Aims &
Scope The International Spectator,
established in 1965, is a peer-reviewed international affairs journal.
In its four annual issues, The
International Spectator aims to provide academics, practitioners, opinion-
and decision-makers, and interested laymen with thought-provoking and policy-oriented
essays, opinions, and book reviews on a wide spectrum of foreign policy issues. The two
kinds of articles published - the shorter "opinions" on topics of major current
interest, and the more analytical and scholarly "essays" - undergo rigorous peer
review, based on initial in-house screening and anonymous refereeing by at least two
reviewers. Authors come from a broad geographic range, particularly European, North
American, Mediterranean and Middle Eastern countries.
Geographically, The
International Spectator covers areas of ongoing international concern with
an emphasis on regions and countries adjacent to Italy, especially the Balkans, the
Mediterranean and the Middle East. The focus is on European and transatlantic policies in
these areas as well as on regional cooperation and initiatives. Thematically, it
concentrates on European integration and European foreign policy, regularly featuring a
"Europe Forum" which provides fresh analysis and debate of topical European
issues. It also focuses on international organisations, regional cooperation and global
governance, conflicts and conflict resolution, security and defence issues.
Finally, with its section
"Italy in World Affairs", the journal uses its comparative advantage in
understanding the factors that shape the country's foreign policy to further the debate on
Italy's role on the international scene.
Special "core" sections
that have recently appeared in the journal include:
Peer Review
All research articles in this journal have undergone rigorous peer review, based on
initial editor screening and anonymized refereeing by two anonymous referees.
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