• First-ever annual award

    22 May 2024

    CEJISS has established a new tradition of annual awards for the best article in a given year. The awarded article is selected by the CEJISS Editorial Board on the basis of the overall academic quality and contribution. For more information about the award, see here. The first-ever award for the best paper in 2023 goes to Yulia Kurnyshova for her article Ukraine at War: Resilience and Normative...

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  • New SJR (Scopus) Ranking Released

    22 April 2024

    According to the latest (2023) SJR ranking based on Scopus data, CEJISS is in Q2 in Political Science and International Relations. More information about metrics and other indicators can be found here: https://www.cejiss.org/metrics

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  • The special issues on 'Constructing Crises in Europe' published

    27 June 2023

    The special issue on Constructing Crises in Europe: Multifaceted Securitisation in Times of Exception guest-edited by Andrey Makarychev and Thomas Diez has been published. See our June 2023 issue (vol. 17, no. 2).

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  • Special Issues - Open Call

    09 November 2021

    CEJISS welcomes special issue proposals related to international politics and international security. The journal is particularly interested in proposals that help advance its aims and scope. The Editorial Team of CEJISS assesses proposals on a rolling basis. It aims to publish a special issue within 10-13 months after accepting a proposal and within eight months after receiving an entire batch of...

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  • The new website and citation guidelines

    29 July 2021

    The new CEJISS website has been launched! Please also check out our new citation and formal guidelines. We follow the 'your paper, your way' principle. At the initial submission, you may use any formal and citation style as long as it is consistent.

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  • Aims & Scope

    23 June 2021

    Central European Journal of International and Security Studies (CEJISS) is a quarterly journal that publishes peer-reviewed scholarly articles across the entire field of International Relations and International Security. CEJISS is a pluralist journal. It favours a variety of theories and methods used as well as topics and geographical areas covered. Nonetheless, CEJISS is primarily (but not...

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Recent articles

  • Being Small but Smart in the International Arena

    (2024 - Volume 18, Issue 2)

    LITSAS, N. Spyridon. Smart Instead of Small in International Relations Theory. Switzerland: Springer, 2023. ISBN: 9783031446368 (e-book).   Small states have attracted the attention of researchers for decades. Historians and political scientists have analysed small states within the context of international relations, delving into facets encompassing foreign affairs, security, power relations and antagonism, diplomatic engagements, as well as peace and conflicts. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s,...

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  • Geopolitical Positioning of a Small State: Serbia in the Shadow of Yugoslavia’s ‘Third Way’

    (2024 - Volume 18, Issue 2)

    Abstract This article examines Serbia’s positioning in the East-West axis during the post-Cold War era. This is a specific example of the ‘third way’ in twenty-first century geopolitical behaviour. The small country remains non-aligned within the existing alliances of the East and the West, trying to find a balance between their influence and remaining faithful to its national interests. Although with far more modest resources, the situation of the Serbian state is reminiscent of the fate of...

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  • The Institutionalisation of Security Norms in the Context of Cyber Alignments: The Transatlantic Alignment in the Cyber Domain

    (2024 - Volume 18, Issue 2)

    Abstract Realists argue that security alliances are established to confront military threats posed by one state to others. In contrast, this study argues that nonmilitary cyberthreats have become a factor in establishing new security arrangements that do not necessarily take the form of an alliance, but rather emerge in the form of alignments. Cyberthreats lie in the political, economic, societal and military repercussions caused by the employment of cyber technologies, not these technologies...

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  • Two’s Company, Three’s a Crowd: Tripolarity and War

    (2024 - Volume 18, Issue 2)

    Abstract International systems of three great powers, tripolar systems, remain an understudied topic. In this article, I make three claims about tripolarity. First, it is more warlike than either bipolarity or multipolarity. Second, the two weaker poles of a tripolar system usually ally against the most powerful one. Third, when a pole abruptly declines, the two others have a strong incentive to race to prey on it. To demonstrate this, I develop three cases of past tripolar systems rarely...

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