Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Rumelili, Bahar
2020.
Integrating anxiety into international relations theory: Hobbes, existentialism, and ontological security.
International Theory,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 2,
p.
257.
Arfi, Badredine
2020.
Securityquaexistential surviving (while becoming otherwise) through performative leaps of faith.
International Theory,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 2,
p.
291.
Cash, John
2020.
Psychoanalysis, cultures of anarchy, and ontological insecurity.
International Theory,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 2,
p.
306.
Kinnvall, Catarina
and
Mitzen, Jennifer
2020.
Anxiety, fear, and ontological security in world politics: thinking with and beyond Giddens.
International Theory,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 2,
p.
240.
Berenskötter, Felix
2020.
Anxiety, time, and agency.
International Theory,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 2,
p.
273.
Rumelili, Bahar
2021.
[Our] age of anxiety: existentialism and the current state of international relations.
Journal of International Relations and Development,
Vol. 24,
Issue. 4,
p.
1020.
Grzybowski, Janis
2021.
Re-enacting the international order, or: why the Syrian state did not disappear.
Review of International Studies,
Vol. 47,
Issue. 5,
p.
672.
Mälksoo, Maria
2021.
Militant memocracy in International Relations: Mnemonical status anxiety and memory laws in Eastern Europe.
Review of International Studies,
Vol. 47,
Issue. 4,
p.
489.
Riemann, Malte
and
Rossi, Norma
2021.
Remote warfare as “security of being”: reading security force assistance as an ontological security routine.
Defence Studies,
Vol. 21,
Issue. 4,
p.
489.
Steele, Brent J.
2021.
Nowhere to run to, nowhere to hide: inescapable dread in the 2020s.
Journal of International Relations and Development,
Vol. 24,
Issue. 4,
p.
1037.
Hinck, Robert S
and
Ehrl, Marco
2022.
Internationalizing Afghan security? Strategic narratives and transnational public sphere (dis)formation in Chinese, Russian, Afghani, and US media.
Communication and the Public,
Vol. 7,
Issue. 2,
p.
97.
Ku, Minseon
and
Mitzen, Jennifer
2022.
The Dark Matter of World Politics: System Trust, Summits, and State Personhood.
International Organization,
Vol. 76,
Issue. 4,
p.
799.
Krickel-Choi, Nina C
2022.
The Concept of Anxiety in Ontological Security Studies.
International Studies Review,
Vol. 24,
Issue. 3,
Rosher, Ben
2022.
“And now we’re facing that reality too”: Brexit, ontological security, and intergenerational anxiety in the Irish border region.
European Security,
Vol. 31,
Issue. 1,
p.
21.
Adısönmez, Umut Can
Onursal, Recep
and
Öztığ, Laçin İdil
2023.
Quest for Regional Hegemony: The Politics of Ontological Insecurity in the Saudi–Iran Rivalry.
Alternatives: Global, Local, Political,
Vol. 48,
Issue. 1,
p.
91.
Hom, Andrew R.
2023.
Heidegger’s heritage: The temporal politics of authenticity, then and now.
Review of International Studies,
Vol. 49,
Issue. 5,
p.
885.
Innes, Alexandria
2023.
Accounting for inequalities: divided selves and divided states in International Relations.
European Journal of International Relations,
Vol. 29,
Issue. 3,
p.
651.
Guzina, Dejan
2023.
Serbia after Yugoslavia: Caught between Geopolitics and Liberal Promises.
Geopolitics,
Vol. 28,
Issue. 4,
p.
1589.
Zevnik, Andreja
2023.
Anxious Politics: Contesting Fantasies Surrounding the Removal of Statues of Slavery and the Confederacy.
International Studies Quarterly,
Vol. 67,
Issue. 3,
von Essen, Hugo
and
Danielson, August
2023.
A Typology of Ontological Insecurity Mechanisms: Russia's Military Engagement in Syria.
International Studies Review,
Vol. 25,
Issue. 2,