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John Agnew

Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles

Publications -  234
Citations -  13685

John Agnew is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Politics & Geopolitics. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 229 publications receiving 12820 citations. Previous affiliations of John Agnew include Queen's University Belfast & University of California.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Is there a politics to geopolitics

TL;DR: In this paper, four eminent contributors to the literature in political geography offer their thoughts on the meanings associated with the term and potential confusions that arise from its different uses, and discuss the gap in the ways that the term geopolitics is understood and deployed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deus Vult: The Geopolitics of the Catholic Church

TL;DR: The Church is a religious tradition with a highly centralised organisational structure which operates worldwide but that must adjust itself to and effectively operate in local and world-regional contexts that can often challenge and threaten to subvert its central doctrines, operational principles, and political compromises with secular authorities.
Journal ArticleDOI

The geography of party replacement in Italy, 1987-1996

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore how these ongoing changes to party politics in Italy were manifest spatially between 1987 and 1996, and examine the geographical aspects of party replacement in central and northern Italy.
Book ChapterDOI

The Territorial Trap

John Agnew, +1 more
- 26 Sep 2002 - 
TL;DR: Even when political rule is territorial, territoriality does not necessarily entail the practices of total mutual exclusion which dominant understandings of the modem territorial state attribute to it as mentioned in this paper, however, when the territoriality of the state is debated by international relations theorists, the discussion is overwhelmingly in terms of the persistence or obsolescence of the territorial state as an unchanging entity rather than in the terms of its significance and meaning in different historical-geographical circumstances.