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Co-Editors-in-Chief
Sarah Bauerle Danzman, Indiana University, Bloomington (USA)
Mikael Wigell, Finnish Institute of International Affairs (Finland)
Henrique Choer Moraes, Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Brazil)
Victor A. Ferguson, The University of Tokyo (Japan)
Markus Wagner, University of Wollongong (Australia)
Cordelia Buchanan Ponczek, University of Oxford (UK)

Editorial Staff
Managing Editor:
Naoise McDonagh, Edith Cowan University (Australia)
Deputy Managing Editors:
Mohammed Hadi, Finnish Institute of International Affairs (Finland)
Senior Article Editors:
Tomi Kristeri, Finnish Institute of International Affairs (Finland)
Nathaniel Gilkey, University of Helsinki (Finland)
Article Editors:
Aleksis Oreschnikoff, University of Helsinki (Finland)
Submissions Editor:
Sara von Bonsdorff, Åbo Akademi University (Finland) (Executive Editor)

Editorial Board
Heiko Borchert, Borchert Consulting & Research AG (Switzerland)
Henry Gao, Singapore Management University (Singapore)
Fabien Gehl, European Commission / College of Europe (Belgium)
Alexandra Hofer, Utrecht University (The Netherlands)
William Hynes, The World Bank (USA)
Nikhil Kalyanpur, London School of Economics and Political Science (UK)
Saori N. Katada, University of Southern California (USA)
Ashley Thomas Lenihan, Georgetown University (USA)
Sophie Meunier, Princeton University (USA)
Helen V. Milner, Princeton University (USA)
Fabio Morosini, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul School of Law (Brazil)
Nicholas Mulder, Cornell University (USA)
Amrita Narlikar, Observer Research Foundation (India)
Abraham L. Newman, Georgetown University (USA)
William J. Norris, The Bush School, Texas A&M University (USA)
Smruti Pattanaik, Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (India)
Julia Qin, Wayne State University (USA)
Michelle Ratton Sanchez Badin, FGV São Paulo Law School (Brazil)
Paul Rivlin, Tel Aviv University (Israel)
Anthea Roberts, Australian National University (Australia)
Claudia Schmucker, German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP) (Germany)
Maria Shagina, International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) (Switzerland)
Kazuto Suzuki, The University of Tokyo (Japan)
Joel P. Trachtman, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University (USA)
Cindy Whang, National Chung Hsing University (Taiwan)

Law & Geoeconomics

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Sarah Bauerle Danzman
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Henrique Choer Moraes
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Mikael Wigell
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Individuals are eligible for free access to Law & Geoeconomics until 31 December 2026, using access token LGEO4U. Click here for more information.

Law & Geoeconomics is a double-anonymous peer-reviewed journal that provides a platform for an emerging multi-/interdisciplinary scholarly community to rigorously analyze and debate the relationship between law and geoeconomics and its implications for world politics. The journal particularly welcomes manuscripts that explore: (A) the role of law in conditioning power politics by economic means; and (B) the role of such power politics in the formation, enforcement, and systematic variation of laws and norms that govern the global economy. The term “geoeconomics” has become increasingly popular in international relations (IR) scholarship to describe this type of power politics by economic means and the rapidly evolving transformation in the logic underpinning global economic relations. In recent years, diverse strands of literature have emerged and multiplied that all share an interest in these matters. Such scholarship is linked by recurring and conceptually overlapping terminology, including “economic statecraft”, “weaponized interdependence”, “economic diplomacy”, “economic security”, “economic warfare”, or simply “geoeconomics”.

The Editorial Board consists of distinguished scholars drawn widely from across the humanities and social sciences, and the journal’s remit is similarly pluralist, welcoming contributions from all theoretical and methodological approaches and from scholars working in or at the intersection of a diverse range of disciplines, including political science, law, international relations, economics, history, geography, and sociology. Law & Geoeconomics aims to be at the forefront of scholarly inquiry in this rapidly evolving area, promoting cutting-edge research that advances theoretical understanding, informs policy debates, and fosters dialogue and exchange across disciplines.

The journal will welcome the following types of submissions (in APA format) for double-anonymous external peer review:

Articles (maximum 12,000 words, inclusive of footnotes and references but excluding online appendices) that advance theory, concept formation, or empirical analysis.
Notes (maximum 6,000 words, inclusive of footnotes and references but excluding online appendices). Notes are shorter-form manuscripts that are less theoretically ambitious than Articles. Notes may introduce new datasets, provide a pithy empirical test of existing theory using new data, or replicate previous research findings using new methods that change underlying results.
Reviews. The journal publishes different types of reviews, which have their own word limits:
- Policy reviews (maximum 5,000 words) analyze recent policy developments and/or policy publications of government or non-government-affiliated research institutes and think tanks.
- Legal case notes (maximum 5,000 words) analyze recent judgments or arbitral awards.
- Book reviews can either appraise a single recent book-length scholarly publication (maximum 1,000 words), reappraise classic scholarly writings from a law and geoeconomics perspective (maximum 2,500 words), or review several scholarly books that are thematically linked (maximum 3,000 words).

For editorial queries and proposals, please contact the Law & Geoeconomics Editorial Office.
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