- The rise of the nation-state during the Age of Revolutions, Eric StormStorm discusses a broad comparative analysis of the rise of the nation-state during the Age of Revolutions.
- A Priceless Grace?, Ozan OzavciThe article traces the answer to diverse relational dynamics such as the conflicts in the Ottoman cabinet, the rivalries among the Great Powers, and the European endeavours to secure commercial interests.
- The Great Illusion, Stefano LissiThe Great Illusion: Blueprints of Collaboration between Revolutions in Italy and Germany (1848). Lissi analyses two episodes and their role in two revolutions.
- From letters to bombs, Annelotte JanseAnnelotte Janse’s article that won best student paper society for terrorism research annual postgraduate conference 2021.
- Terrorists as Monsters: The Unmanageable Other, Beatrice de GraafDe Graaf joins Marcus Pinfari to get to the bottom of the monster metaphor, which is slavishly omnipresent in dealings with terrorism.
- Quarantine as a safety repertoire (German), Andrea WiegeshoffWiegeshoff discusses the global COVID restrictions from a historical perspective dating back to the late Middle Ages and early modern times.
- National security as a transnational issue, Beatrice de Graaf et. al.In a co-authored publication, Beatrice de Graaf discusses the nineteenth-century origins of the concept of security.
- A new perspective on the European security culture after 1815, Beatrice de GraafBeatrice de Graaf et al., discusses the concept of national security as a transnational issue.
- A new perspective on the European security culture after 1815, Beatrice de Graaf et. al.In a co-authored publication, Beatrice de Graaf discusses the European security culture after 1815.
- Governing the Armenian Question by İlkay YılmazExploring the passport regulations and practices to shed light onto the relationship between state formation, Ottoman threat perceptions and the marginalisation of the Armenian community.
- Vorstin op vredespad, Beatrice de GraafBeatrice de Graaf discusses the correspondence between Queen Wilhelmina and Emperor Wilhelm II concerning a peace conference for 1918.
- (In-)Securities across European Empires and Beyond, Andrea Wiegeshoff & Benedikt StuchteyWiegeshoff & Benedikt Stuchtey focus on the multi-layered relationship between issues of (in-)securities, European history and imperial history.
- A Life of Longing and Belonging, Nora LessersohnThis article serves as an introduction to the person of Christopher Oscanyan, an Ottoman Armenian writer, entrepreneur, lecturer, translator, public figure, and one-time consul general from Constantinople to New York City
- Imperial anxieties, Eric de LangeDe Lange discusses the current state of affairs in the historiography and indicates the potential to analyse security and a comparative approach to imperial history.
- ‘That racial chasm that yawns eternally in our midst’, Cees HeereStorm discusses a broad comparative analysis of the rise of the nation-state during the Age of Revolutions.
- What’s Up in Ottoman Studies? Virginia H. AskanAskan volunteers a few words about the state-of-the-field of Ottoman Studies.
- Changing Definitions of Sovereignty, Seo-Hyun ParkChanging Definitions of Sovereignty in Nineteenth Century East Asia. Park analyses how Westphalian sovereignty was interpreted in Japan and Korea.
- A British Meat Cannery in Moldavia, Constantin ArdeleanuA British Meat Cannery in Moldavia (1844–1852). Ardeleanu details Stephen Goldner’s activity in Moldavia during his administration of a meat cannery in Galatz.
- The European Commission of the Danube, Constantin ArdeleanuArdeleanu discusses the issues and threats facing Danube navigation.
- Non-Belligerent Belligerent Russia and the Franco-Austrian War, Alexander MikaberidzeDiscussing the political maoeuvrings and the military operations in Austrian Galicia: the overlooked in history of the 1809 war.

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