Amanda Pearson (@pearson_ink) 's Twitter Profile
Amanda Pearson

@pearson_ink

Deputy Editor, International Security (@IntSecHarvard) | formerly @HarvardWCFIA | IR, comparative politics, history

ID: 248698831

linkhttps://www.belfercenter.org/person/amanda-pearson calendar_today07-02-2011 14:59:59

2,2K Tweet

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Watson Institute (@watsoninstitute) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Damned If They Do, Damned If They Don't: The Assurance Dilemma in International Coercion — Reid Pauly recently published a paper exploring the relationship between threats and coercive assurance: how bolstering one can undermine the other. ow.ly/v3Vl50TogHr

Miranda Priebe (@mirandapriebe) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Confused by the grand strategy debate? In International Security, we break down the arguments in favor of a new U.S. approach that emerge from realist, conservative, and progressive ideas. (w/ John Schuessler, Jasen Castillo, & Bryan Rooney) direct.mit.edu/isec/article/4…

International Security (@intsecharvard) 's Twitter Profile Photo

1) ***Announcement*** The new Fall 2024 issue is online! Read articles by Jennifer Lind; David Logan; Jeffrey Friedman; and Miranda Priebe, John Schuessler, Bryan Rooney, and Jasen Castillo; and correspondence by Mark Bell and Matthew Evangelista. direct.mit.edu/isec/issue

Jennifer Lind (@proflind) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Fall issue is live! In my International Security article I argue that China's rise has shifted the international system back to bipolarity. (ungated article here): direct.mit.edu/isec/article/4…

Ifeanyichukwu Charles Nweke (@icnweke) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"On most metrics, China exceeds the Soviet Union at its peak, and the two countries share notable similarities in their great power portfolios. If the USSR was a superpower then, China is one today. The world is bipolar." - Jennifer Lind direct.mit.edu/isec/article/4…

Miranda Priebe (@mirandapriebe) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A US grand strategy of restraint involves using diplomacy to settle differences, reducing forward presence, downgrading/ending commitments, and raising the bar for the use of force. Our new RAND brief outlines competing visions of restraint: rand.org/pubs/research_…

International Security (@intsecharvard) 's Twitter Profile Photo

***Announcement*** The new Winter 2024-25 issue is online! Read articles by Barry Posen, Dima Adamsky, John Owen, @SheenaGreitensand Isaac B. Kardon, and Jennifer Spindel. direct.mit.edu/isec/issue

Isaac B. Kardon (@ibkardon) 's Twitter Profile Photo

With Sheena Chestnut Greitens, we argue in IS that the global security landscape has been shifting under our feet. If we are in a "cold war" with China, it bears little resemblance to the "Cold War" with the Soviet Union - and not only because of high levels of economic integration. (1/4)

John Glaser (@jwcglaser) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Latest w Barry Posen on the roots of Russia's war in Ukraine. He discusses preventive war, the role of NATO & US leaders, Putin's war aims, strategic empathy, realism, post-CW US FP, negotiating peace, & at the end he offers a warning about Taiwan. Listen! cato.org/multimedia/pow…

International Security (@intsecharvard) 's Twitter Profile Photo

1) ***Announcement*** The new Spring 2025 issue is online! Read articles by John Mearsheimer, Stephen Walt, Zachary Burdette, Nilay Saiya and Stuti Manchanda, and Don Casler and Tyler Jost direct.mit.edu/isec/issue/49/4

Don Casler (@don_casler) 's Twitter Profile Photo

When does communication fail in international politics? In a new International Security piece, Tyler Jost and I present some fresh theory and evidence on an enduring challenge for states — getting others to understand what they are trying to say