How to End a Nuclear War: Deterrence and Provocation in War Termination

Is nuclear conflict manageable, or does any use of nuclear weapons inexorably push states toward escalation? And how do these dynamics differ between nuclear- and conventional-armed attacks? Many theorists have considered these questions, but empirically answering them is difficult given the absence of historical data. We address this challenge by fielding a pre-registered experimental survey of American adults designed around a series of hypothetical vignettes featuring attacks on the United States.

Cyril Foster Lecture 2026: ‘Gaza, the Humanisation of War, and the Politics of International Law’ with Samuel Moyn

Law is not just a set of rules to comply with (or not), but a terrain of political struggle. As the war in Gaza began 2023, leading politicians, international lawyers, and ordinary people engaged on that terrain, to advance strategy and honor principle. This lecture considers how the demand for war to be fought within humane limits has shaped how activists, observers, and politicians argue in the present and imagine the future.

Whither dependency? The rise of the Visegrád countries' billionaires

This paper introduces and reports the first results of a research project on the emerging billionaire-entrepreneurs of the Visegrád countries (Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia). The increasing visibility of V4 billionaire-entrepreneurs has largely happened under the radar of recent scholarship, and their economic activities — including increasingly significant outward FDI towards the West — seem to defy the dominant thesis of the Visegrád countries' economic dependence on foreign capital.

OCPSG Speaker Event (LLM Application): Measuring Empirically the Legal Conflicts over U.S. Public Lands from 1960 to 2024

The Oxford Computational Political Science Group (OCPSG) is pleased to announce its speaker event w/ Prof Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, FBA and Amara Otero-Salgado. They will be presenting their paper 'Measuring Empirically the Legal Conflicts over U.S. Public Lands from 1960 to 2024'. It seeks to better understand how conflicting views over public lands have evolved over time, namely by examining empirically a newly developed dataset to assess competing narratives that have driven legal battles in the U.S. in the modern era of environmental policy.

Senkai Hsia

Senkai Hsia is studying for an MPhil in International Relations as a Rotary Foundation Scholar. Under the supervision of Professor Ranjit Lall, Senkai's research examines evolving U.S. economic strategy with Indo-Pacific allies, alongside broad interests in American foreign policy, international political economy and U.S.-China relations.

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