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75 Int'l J. 3 (2020)

handle is hein.journals/intj75 and id is 1 raw text is: 





                                                                International journal
                                 0   92020, Vol. 75(1) 3-4
Editors         Introduction                                  @TheAuthor(s)2020
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                                                       sagepub.com/journals-permissions
                                                       DOI: 10.1 177/0020702020920809
                                                         journals.sagepub.com/home/ijx
                                                                    OSAGE



This is the first issue in the 75th volume of International Journal, Canada's oldest
and  best-known journal on  international politics. This anniversary issue is an
opportunity to reflect on the journal's traditions and legacies, but also a time
for transitions and new opportunities. This is our first issue with Greg Donaghy
serving as one of the two co-editors in chief, and Susan Colbourn as editor of the
Lessons of History feature. Much to look forward to.
   We're also looking back and are happy to formally announce here the winners
of the three essay prizes for contributors to the journal. For 2019, the $1,000
SAGE   Prize for International Scholarship, awarded annually for the best article
on international affairs, goes to Louise Riis Andersen, for her article, Curb your
enthusiasm:  Middle-power   liberal internationalism and  the future  of the
United Nations. Also from  the March  2019 issue is our winner for the $1,000
Marcel  Cadieux Award   for the best article on Canadian foreign policy: Peter
Jones' Middle  power liberal internationalism and mediation in messy places:
The Canadian  dilemma.  And this year's $1,000 Marvin Gelber Essay Prize, for
the best article by a junior scholar, has been awarded to Michael de Groot, for his
essay, Western  Europe  and  the collapse of  Bretton Woods   (June 2019).
Congratulations to this year's winners on their impressive contributions to the
study of international relations.
   This issue begins with the question of whether  the study of International
Relations in Canada has been thoroughly Americanized, and what the prospects
are for more  homegrown   IR in this country. Michael Murphy  and  Michael
Wigginton  cut into this debate in a new way, by looking at the reading lists for
comprehensive  exams in Canadian  PhD  programs,  and      more specifically  the
degree to which those lists are dominated by American journals. That's followed
by Aaron  Ettinger's look at contemporary US  foreign policy debates, and the
question of whether we  are seeing the emergence of a coherent left-wing or
progressive foreign  policy agenda  within  the Democratic   primary  race.
Ettinger takes a close look at the foreign policy platforms of Elizabeth Warren
and Bernie Sanders, contrasts them with that of Joe Biden, and makes the case that
a new left/progressive agenda is taking shape. Next is Paul Meyer's reflection on
the recent history of Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty  (NPT). Meyer   tracks
Canada's efforts to try to strengthen the accountability mechanisms in the NPT,

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