SWP Comments
From Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP), German Institute for International and Security Affairs Bibliographic data for series maintained by ZBW - Leibniz Information Centre for Economics (). Access Statistics for this working paper series.
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
- 50/2020: Emmanuel Macron's "New Way": Setting the course for re-election in 2022

- Ronja Kempin and Dominik Rehbaum
- 50/2019: The United States and Israel: The risk of growing apart. If illiberal democracy prevails in Israel, the special relationship may not survive

- Mark A. Heller
- 50/2018: Shadows over the European elections: Three scenarios for EU-sceptical parties after the 2019 elections

- Nicolai von Ondarza and Felix Schenuit
- 50/2017: Red Sea: Connecter and divider. Disruption waves from the Arabian Gulf to the Horn of Africa

- Annette Weber
- 50/2016: International climate diplomacy after the Trump election victory: Germany and the EU should intensify their outreach to climate allies

- Susanne Dröge
- 50/2015: Blocked for good by the threat of treaty change? Perspectives for reform in the European Union

- Nicolai von Ondarza
- 50/2014: The EU in the Middle East and North Africa: Helpless bystander rather than effective democracy promoter or stabilizing force

- Muriel Asseburg
- 50/2005: The economic and social model of the nordic EU members: Growth, innovation and budgetary discipline despite high government spending rates

- Ognian N. Hishow
- 49/2024: North Korea's arms policy as an indirect security threat to Europe: How Pyongyang expands its partnerships with Moscow and Tehran

- Elisabeth Suh
- 49/2023: Turkey-Iran rivalry in the changing geopolitics of the South Caucasus

- Hamidreza Azizi and Daria Isachenko
- 49/2022: After the Conference on the Future of Europe: Time to make reforms happen:four lessons for a European Union again requiring a new balance between deepening and widening

- Nicolai von Ondarza and Minna Ålander
- 49/2021: Political prisoners in Sisi's Egypt: Arbitrary detention as an obstacle to German stabilisation efforts

- Patricia Jannack and Stephan Roll
- 49/2020: German armed forces approaching outer space: The Air and Space Operations Centre as a gateway to multi-domain operations

- Dominic Vogel
- 49/2019: Alternatives to refugee camps: Cities need international support for receiving forcibly displaced people

- Nadine Biehler and David Kipp
- 49/2018: EU-Tunisia DCFTA: Good intentions not enough. Shift needed from deep to deliberate, comprehensive to coherent and from free to fair trade

- Bettina Rudloff and Isabelle Werenfels
- 49/2017: The Japan-EU Economic Partnership Agreement: Economic potentials and policy perspectives

- Hanns Günther Hilpert
- 49/2016: A European "special relationship": Guiding principles, interests and options for the EU-27 in the Brexit talks

- Barbara Lippert and Nicolai von Ondarza
- 49/2015: Perspectives for NATO-Russia relations: Forms of confrontation dominate - but dialogue not excluded

- Margarete Klein and Claudia Major
- 49/2014: Food standards in trade agreements: Differing regulatory traditions in the EU and the US and tips for the TTIP

- Bettina Rudloff
- 49/2005: A litmus test for Bush and the Republicans: The composition of the "new" U.S. Supreme Court

- Josef M. Braml
- 48/2024: The digitalisation of central bank money: China advances while Europe hesitates

- Hanns Günther Hilpert and Paweł Tokarski
- 48/2023: Shifting paradigms in Europe's approach to cyber defence: Ambitions to disrupt malicious cyber activity need to protect norms as well as networks

- Annegret Bendiek and Jakob Bund
- 48/2022: Feminist foreign policy: Concepts, core components and controversies

- Claudia Zilla
- 48/2021: The rush for the North Pole: A furious start to Russia's Arctic Council chairmanship

- Michael Paul
- 48/2020: Customs union: Old instrument, new function in EU-Turkey relations

- Sinem Adar, Nicola Bilotta, Aurélien Denizeau, Sinan Ekim, Dorothée Schmid, Günter Seufert, Ilke Toygür and Karol Wasilewski
- 48/2019: The European Commission's enhanced Rule of Law mechanism

- Molly O'Neal
- 48/2018: Stubbornly Germany first: Options for reducing the world's largest current account surplus

- Heribert Dieter
- 48/2017: Prioritise greenhouse gas neutrality: EU and German climate policy should be more ambitious and more pragmatic

- Oliver Geden
- 48/2016: The EU budget's mid-term review: With its promising reform proposals, the Commission lays the groundwork for the next, post-2020 budget

- Peter Becker
- 48/2015: Russia's military intervention in Syria: Its operation plan, objectives, and consequences for the West's policies

- Markus Kaim and Oliver Tamminga
- 48/2014: The networking of European foreign policy: From cacophony to choir?

- Annegret Bendiek
- 48/2005: Britain's anti-terror laws: Consequences for civil liberties and the integration of British Muslims

- Sabine Riedel
- 47/2024: The potential of bilateral migration agreements: From symbolic politics to practical implementation

- Nadine Biehler, David Kipp and Anne Koch
- 47/2023: Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE: The end of an alliance. Divergences of interest in bilateral relations offer opportunities for Germany and the EU

- Stephan Roll
- 47/2022: Multilateral cooperation in times of multiple crises: The G7 should focus on inclusive, selective and anticipatory policy approaches

- Lars Brozus and Naomi Shulman
- 47/2021: Erdoğan the builder in northern Cyprus: Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's visit to the "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus" cements a shift in Turkey's Cyprus policy and reinforces Ankara's isolation

- Günter Seufert
- 47/2020: Upholding the World Health Organization: Next steps for the EU

- Susan Bergner, Remco van de Pas, Louise G. van Schaik and Maike Voss
- 47/2019: The expansion of Frontex: Symbolic measures and long-term changes in EU border management

- Raphael Bossong
- 47/2018: Vostok-2018: Another sign of strengthening Russia-China ties. Not an alliance, but defense cooperation is growing

- Brian G. Carlson
- 47/2017: The EU's revised cybersecurity strategy: Half-hearted progress on far-reaching challenges

- Annegret Bendiek, Raphael Bossong and Matthias Schulze
- 47/2016: The new White Paper 2016: Promoting greater understanding of security policy?

- Markus Kaim and Hilmar Linnenkamp
- 47/2015: The West's darling in Syria: Seeking support, the Kurdish Democratic Union Party brandishes an anti-jihadist image

- Khaled Yacoub Oweis
- 47/2014: Turkey's policy toward Syrian refugees: Domestic repercussions and the need for international support

- Souad Ahmadoun
- 47/2005: Liberia votes - woman or soccer star?

- Dunja Speiser
- 46/2024: The attribution dividend: Protecting critical infrastructure from cyber attacks

- Annegret Bendiek, Jakob Bund and Mika Kerttunen
- 46/2023: Ensuring Ukraine's security: From ad hoc support to long-term security guarantees as NATO member

- Margarete Klein and Claudia Major
- 46/2022: The EU's next Eastward enlargement will be complicated and expensive: Accession negotiations, association and new formats should be coordinated

- Barbara Lippert
- 46/2021: Nord Stream 2 and the energy security dilemma: Opportunities, options and obstacles for a grand bargain

- Maria Shagina and Kirsten Westphal
- 46/2020: The new EU migration and asylum package: Breakthrough or admission of defeat?

- Steffen Angenendt, Nadine Biehler, Raphael Bossong, David Kipp and Anne Koch
- 46/2019: Ways out of the WTO's December crisis: How to prevent the open global trade order from unravelling

- Laura von Daniels, Susanne Dröge and Alexandra Bögner
| |