Refereed Journal Articles

  1. Cooper published an article in the Third World Quarterly. China, India and the pattern of G20/BRICS engagement: differentiated ambivalence between ‘rising’ power status and solidarity with the Global South
  2. Cooper and Hongying Wang published an article in Asian Survey, “China’s Engagement with Former Foreign Leaders: In Search of External Validation of Regime Legitimacy,” Volume 60, Issue 4 July/August 2020.
  3. Cooper published a new article “Recalibrating the Classic Models of Mediation: Former Leaders and Hybrid Personality-Network Driven Initiatives in the Venezuela Crisis”, Rev. cienc. polít. vol. 40 no.1, Apr. 2020.
  4. Cooper co-edited a Special issue (South African Journal of International Affairs, Volume 26, Issue 4, December 2019) with colleagues at the German Development Institute: A decade of G20 summitry: Assessing the benefits, limitations and future of global club governance in turbulent times. His contribution is as co-author on the Introduction and as author on the lead-off article. His article is titled, “The G20 is dead as a crisis or steering committee: Long live the G20 as hybrid focal point.” The entire Special Issue is available online.
  5. Cooper published ‘Rising” States and Global Reach: Measuring “Globality” among BRICS/MIKTA Countries,’ on Global Summitry, Published on line: 18 July 2019
  6. Cooper published a new article on “Adapting Public Diplomacy to the Populist Challenge,” in a special issue of The Hague Journal of Diplomacy (HJD) on Debating Public Diplomacy. The articles in this special issue are intended to be debate-focused.
  7. Cooper also co-athored another article, with Christina Stolte, Insider and Outsider Strategies of Influence: The BRICS’ Dualistic Approach Towards Informal Institutions, New Political Economy.
  8. (co-authored by Jérémie Cornut) “The changing practices of frontline diplomacy: New directions for inquiry”, Review of International Studies, First View.
  9. U.S. public diplomacy and sports stars: mobilizing African-American athletes as goodwill ambassadors from the cold war to an uncertain futurePlace Brandng Public Diplomacy (2018).
  10. Concluding article to Special Issue onEntrepreneurial states, edited by John Ravenhill,  “Entrepreneurial states versus middle powers: Distinct or intertwined frameworks?”, International Journal, first published online December 8 2018.
  11. U.S. public diplomacy and sports stars: mobilizing African-American athletes as goodwill ambassadors from the cold war to an uncertain future”Place Branding and Public Diplomacy (2018). The United States has diverse options in the projection of public diplomacy ranging across the spectrum from risk-averse to risk-oriented strategies. A significant test highlights the use of the deep pool of the U.S. star athletes generally and African-American athletes more specifically. During the Cold War era, a conformist style was privileged in the U.S. State Department goodwill ‘ambassador’ program. Yet, paralleling the overall trajectory of celebrity diplomats, significant gaps can be located in this risk-averse culture. With this unevenness in mind, the article look back to see what lessons or parallels can be taken from earlier initiatives. At a moment marked by the populism of the Trump administration and the environment of intensified racial polarization, it is unlikely that any new connection between African-American athletes and a new public diplomacy strategy will fit into a recalibrated conformist model. Even if it is a sharper break from past experiences, however, the constant is that this category of individuals—especially the high-profile African-American sports stars—remains a huge asset if the U.S. State Department has the desire and ability to tap into this talent pool under different political conditions in the future.
  12.  “The changing practices of frontline diplomacy: New directions for inquiry”  Review of International Studies, First View. 2018. This article develops the concept of ‘frontline diplomacy’ – what practitioners referring to work in embassies, consulates, and permanent representation as ‘the field’ –, defined here as all diplomats’ activities taking place away from headquarters. IR scholarship tends to focus on Ministries of Foreign Affairs located in capitals. On the contrary, building on the practice turn in IR, we first show that international politics emerge from frontline practices. Adding to criticism against the practice turn, we then explain that it has missed important transformations occurring in frontline diplomacy because it tends to privilege stability over change. We finally discuss two innovations in frontline practices: the action of Sherpas in G20 summits following the 2008 crisis and the use of Twitter by US Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul (2012–14). For each we answer three questions: How do these activities transform traditional modes of operation? How are non-state actors involved in them? What do they tell about transformation of global politics? Because diplomatic practices at the frontlines epitomise international politics, these new directions for inquiry contribute substantively to IR scholarship. At the theoretical level, they enrich the continuing encounter between IR and diplomatic studies through practice theory and help to understand change in practice.
  13. (co-authored by Jérémie Cornut) “The changing practices of frontline diplomacy: New directions for inquiry“, Review of International Studies, First View https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210518000505
  14. U.S. public diplomacy and sports stars: mobilizing African-American athletes as goodwill ambassadors from the cold war to an uncertain future, Place Brandng Public Diplomacy (2018).
  15. Concluding article to Special Issue on Entrepreneurial states, edited by John Ravenhill,  “Entrepreneurial states versus middle powers: Distinct or intertwined frameworks?”,International Journal, first published online December 8 2018.
  16. Cooper A. F. (coauthor) (2018)”The FIFA Scandal and the Distorted Influence of Small States,” Global Governance, vol. 14, no.1: pp:21-40
  17. Cooper A.F. (2017) “Between Hub Status and Parallelism: Examining the G20-BRICS Dynamics in Global Governance” International Organisations Research Journal, vol. 12, no 2, pp. 146– 163 (in Russian and English). DOI: 10.17323/1996-7845-2017-02-146 
  18. Cooper, A.F. & Zhang, Y. (2017) “Chinese Leadership in the Evolution of “Hub” and “Parallel” Globally Oriented Institutions” Chinese Political Science Review.
  19. The BRICS’ New Development Bank: Shifting from Material Leverage to Innovative CapacityGlobal Policy (2017).
  20. (with Asif B. Farooq) ‘Emerging Donors: The Promise and Limits of Bilateral and Multilateral Democracy Promotion,’ Cambridge Review of International Affairs, vol. 29 issue 4 (2017): 1520-1521.
  21. Cooper, Andrew (co-authored with Richard Stubbs) “Contending regionalisms: hubs and challengers in the Americas and the Asia-Pacific” In The Pacific Review :1-18 Published online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09512748.2017.1332083 

  22. Cooper co-edited the Introduction to a Special Report on “Non-Western Celebrity Politics and Diplomacy” in CELEBRITY STUDIES , Vol. 8 , No. 2, 2017: 312-317. 
  23. Cooper has co-edited a Special Issue of international Journal on “Positioning the third wave of middle power diplomacy: Institutional elevation, practice limitations.”
  24. Cooper, co-authored (with Asif B Farooq) an article, ‘The Role of China and India in the G20 and BRICS: Commonalities or Competitive Behaviour?’  in a special issue of the Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, Vol 45, No 3 (2016): 73-106 on the theme of  non-traditional security in Sino-Indian relationship http://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jcca.

  25. MIKTA and the Global Projection of Middle Powers: Toward a Summit of Their Own?” Global Summitry Journal, 1, 1, 2015: 95-114.
  26. Stretching health diplomacy beyond ‘Global’ problem solving: Bringing the regional normative dimension in,” Global Social Policy (with Asif B. Farooq), 15, 3, 2015: 313-328.
  27. (with Vincent Pouliot), “How much is global governance changing? The G20 as international practice,” on a special issue of Cooperation and Conflict on ‘Diplomacy in Theory and in Practice’, September 2015, 50: 334-350.
  28. (with Asif B. Farooq) ‘Emerging Donors: The Promise and Limits of Bilateral and Multilateral Democracy Promotion,’ Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 2015, DOI: 10.1080/09557571.2015.1062686.
  29. (with Asif B. Farooq) ‘The Advocacy of Democratic Governance by India and China: Patterns of Consistency/Inconsistency between Declaratory and Operational Practice,’ India Quarterly, 71(3): 221-238.
  30. (with Asif B. Farooq) ‘Testing the Club Dynamics of the BRICS: The New Development Bank from Conception to Establishment,’ International Organization Research Journal, 10(5).
  31. Beyond the middle power model: Canada in a reshaping global order,” South African Journal of International Affairs, 2015: on line first, July 2.
  32. Andrew F. Cooper and Asif B. Farooq, “Testando a Cultura de Clube dos BRICS: A Evolução de um Novo Banco de Desenvolvimento“, Contexto Internacional (publication of the Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro, Instituto de Relações Internacionais) Vol. 37, N° 1, 2015: 13-46.
  33. “Re-balancing the G-20 from Efficiency to Legitimacy: The 3G Coalition and the Practice of Global Governance” (with Bessma Momani) Global Governance: A Review of Multilateralism and International Organizations, 20, 2, 2014: 213-232.
  34. “BRICS and the Privileging of Informality in Global Governance” (with Asif B. Farooq) Global Policy, 4.4 (2013).
  35. Between Collective Action and a Fragmented Political Economy: The G20 and the return of the protectionist impulses” (with Dan Herman) Contemporary Politics, 19.4 (2013).
  36. “Foreign Policy Strategies of Emerging Powers in a Multipolar World: An Introductory Review” (with Daniel Flemes) Third World Quarterly, 34.6 (2013): 943-962; and “Squeezed or Revitalised? Middle powers, the G20 and the Evolution of Global Governance,” Third World Quarterly, 34.6 (2013):963-984.
  37. Middle Power Leadership and the Evolution of the G20,” The Global Summitry Journal (GSJ), 5-2-2013.
  38. “Civil Society Relationships with the G20: An Extension of the G8 Template or Distinctive Pattern of Engagement?”, Global Society, 27, 2 2013:179-200.
  39. “Canada’s Engagement with the Americas in comparative perspective: Between declaratory thickness and operational thinness,” International Journal, Annual John. W. Holmes issue on Canadian Foreign Policy, 67, 3 Summer 2012: 707-723.
  40. “Consolidated Institutional Cooperation and/or Competitive Fragmentation in the Aftermath of the Financial Crisis,” Whitehead Journal of Diplomacy and International Relations XIII, 2 Summer/Fall 2011, 19-31.
  41. “Las potencias emergentes y el nuevo multilateralismo,” Revista Mexicana de Política Exterior, 94, November 2011 – February 2012: 139- 162
  42. “The G20 and Its Regional Critics: The Search for Inclusion,” Global Policy Journal 2, 2 May 2011, 203-209.
  43. “Qatar and expanded contours of Small State Diplomacy” (with Bessma Momani), International Spectator 46, 2 June 2011, 127-142.
  44. “G20 for Global Governance: Lessons from G8 Outreach” (with Agata Antkiewicz), Studia Diplomatica LXIII (2-3) 2010, 91-103.
  45. “Overview: Global economic governance in transition” (with Paola Subacchi), Introduction to special issue of International Affairs 86, 3 May 2010, 607-617.
  46. “The G20 as an improvised crisis committee and/or a contested ‘steering committee’ for the world,” International Affairs 86, 3 May 2010, 741-757.
  47. “Overcoming constraints of state sovereignty: Global health governance in Asia” (with Michael Stevenson), Third World Quarterly 30, Issue 7 October 2009, 1379 – 1394.
  48. “The challenge of re-branding progressive countries in the Gulf and Middle East: Opportunities through new networked engagements versus constraints of embedded negative images” (with Bessma Momani), Place Branding and Public Diplomacy 5, 2009, 103–117.
  49. “Emerging Powers and Africa: Implications for/from Global Governance? (with Tim Shaw and Greg Chin, Politikon (South African Journal of Political Science), 36, 1 April 2009, 27-44.
  50. “The Incremental Transformation of the G8 through the Heiligendamm Process” (with Kelly Jackson), Studia Diplomatica: The Brussels Journal of International Relations, 61, no. 2 Fall 2008, 79-88.
  51. “Beyond One Image Fits All: Bono and the Complexity of Celebrity Diplomacy,” Global Governance, 14, 3 (July-September 2008), 265-72.
  52. Do the Asian Drivers Pull their Diplomatic Weight? China, India and the United Nations” (with Thomas Fues), World Development 36, 2 2008, 293-307.
  53. “Lessons from/for BRICSAM about South-North Relations at the Start of the 21st Century: Economic Size Trumps All Else?” (with Agata Antkiewicz and Timothy M. Shaw), International Studies Review 9, 4 2007, 673-89.
  54. “Global and/or Regional Development at the Start of the 21st Century? China, India and (South) Africa” (with Timothy M. Shaw and Agata Antkiewicz), Third World Quarterly 28, 7 2007, 1255-70.
  55. “The Achilles’ Heel of Canadian Good International Citizenship: Indigenous Diplomacies and State Responses
    ” (with P. Whitney Lackenbauer), Canadian Foreign Policy Journal 13, 2 2007, 99-119. (reprinted in Duane Bratt and Christopher J. Kukucha, eds., Readings in Canadian Foreign Policy: Classic Debates and New Ideas (Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2011).
  56. “Beyond Hollywood and the Boardroom: Celebrity Diplomacy,” Georgetown Journal of International Affairs, 8, 2 2007, 91-98.
  57. “Opening up Governance from the Top: The L20 as a project of ‘New Multilateralism’ and ‘New Regionalism’,” Korean Journal of International Organizations, 1, 1 2006, 121-133.
  58. “A Tale of Two Mesas: The OAS Defense of Democracy in Peru and Venezuela,” (with Thomas Legler), Global Governance, 11, 3 2005, 425-444.
  59. “Negotiating Out of Argentina’s Financial Crisis: Segmenting the International Creditors” (with Bessma Momani), New Political Economy, 10, 3 2005, 305-320.
  60. “The Inter-American Regime of Citizenship: Bridging the Gap between Democracy and Human Rights,” (with Jean-Philippe Thérien), Third World Quarterly, 25, 4 2004, 731-746.
  61. “The Making of the Inter-Democratic Charter: A Case of Complex Multilateralism,” International Studies Perspectives, 5, 1 February 2004, 90-121. “Ownership and the Canadian Model of New Multilateralism: Negotiating the Inter American Democratic
  62. Charter”, Canadian Foreign Policy, 10, 3 Spring 2003, 31-44.
  63. “Canadian Foreign Policy after September 11th: A Preliminary Analysis”, Études Internationales, 33, 4 December 2002, 629-645.
  64. “A Model for Defending Democracy? The OAS’s Mission to Peru” (with Thomas Legler), Journal of Democracy, 12, 4 October 2001, 123-136.
  65. “More than a Star Turn: Canadian Hybrid Diplomacy and the OAS Mission to Peru”, International Journal, 56, 2 Spring 2001, 279-296.
  66. “Vertical Limits: A Foreign Ministry of the Future,” Journal of Canadian Studies, 35, 24 Winter 2001, 111-129.
  67. “The OAS Democratic Solidarity Paradigm: Questions of Collective and National Leadership” (with Thomas Legler), Latin American Politics and Society (formerly Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs), 43, 1 Spring 2001, 103-126.
  68. “The Quebec City ‘Democracy Summit’,” The Washington Quarterly, 24, 2 Spring 2001, 159-171.
  69. “‘Out of Africa’ versus ‘Made in Africa’: Comparing South Africa’s Non-Leadership with Canada’s Leadership in the 1996 Crisis in Eastern Zaire” (with Ian Taylor), Journal of Commonwealth Politics and Comparative Politics, 39, 1, March 2001, 23-41.
  70. “Diplomacy and the re-calibration of state-societal relations” (with Brian Hocking), Global Society, 14, 3, 2000, 371-376.
  71. “Like-minded Nations, NGOs and the Changing Pattern of Diplomacy within the UN System,” Canadian Foreign Policy, 7, 1 Fall 1999, 39-50.
  72. “The Multiple Faces of South African Foreign Policy,” International Journal, 53, 4, Autumn 1998, 705-732.
  73. “In Search of Niches: Saying ‘Yes’ and Saying ‘No’ in Canada’s International Relations,” Canadian Foreign Policy, 3 Winter 1995, 1-13.
  74. “Between Fragmentation and Integration: The Evolving Security Discourse in Australia and Canada,” Australian Journal of International Affairs, 49 May 1995, 49-68.
  75. “Australian Approaches to Countertrade: State and Firm Responses” (with Ann Capling), Australian Journal of Political Science, 29 November 1994, 520-540.
  76. “Bringing the NGOs In: UNCED and the Evolution of Canada’s International Environmental Policy” (with S.J. Fritz), International Journal 47 Autumn 1992, 796-817
  77. “Like-Minded Nations/Contrasting Diplomatic Styles: Australian and Canadian Approaches to Agricultural Trade,” Canadian Journal of Political Science, 25 June 1992, 349-379.
  78. “Bound to Follow? Leadership and Followership in the Gulf Conflict” (with Richard A. Higgott and Kim Richard Nossal), Political Science Quarterly, 106 Fall 1991, 391-410.
  79. “Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation: An Evolving Case Study in Leadership and Co-operation Building” (with Richard A. Higgott and Janelle Bonnor), International Journal, 45 Autumn 1990, 823-866.
  80. “Conflict Analysis of the Trade in Services Dispute” (with Keith Hipel and Niall Fraser), Information and Decision Technologies, Special Issue on Conflict Analysis 16, 1990, 347-360.
  81. “Middle Power Leadership and Coalition-Building: Australia, the Cairns Group and the Uruguay Round” (with Richard Higgott), International Organization, 44 Autumn 1990, 589-631.
  82. “Partial Security Regimes and Verification of Compliance” (with Seong Cheon and Niall Fraser), International Interactions, 16/2, 1990, 117-136.
  83. “Exporters v. Importers: Less Developed Countries, Agricultural Trade and the MTN”, Intereconomics, 25 January/February 1990, 13-17.
  84. “Playing by New Rules: Allan Gotlieb, Public Diplomacy, and the Management of Canada-US Relations”, Fletcher Forum of World Affairs, 14 Fall 1989, 93-110.
  85. “Retour vers le Futur: Le commerce d’échange international au cours des années 80”, Études Internationales, 20 June 1989, 263-281.
  86. “The Protein Link: Complexity in the US-EC Agricultural Trade Relationship”, Journal of European Integration, 11 Winter 1987, 29-45.
  87. “Another Look at the “Great Betrayal”: Agrarian Reformers and Agricultural Policy in Britain” Agricultural History, 60 Summer 1986, 81-104.
  88. “Subnational activity and foreign policy making in Canada and the United States: Perspectives on Agriculture”, International Journal, 41 Summer 1986, 655-673.
  89. “La Vulnérabilité Stratégique des Minéraux: Le Cas de la République Fédérale Allemande Face à L’Afrique du Sud et à L’Union Soviétique,” (with Ashok Kapur), Études Internationales, 15 March 1984, 121-156.