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1 month agoWhat Does “Immigration” Mean? Spain and the Launching of a (counter)Hegemonic Operation 1 month agoImplosion, Evolution, and Crisis: The Golden Triangle and the Future of Southeast Asian Drug Trafficking 1 month agoChile’s President-elect Kast and the Populism to Fascism Pipeline 1 month agoRethinking the Price Cap on Russian Oil 1 month agoPolymarket and Politics: the risks of geopolitical prediction markers
Monday, Apr 6, 2026
The McGill Journal of Political Science

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1

What Does “Immigration” Mean? Spain and the Launching of a (counter)Hegemonic Operation

2

Rethinking the Price Cap on Russian Oil

3

Polymarket and Politics: the risks of geopolitical prediction markers

4

“Living Within a Lie”: Canada’s Reconfiguration of Middle Power Rhetoric

Category:
  • Featured
  • Political Theory

What Does “Immigration” Mean? Spain and the Launching of a (counter)Hegemonic Operation

Posted On : February 24, 2026 Published By : Anyue Zhang
Category:
  • Featured
  • International Relations

Rethinking the Price Cap on Russian Oil

Posted On : February 23, 2026 Published By : Patrick Armstrong
Category:
  • Featured
  • International Relations

Polymarket and Politics: the risks of geopolitical prediction markers

Posted On : February 23, 2026 Published By : Spencer Clark
Category:
  • Canadian Politics
  • Featured

“Living Within a Lie”: Canada’s Reconfiguration of Middle Power Rhetoric

Posted On : February 23, 2026 Published By : Arianne Fouse
Category:
  • Comparative Politics
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  • Featured: 2020 U.S. Elections

Opinion: An Ode to Andrew Yang

I was, like many others, first introduced to Andrew Yang, a former Democratic candidate for president, through a video on YouTube. Although it was a short ad, about 1 minute More

Posted On : February 21, 2020 Published By : Peter Wu
Category:
  • Comparative Politics
  • Featured

The Fall of Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer and the Crisis of German Conservatism

Outside of Germany, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer is perhaps best known for her difficult-to-pronounce name. However, on February 10th, she made international headlines when she resigned from her post as chairwoman of More

Posted On : February 21, 2020 Published By : Jacob Berk
Category:
  • Featured
  • International Relations

UK Allows Huawei: Has the US Lost Control Over its Allies?

On January 28th, after a long period of contemplation, the UK government has finally allowed the Chinese technology giant, Huawei, to participate, with a limited role, in the construction of More

Posted On : February 20, 2020 Published By : David Duan
Category:
  • Canadian Politics
  • Featured

Railway Blockades and Pipeline Protests: Why The Crisis Requires Immediate Action

Despite frigid temperatures, members of the Wet’suwet’en Nation and their allies have not been deterred in conducting days of blockades on CN railway lines in B.C. and Ontario. The blockades More

Posted On : February 19, 2020 Published By : Dia Mukherjee
Category:
  • Featured
  • International Relations

Brexit: The (Re-)Emergence of Racist Undercurrents?

Three days after Britain officially left the European Union on the 31st of January, flyers were removed from a Norwich apartment block following complaints from residents. According to The Guardian, More

Posted On : February 19, 2020 Published By : Kate Miller
Category:
  • Comparative Politics
  • Featured

The Cold War over your iPhone: Politicizing 5G Networking

To the average consumer, the concept of “5G” may seem obscure and unimportant – a flashy sell for Apple’s newest line. Over the past two decades, the telecommunication industry’s jump More

Posted On : February 18, 2020 Published By : Jasper Scott
Category:
  • Featured
  • Political Theory

Opinion: A Call for Technomorality in the New Scientific Revolution

Albert Einstein famously said of the development of the atomic bomb: “It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity.” In our modern world, defined by the More

Posted On : February 18, 2020 Published By : Jessica Maloney
Category:
  • Canadian Politics
  • Featured

An Abundance of Space but Nowhere Affordable: Canada’s Housing Crisis

In many Canadian ridings, spending more than 50 per cent of your income on housing is becoming the norm. While the crisis of affordable housing in Vancouver and Toronto is More

Posted On : February 17, 2020 Published By : Marie Fester
Category:
  • Comparative Politics
  • Featured

Why Democrats Won’t Repeal Right-to-Work

In the several elections held since Donald Trump took office, Democrats have scored wins across the country. Besides rebuilding control in places where the party lost influence during the Obama More

Posted On : February 16, 2020 Published By : Kabir Gupta
Category:
  • Canadian Politics
  • Featured

Teck Frontier: Ottawa vs the Oil Industry, Again

As the completion of the controversial Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project becomes more and more likely, the Liberal government also faces another – albeit lesser-known – conflict in its midst. More

Posted On : February 16, 2020 Published By : Olivia Hallett

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  • What Does “Immigration” Mean? Spain and the Launching of a (counter)Hegemonic Operation
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