intellectualhistory.web.ox.ac.uk
'Utopia across Disciplines': A conversation between Douglas Mao and Duncan Bell
Feed for History/IR content – historians, IR folks, and anyone interested. Filters for "HistIR", "Historical IR", and "HistoryIR". If you'd like to be added to the list, just tag me @janeijking & let me know. This is work in progress – suggestions welcome!
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intellectualhistory.web.ox.ac.uk
'Utopia across Disciplines': A conversation between Douglas Mao and Duncan Bell

www.eur.nl
Lof der Zotheidspeld 2025 voor historicus Beatrice de Graaf
Historicus Beatrice de Graaf krijgt internationale erkenning voor haar wetenschappelijke verdienste. De Lof der Zotheidspeld 2025 wordt aan haar toegekend.

Lots of great things coming up this autumn in the CSI calendar - next up is @emmakluge.bsky.social's lunchtime seminar 'Oceanic internationalism: anticolonialism and environmentalism in the Pacific' (30 Oct 1-2pm, in person & online, msg for link) Full programme here csi.bbk.ac.uk/blog/autumn-...
csi.bbk.ac.uk

en.vijesti.me
Six facts about the interesting history of the Louvre
The museum's director admitted that the very architecture and condition of the Louvre Palace make it difficult to install modern security devices in a building that was not originally...

www.the-tls.com
The erasure of women philosophers
Eileen O’Neill’s foundational article “Disappearing Ink: Early modern women philosophers and their fate in history” (1998) was revelatory for me as a

jobportal.uni-koeln.de

newleftreview.org
Martti Koskenniemi, The Laws That Rule Us, NLR 154, July–August 2025
In an expansive response to Perry Anderson’s critique of international law in NLR 143, Martti Koskenniemi counterposes to headline rulings on crimes against humanity the opaque, pervasive network of t...






www.cambridge.org
The middling of international hierarchies | Review of International Studies | Cambridge Core
The middling of international hierarchies

📣John Locke’s Forgotten Manuscript We are thrilled to announce that @davidrarmitage.bsky.social's article on his discovery of a new John Locke manuscript is out now👇 It sheds new light on Locke's practical involvement in political economy & his engagement with Ireland 📜🗃️
www.cambridge.org


lareviewofbooks.org
An Active Project of Exclusion | Los Angeles Review of Books
Geertje Bol and Jan Eijking review “Erased: A History of International Thought Without Men,” by Patricia Owens.

lareviewofbooks.org
An Active Project of Exclusion | Los Angeles Review of Books
Geertje Bol and Jan Eijking review “Erased: A History of International Thought Without Men,” by Patricia Owens.

☀️ The wait is over: our summer reading list 2025 is here! Explore our recommended selection of books, reviewed in International Affairs, to keep you company this summer: medium.com/internationa...
medium.com

www.jobs.ac.uk
Departmental Lecturer in Global and Imperial History at University of Oxford
Discover an exciting academic career path as a Departmental Lecturer in Global and Imperial History at jobs.ac.uk. Don't miss out on this job opportunity - apply today!

Kerry Goettlich, From Frontiers to Borders: How Colonial Technicians Created Modern Territoriality - Cambridge University Press, August 2025 www.cambridge.org/gb/universit...

Kerry Goettlich, From Frontiers to Borders: How Colonial Technicians Created Modern Territoriality - Cambridge University Press, August 2025 www.cambridge.org/gb/universit...

www.cambridge.org
Universal in Scope and Appeal? The Politics of ‘National’ vs ‘International’ Opera at Post-war Covent Garden | Transactions of the Royal Historical Society | Cambridge Core
Universal in Scope and Appeal? The Politics of ‘National’ vs ‘International’ Opera at Post-war Covent Garden

www.cambridge.org
Universal in Scope and Appeal? The Politics of ‘National’ vs ‘International’ Opera at Post-war Covent Garden | Transactions of the Royal Historical Society | Cambridge Core
Universal in Scope and Appeal? The Politics of ‘National’ vs ‘International’ Opera at Post-war Covent Garden

The history of international order is usually the history of the great powers. But what can we learn from looking at worldviews of those who resisted intervention? Very pleased to have this new post available on The Conversation with my coauthor and friend @caschulz.bsky.social.

www.cambridge.org
The 19th-century ‘antiquities rush’ and the international competition for cultural status | Review of International Studies | Cambridge Core
The 19th-century ‘antiquities rush’ and the international competition for cultural status