From Fox to Wolf: U.S. Hegemonic Transformation, Domestic Democracy, and Strategic Alliances in East Asia

By: Prof. Habib Badawi & Dr. Nicholas Howard Introduction: The Paradox of Hegemonic Strength The transformation of American global leadership presents a fundamental paradox that challenges conventional wisdom about hegemonic power and its exercise. While the United States retains overwhelming material capabilities, its capacity to build and maintain international coalitions has demonstrably diminished. This study …

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Strategic Competition in an Interdependent World: Reassessing Power Transition Dynamics in US-China Relations

By: Prof. Habib Badawi and Dr. Ali Darbaj Introduction The contemporary discourse surrounding US-China relations has been dominated by historical analogies, particularly Graham Allison’s application of the “Thucydides Trap” framework, which suggests that rising powers inevitably challenge established hegemons, often leading to conflict (Allison, 2017). However, such binary frameworks struggle to capture the unprecedented complexity …

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The Original Axis: India’s Stand Beyond Allegiance

By Abhay Pratap Singh In a world fractured into competing blocs, India stands not as an outlier, but as a civilizational anchor. The global order is increasingly defined by a binary choice: the rules-based liberal system championed by the West, and the authoritarian civilizational states like China and Russia, which frame Western norms as morally …

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From Partnership to Panic: How Misinformation Distorted Japan’s Africa City Initiative (TICAD 9)

Prof. Habib Al Badawi The Architecture of Misunderstanding The “Partner City” initiative, conceived as a cornerstone of Japan’s soft diplomatic engagement with Africa through the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD), represented an ambitious yet fundamentally modest vision of international cooperation. By establishing formal partnerships between four Japanese municipalities—Nagai, Kisarazu, Sanjo, and Imabari—and the …

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In God’s own country, even Stealth Champions bow

By Ankit Jakhar and Priyansh Pandey When HMS Prince of Wales and its carrier strike group docked in Singapore for Operation High mast, it was missing one of its F-35 Lightning – numbered 34, which made an emergency landing at Thiruvananthapuram International Airport at approximately 9:30 PM IST on 14th June. According to sources, low …

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From Harlem to the Hudson: Malcolm X, Mamdani, and the Myth of America’s Democracy

By Habib Al Badawi Abstract This investigation challenges the foundational mythology of American democracy through a comprehensive examination of systematic exclusion that characterized United States political development for 189 years (1776-1965). By analyzing the intellectual trajectory from Malcolm X’s revolutionary critique to contemporary figures like Zohran Mamdani, this research illuminates persistent patterns of hegemonic struggle …

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India Must Resist TRIPS‑Plus IP Pressures to Protect Biotech and Public Health

The push for TRIPS‑Plus IP provisions threatens innovation and access to affordable healthcare worldwide By Nandan Trivedi India’s remarkable rise as a global pharmaceutical powerhouse is no accident—it is the result of strategic legal foresight, including a refusal to bow to overreaching global IP standards. Now, as India negotiates multiple Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with …

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The Architecture of Global Power Transformation—US-China Strategic Competition in the 21st Century

By Habib Al Badawi Introduction: Navigating Unprecedented Power Reconfiguration The contemporary international system exists at a critical inflection point, characterized by a profound reconfiguration of global power dynamics driven by the dual forces of hegemonic persistence and strategic ascent (Gilpin, 1981). This transformation transcends simplistic models of unipolar transition, demanding a nuanced understanding of power …

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Gupta Era Copper Plate from the 4th century CE Unveiled:

A newly discovered copper plate from the Gupta Era, dated to Gupta Saṃvat 58 (376-77 CE), has emerged as a significant archaeological find in Gujarat. The artifact, inscribed in Sanskrit using the Gupta Brahmi script, was initially photographed by an anonymous individual who shared the image with archaeologist Tamanna Mishra. Recognizing its historical importance, Mishra …

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When Authority Undermines Literacy: A Case Study of Public Grammar, Political Power, and Institutional Response

By Professor Habib Al-Badawi Abstract Purpose: This study investigates how grammatical errors in official communications from educational authorities impact their perceived legitimacy and credibility. Specifically, it examines the May 2025 case of U.S. Education Secretary McMahon’s grammatically flawed letter to Harvard University threatening federal funding withdrawal and analyzes the resulting public discourse and institutional responses. …

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