Islamic moral reasoning developed amid persecution, migration, diplomacy, and armed conflict. Contemporary debates frequently portray Islam either as a tradition [...] Read more.
This article re-examines Islamic ethics of war and peace by returning to the formative Meccan–Medinan trajectory of the Prophet Muḥammad’s life, where early Islamic moral reasoning developed amid persecution, migration, diplomacy, and armed conflict. Contemporary debates frequently portray Islam either as a tradition that sacralizes violence through jihad or as one that reduces peace to purely inward spirituality. Both perspectives obscure the historically grounded ethical discourse that emerged within the early Muslim community. This study argues that the Qurʾān—understood within the Islamic tradition as the authoritative source of ethical guidance—together with prophetic practice articulated a coherent moral framework governing the use of force, the pursuit of peace, and the restoration of social order after conflict. Drawing on Qurʾānic discourse, canonical ḥadīth, classical tafsīr and sīrah literature, and modern scholarship in Islamic studies, religious ethics, and conflict resolution theory, the article reconstructs how early Islamic sources represent the ethical regulation of violence. The analysis identifies a threefold trajectory in prophetic practice: a Meccan phase characterized by nonviolent endurance and moral witness under persecution; a Medinan phase marked by constitutional governance, plural coexistence, and tightly regulated defensive warfare; and a culminating ethic of negotiated peace and post-conflict reconciliation exemplified in the Treaty of Ḥudaybiyyah and the Conquest of Mecca. Taken together, these stages reveal an integrated moral vision in which force is neither celebrated nor treated as a default instrument of political expansion, but permitted only under strict ethical constraints shaped by justice (ʿadl), mercy (raḥma), proportionality, and the protection of communal life. By reconstructing this early prophetic framework, the article demonstrates that Islamic sources contain significant internal resources for limiting violence, regulating warfare, and prioritizing reconciliation. In doing so, it contributes to contemporary scholarship on Islamic ethics and situates the prophetic model within broader global debates on the moral regulation of war, peacebuilding, and post-conflict justice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Ethics of War and Peace: Religious Traditions in Dialogue)
23 pages, 284 KB  
Article
Resilience of Electricity Transition Strategies in Israel Under Deep Uncertainty
by Helyette Geman and Steve Ohana
Energies 2026, 19(7), 1682; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19071682 - 30 Mar 2026
Viewed by 368
Abstract
Electricity systems increasingly operate under deep uncertainty driven by geopolitical risk, volatile fuel markets, trade fragmentation, security threats, and technological change. Under such conditions, cost-optimal planning based on assumed trajectories may lead to fragile outcomes, particularly for small and geopolitically exposed systems such [...] Read more.
Electricity systems increasingly operate under deep uncertainty driven by geopolitical risk, volatile fuel markets, trade fragmentation, security threats, and technological change. Under such conditions, cost-optimal planning based on assumed trajectories may lead to fragile outcomes, particularly for small and geopolitically exposed systems such as Israel’s. This paper assesses the resilience of alternative electricity transition strategies for Israel using a qualitative robustness framework inspired by Decision Making under Deep Uncertainty and scenario-based energy security analysis. Six policy-relevant strategies are evaluated across structurally distinct stress scenarios. Resilience is assessed along three dimensions: security of supply, dependency exposure, and economic vulnerability, using anchored qualitative scoring and dominance rules. The results indicate that gas-centric strategies exhibit limited robustness, while strategies combining solar deployment with adaptive gas management, smart grids, microgrids, and domestic clean-technology capabilities achieve higher resilience across a wide range of futures. The paper contributes a structured qualitative approach to resilience assessment and offers policy-relevant insights for electricity transitions under deep uncertainty. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Economic and Policy Tools for Sustainable Energy Transitions)
16 pages, 2633 KB  
Article
A Korean Captive-Turned-Monk (Nichiyō) in Japan and Longing for Family Reunion in the 1620s
by Nam-lin Hur
Humanities 2026, 15(4), 53; https://doi.org/10.3390/h15040053 - 28 Mar 2026
Viewed by 275
Abstract
Honmyōji Temple in Kumamoto preserves copies of four letters exchanged in the early 1620s between a father, Yŏ Ch’ŏn’gap, in Chosŏn, and his son, Yŏ Taenam (Nichiyō), in Japan, although one of the letters was never delivered. Both father and son were abducted [...] Read more.
Honmyōji Temple in Kumamoto preserves copies of four letters exchanged in the early 1620s between a father, Yŏ Ch’ŏn’gap, in Chosŏn, and his son, Yŏ Taenam (Nichiyō), in Japan, although one of the letters was never delivered. Both father and son were abducted to Japan during the Imjin War (1592–1598), but while the father was able to return home, the son was not. In the late 1610s, upon learning that his son, now the abbot of Honmyōji, was alive in Kumamoto, the father sought to contact him by letter. His efforts eventually succeeded, leading to an exchange of correspondence. These four letters, the only known instance of overseas communication between family members separated by Japan’s invasion of Chosŏn, provide valuable insight into the tragic fate of a family divided by war. Drawing on these documents, this article examines how a Korean boy was abducted during the Imjin War and later became the abbot of his captor’s temple. It also explores the father’s efforts to bring his son home and the reasons their hopes for reunion were never realized. Together, the letters bear witness to the dramatic transformation in the life of a young Korean boy who became a victim of war. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section History in the Humanities)
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25 pages, 720 KB  
Article
From Hybrid Commons to Trilateral Treaty: A Four-Stage Allocation Framework for the Salween River Basin
by Thomas Stephen Ramsey, Weijun He, Liang Yuan, Qingling Peng, Min An, Lei Wang, Feiya Xiang, Sher Ali and Ribesh Khanal
Water 2026, 18(7), 795; https://doi.org/10.3390/w18070795 - 27 Mar 2026
Viewed by 305
Abstract
Transboundary river basins face water stress exacerbated by data scarcity and political instability, and most allocation models require ideal conditions that ordinarily do not exist. This study operationalizes Water Diplomacy Theory (WDT) for data-scarce, conflict-prone basins through quantifiable allocation rules—a critical gap as [...] Read more.
Transboundary river basins face water stress exacerbated by data scarcity and political instability, and most allocation models require ideal conditions that ordinarily do not exist. This study operationalizes Water Diplomacy Theory (WDT) for data-scarce, conflict-prone basins through quantifiable allocation rules—a critical gap as 310 transboundary basins worldwide face similar challenges. We address: (1) How can a four-stage allocation framework reduce basin-wide water stress under varying Institutional Capacity (IC), Data Transparency (DT), and Stakeholder Inclusion (SI)? (2) What treaty provisions achieve bindingness under upstream-downstream power asymmetries? (3) How does this framework advance beyond existing models in equity, efficiency, and adaptive capacity? We synthesize Water Diplomacy Theory with Hydro-political Security Complex Theory to construct a novel four-stage framework: initial allocation with ecological floors, conditional reallocation triggers, interannual water banking, and satellite-verified compliance. Drawing on 14 treaty precedents and 30-year hydrological data for the Salween River, we embed these rules in an open-source water banking model. Results demonstrate that increasing IC from low to high reduces basin-wide water stress by 34% (±7%, 95% IC) under drought conditions. Stakeholder Inclusion decreases allocation conflicts by 52%. Water banking outperforms priority rules by 23% across climate scenarios. Cooperation becomes self-enforcing when IC exceeds 0.55. The novelty and contribution to existing literature our study provides are: (1) first operationalization of hybrid commons-to-treaty transition with 85.7% empirically grounded clauses; (2) evidence that binding cooperative treaty design is achievable in weak-state contexts through institutional design; and (3) a portable template for data-scarce conflict-affected basins. Full article
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13 pages, 264 KB  
Article
Non-Alignment from New Delhi to Korea, 1949–1953
by David Webster
Histories 2026, 6(1), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories6010025 - 14 Mar 2026
Viewed by 631
Abstract
Non-alignment was officially born at a conference in Brijuni, Croatia (then Yugoslavia), in 1956 and then formalized in Belgrade in 1961. Yet its origins go back to the independence struggle of Indonesia in 1945–1949 and especially to diplomacy around the Korean War in [...] Read more.
Non-alignment was officially born at a conference in Brijuni, Croatia (then Yugoslavia), in 1956 and then formalized in Belgrade in 1961. Yet its origins go back to the independence struggle of Indonesia in 1945–1949 and especially to diplomacy around the Korean War in 1950–1953. During that conflict, United States unilateralism pushed India, Indonesia, and Burma (now Myanmar) into forming an Asian bloc aligned for diplomatic purposes in the goal of peace. The search for peace in turn formalized a bloc of Asian states that would initiate the Bandung Asian–African conference of 1955 and finally the Non-Aligned Movement. This article explores the emergence of non-alignment in the late 1940s and early 1950s as a conscious rejection of both Cold War alignment and earlier European concepts of neutralism in favour of an “active and independent” non-aligned diplomacy that would lead to the emergence of a bloc of non-aligned states. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue History of International Relations)
23 pages, 675 KB  
Article
Food Security and Food Technology in a Shrinking Society: A Socio-Technical Transition Perspective
by Kunhang Li and Hyun-Chool Lee
Sustainability 2026, 18(5), 2316; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18052316 - 27 Feb 2026
Viewed by 391
Abstract
Conventional food security strategies have largely been formulated under assumptions of population growth, abundant agricultural labor, and stable global trade. However, many advanced economies—particularly in East Asia—are entering a shrinking-society context characterized by population decline, rapid aging, and regional depopulation. This paper argues [...] Read more.
Conventional food security strategies have largely been formulated under assumptions of population growth, abundant agricultural labor, and stable global trade. However, many advanced economies—particularly in East Asia—are entering a shrinking-society context characterized by population decline, rapid aging, and regional depopulation. This paper argues that demographic shrinkage should be understood not as a peripheral trend but as a landscape-level structural pressure that destabilizes incumbent agri-food systems. Drawing on the Multi-Level Perspective (MLP), the study conceptualizes demographic shrinkage as a cumulative force that erodes the labor base, productive capacity, and institutional stability of food systems, thereby weakening regime path dependence. Building on this framework, it advances Food Security 3.0 as a theory-driven contribution to sustainability research. Food Security 3.0 reconceptualizes food security under shrinkage conditions as a problem of systemic resilience rather than production expansion or import diversification, and theorizes food technology—including smart and automated agriculture, alternative proteins, and AI-enabled supply chains—as transitional infrastructure enabling regime reconfiguration under structural constraints. By integrating demographic change, socio-technical transitions, and governance, the study reframes food security as a question of resilience-oriented system design, strategic self-reliance, and integrated food-system governance. While anchored in the East Asian experience, the framework offers theoretical and policy-relevant insights for shrinking societies confronting overlapping demographic, climatic, and geopolitical pressures. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Food)
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34 pages, 4258 KB  
Article
Rethinking Governance in Transboundary Serial World Heritage Sites: Multi-Level Coordination, Institutional Diversity, and Cultural Diplomacy
by Basak Siklar, Yasemin Akcakaya, Hicran Hanım Halaç and Fikret Bademci
Systems 2026, 14(2), 220; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14020220 - 20 Feb 2026
Viewed by 710
Abstract
While governance theories are well-established, their operational application to transboundary serial cultural heritage remains minimally explored, particularly regarding comparative methodologies for evaluating cooperation maturity. This study addresses this gap by investigating the relationships among institutional models, cooperation mechanisms, and management maturity levels across [...] Read more.
While governance theories are well-established, their operational application to transboundary serial cultural heritage remains minimally explored, particularly regarding comparative methodologies for evaluating cooperation maturity. This study addresses this gap by investigating the relationships among institutional models, cooperation mechanisms, and management maturity levels across different countries. The research utilizes a qualitative comparative analysis of the management plans of fifteen transboundary serial cultural heritage sites on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Findings show that governance is not limited to the functioning of legal and administrative structures, but is also shaped by trust among stakeholders, knowledge exchange, and participant processes. Four main governance models were identified: institutionalized multinational networks, federal–modular structures, bilateral–local cooperation, and community-led collaboration. In parallel, the developed Corporate Governance and Maturity Positioning Map reveals that the sites fall along six distinct levels, ranging from basic communication to sustained governance networks. The study argues that the primary factor determining management effectiveness is the intensity of interaction and continuity of coordination rather than institutional capacity. Overall, the findings suggest that cultural heritage governance should be understood as a multi-layered, learning-based, and diplomatic process. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Governance of System of Systems (SoS))
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21 pages, 332 KB  
Article
The Image of the Ottoman Empire in the Memoirs of Baron Wenceslas Wratislaw: A Cultural and Diplomatic Perspective
by Sevim Karabela Şermet and Önder Deniz
Histories 2026, 6(1), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories6010016 - 14 Feb 2026
Viewed by 949
Abstract
The memoirs of Baron Wenceslas Wratislaw are among the most significant Western sources portraying the Ottoman Empire in the late 16th century. Sent on a diplomatic mission and later taken captive, Wratislaw offers a dual image of the Empire: as a powerful, well-organised [...] Read more.
The memoirs of Baron Wenceslas Wratislaw are among the most significant Western sources portraying the Ottoman Empire in the late 16th century. Sent on a diplomatic mission and later taken captive, Wratislaw offers a dual image of the Empire: as a powerful, well-organised state and as a despotic regime evoking fear. His account reveals two contrasting perceptions of the Ottoman court and administration. While their rigid authoritarianism challenged Western admiration for Ottoman governance, it also reinforced existing notions of Oriental despotism. The shifting diplomatic conduct and hostile treatment of the Bohemian delegation further shaped the Ottomans as unreliable and deceptive in Western eyes. Culturally, Wratislaw presents the Ottomans as “the other civilization,” highlighting differences in religion, lifestyle, and social structure. Yet he also acknowledges their hospitality, generosity, and religious tolerance. This study examines how Wratislaw’s personal experiences reflect broader Western imaginations of the Ottoman world. It argues that cultural and diplomatic encounters shaped a complex and often ambivalent image, influenced by both structural dynamics and individual perspectives. Positioned at the intersection of historical sociology and imagology, the article contributes to the understanding of cross-cultural perception in early modern diplomacy. Full article
16 pages, 566 KB  
Article
Assessing Continuity of Care for Postpartum Women in Standard and Home Visiting Service Delivery Models: Insights from a Lithuanian Study
by Ilona Tamutienė, Vaida Auglytė, Milda Naginevičiūtė, Rita Buitvydė and Aurelija Blaževičienė
Healthcare 2026, 14(4), 477; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14040477 - 13 Feb 2026
Viewed by 413
Abstract
Introduction: A woman’s health and her child’s development are greatly affected by the responsiveness and support of the health system throughout the postpartum period. While various scholars have analysed the qualities of continuity of care and their effects during that phase, this [...] Read more.
Introduction: A woman’s health and her child’s development are greatly affected by the responsiveness and support of the health system throughout the postpartum period. While various scholars have analysed the qualities of continuity of care and their effects during that phase, this article aims to reveal women’s experiences of postpartum care by analysing the impact of continuity of care through home visiting (HVCoC) versus standard care. Methods: Semi-structured interviews have been conducted in a qualitative study with 19 mothers of children under 1 year of age, who meet at least one criterion, such as living in poverty, being under 18 while giving birth, lacking permanent housing, residing in crisis centres due to domestic violence, or giving birth for the first time. All participants of the study have received either standard care or continuity of care through home visiting within the HVCoC model project. Results: The study has shown that women’s postpartum care experiences depend on the service delivery model. The standard care model, compared with the HVCoC model, has led to negative experiences for women across three dimensions: Relational, informational, and management continuity of care. Conclusions: While existing research has concluded that adequate postpartum support is related to the continuity of care model, this study’s findings reveal how different care organisation models affect the value women receive from their healthcare. Decision makers should develop postnatal care services that ensure continuity of care throughout pregnancy and the postpartum period by providing access to the same healthcare specialist for ongoing care. Full article
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15 pages, 1461 KB  
Article
Do Ecosystem Services Really Decline Under Urbanization? Long-Term Evidence from Seoul’s Green Infrastructure (1978–2025)
by Wencelito Palis Hintural, Eunseon Heo, Soyeon Jeong, Jinwoo Lim, Si Ho Han and Byung Bae Park
Sustainability 2026, 18(4), 1833; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18041833 - 11 Feb 2026
Viewed by 575
Abstract
Urban green infrastructure is increasingly recognized as a core component of urban sustainability, providing regulating ecosystem services (ES) that support climate resilience, environmental quality, and long-term urban livability. However, empirical evidence on the long-term stability of ecosystem services (ES) in rapidly urbanizing cities [...] Read more.
Urban green infrastructure is increasingly recognized as a core component of urban sustainability, providing regulating ecosystem services (ES) that support climate resilience, environmental quality, and long-term urban livability. However, empirical evidence on the long-term stability of ecosystem services (ES) in rapidly urbanizing cities remains limited. Despite widespread assumptions that urbanization inevitably leads to irreversible ecological decline, few studies have quantitatively examined whether ES can persist, or even recover, over multi-decadal time horizons relevant to sustainable urban development. This study investigates the long-term trajectories of eight urban ES in Seoul, South Korea, across nearly five decades (1978–2025) and eight congressional districts, providing one of the longest temporal assessments of urban ES in East Asia. Using i-Tree Canopy and high-resolution aerial imagery across four benchmark years (1978, 1989, 2010, 2025), this study quantified standardized indicators for carbon sequestration (CSeq), avoided runoff (AVRO), and removal of six atmospheric pollutants (O3, NO2, SO2, CO, PM10, PM2.5). Paired-sample t-tests and Cohen’s dz (effect size) were used to assess within-district temporal shifts and the magnitude of ecological change. Results reveal a pronounced period of early ecological stress during rapid industrialization (1978–1989), with negative standardized effect sizes across all services (dz between −0.65 and −0.72). However, these early losses were not sustained. Structural services such as CSeq and AVRO exhibited long-term functional stability, with effect sizes converging toward zero and the 1978–2025 change in CSeq showing no statistical difference (p = 0.784). Pollutant removal services followed an early-decline–followed-by-recovery trajectory, exemplified by CO removal shifting from a large early decline (dz = −0.72) to a modest positive effect in later decades dz = 0.31). These findings indicate that Seoul’s sustained urban greening and environmental policies were effective in preventing further deterioration and maintaining core ecological functions, even if they produced stabilization rather than significant long-term gains in ES delivery. Full article
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16 pages, 260 KB  
Article
Jordan’s Niche Diplomacy: Reframing Middle-Power Agency in the 21st-Century Middle East
by Mordechai Chaziza and Carmela Lutmar
World 2026, 7(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/world7020025 - 6 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1649
Abstract
This study analyzes how the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan has converted structural vulnerability into diplomatic capital through the strategic practice of niche diplomacy. Despite its limited material power, Jordan has emerged as a resilient middle power that leverages credibility, moderation, and institutional resilience [...] Read more.
This study analyzes how the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan has converted structural vulnerability into diplomatic capital through the strategic practice of niche diplomacy. Despite its limited material power, Jordan has emerged as a resilient middle power that leverages credibility, moderation, and institutional resilience to sustain its influence in a turbulent regional environment. Focusing on three interrelated domains—regional mediation, water diplomacy, and refugee governance—the article demonstrates how Amman transforms constraints into strategic assets. By institutionalizing trust-based mediation, reframing water scarcity as a platform for cooperative innovation, and integrating humanitarian commitments into foreign policy, Jordan exemplifies the fusion of moral authority with pragmatic statecraft. The analysis contributes to middle-power theory by illustrating how small states can redefine influence through specialization, normative entrepreneurship, and consistent engagement. Ultimately, Jordan’s experience shows that in a fragmented Middle East, stability and credibility constitute enduring sources of diplomatic power. Full article
17 pages, 277 KB  
Article
Making Outer Space Legal: The “Appearance” of Extraterrestrial Intelligence at the Dawn of the Space Age
by Gabriela Radulescu
Histories 2026, 6(1), 12; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories6010012 - 28 Jan 2026
Viewed by 1172
Abstract
This paper addresses the knowledge gap on the beginning of the history of contact with extraterrestrial intelligent beings in international astronautics. In the mid-1950s, the world’s space law practitioner, Andrew G. Haley, proposed the concept of Metalaw, the law governing interactions between all [...] Read more.
This paper addresses the knowledge gap on the beginning of the history of contact with extraterrestrial intelligent beings in international astronautics. In the mid-1950s, the world’s space law practitioner, Andrew G. Haley, proposed the concept of Metalaw, the law governing interactions between all beings in the Universe, as he represented the American Rocket Society in the International Astronautical Congress, the single largest gathering of space-faring nations. Haley, with experience in radio communications law dating back to the 1930s, played a pivotal role in pushing for the international allocation of radio frequencies in space. Haley was, too, an agile mediator with the Soviet Union and its bloc, acting across various organizations and forums. This article, in contextualizing Haley’s introduction of Metalaw, shows how the onset of the Space Age coincided with the emergence of a contact scenario involving extraterrestrial intelligence enabled by the corresponding techno-scientific capabilities of the time. It demonstrates how extraterrestrial intelligence discursively addressed outer space regulation as a bone of contention between the two geopolitically divided parts, a regulation upon which the US’s global satellite system would depend. The analysis in this article recounts the birth of the Metalaw concept at the intersection of outer space imaginary, law, international organizations, science and technology, diplomacy, the Space Race, the Cold War, and radio astronomy’s Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Political, Institutional, and Economy History)
8 pages, 1934 KB  
Editorial
Naval Warfare and Diplomacy in Southwestern Europe in the Middle Ages: Introduction
by Jesús Ángel Solórzano Telechea
Histories 2026, 6(1), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories6010010 - 24 Jan 2026
Viewed by 769
Abstract
This article serves as the editorial introduction to the Histories Special Issue titled “Naval Warfare and Diplomacy in Southwestern Europe in the Middle Ages [...] Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Novel Insights into Naval Warfare and Diplomacy in Medieval Europe)
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