LSE creators

Number of items: 26.
2025
  • Cooper, Luke (2025). Russo-Ukrainian war: the political economy of the present balance of forces. (PeaceRep Report). PeaceRep: The Peace and Conflict Resolution Evidence Platform, University of Edinburgh. picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke (2025). Authoritarian protectionism and the post-neoliberal transition: learning from Stuart Hall’s method of articulation. Frontiers in Political Science, 7, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpos.2025.1455768 picture_as_pdf
  • 2024
  • Cooper, Luke (2024). The war against Ukraine and the failure of 'great power politics’. In Cope, Zak (Ed.), The Palgrave Handbook of Contemporary Geopolitics (pp. 439-458). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-47227-5_60 picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke, Nimer, Maissim (2024). Generating instability? The impact of the EU's hybrid migration governance in Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan. Governance, 37(3), 785 - 802. https://doi.org/10.1111/gove.12801 picture_as_pdf
  • Vlasiuk, Volodymyr, Cooper, Luke, Milakovsky, Brian (2024). A state-led war economy in an open market: investigating state-market relations in Ukraine 2021-2023. (PeaceRep Ukraine Report). Conflict and Civicness Research Group, LSE IDEAS, The London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • 2023
  • Cooper, Luke (2023). How to be a democrat in an authoritarian world? The International Journal of Interdisciplinary Global Studies, 18(1), 57 - 68. https://doi.org/10.18848/2324-755X/CGP/v18i01/57-68 picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke (2023). Insourcing the war-economy: building a resilient Ukraine means maximising its domestic output. Conflict and Civicness Research Group, LSE IDEAS, The London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke (2023). ‘I won’t protect you’ to ‘I will’: authoritarian protectionism and the end of neoliberal hegemony. International Politics, https://doi.org/10.1057/s41311-023-00447-7 picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke (2023). Economic resilience, social dialogue and democracy in wartime: critical reflections on the challenges facing Ukraine’s economy. Conflict and Civicness Research Group, LSE IDEAS, The London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke (2023). Autocratic nationalism in Hungary: Viktor Orbán as a hegemonic actor. In "Illiberal Democracies" in Europe: An Authoritarian Response to the Crisis of Liberalism (pp. 17 - 26). Illiberalism Studies Program, The George Washington University. picture_as_pdf
  • 2022
  • Cooper, Luke (2022). Market economics in an all-out-war? Assessing economic and political risks to the Ukrainian war effort. LSE IDEAS, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Snyder, Timothy, Kazdobina, Yulia, Scherba, Olexander, Cooper, Luke, Kaldor, Mary (2022). Is a peace deal possible with Putin? On the problems of peacemaking in the Russian war on Ukraine. LSE IDEAS, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke (2022). Imagined communities: from subjecthood to nationality in the British Atlantic. International Relations, 37(1), 72-95. https://doi.org/10.1177/00471178221098913 picture_as_pdf
  • Brik, Tymofii, Shapovalova, Natalia, Cooper, Luke, Kaldor, Mary (2022). Meeting the immediate needs of the Ukrainian economy, the role of international actors and the importance of understanding the conflict as a conventional war. LSE IDEAS, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Rosenberg, Justin, Zarakol, Ayşe, Blagden, David, Rutazibwa, Olivia, Gray, Kevin, Corry, Olaf, Matin, Kamran, Antunes de Oliveira, Felipe, Cooper, Luke (2022). Debating uneven and combined development/debating International Relations: a forum. Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 50(2), 291 - 327. https://doi.org/10.1177/03058298211064346 picture_as_pdf
  • 2021
  • Cooper, Luke (2021). Authoritarian protectionism in Central, Eastern and South-Eastern Europe: diversity, commonality and resistance. (LSE IDEAS Reports). LSE Ideas. picture_as_pdf
  • Dunin-Wasowicz, Roch, Cooper, Luke, Milanese, Niccolò (7 May 2021) Conference on the Future of Europe: civil society should take the lead. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Dunin-Wasowicz, Roch, Cooper, Luke, Milanese, Niccolò (27 April 2021) After a decade of crises, Europe is witnessing the rise of insurgent Europeanism. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke, Dunin-Wasowicz, Roch, Kaldor, Mary, Milanese, Niccolò, Rangelov, Iavor (2021). The rise of insurgent Europeanism: mapping civil society visions of Europe 2018-2020. (LSE IDEAS Reports). LSE Ideas. picture_as_pdf
  • 2020
  • Cooper, Luke, Fowles, Sam (30 December 2020) Parliament should have had a meaningful vote on the EU trade deal. But it did not. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke (2020). Worlds beyond capitalism: images of uneven and combined development in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars trilogy. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, https://doi.org/10.1080/09557571.2020.1828282 picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke, Cooper, Christabel (2020). Get Brexit done: the new political divides of England and Wales at the 2019 election. Political Quarterly, 91(4), 751 - 761. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-923X.12918 picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke (24 June 2020) The end of neoliberalism? Why the current crisis is different to 1989, 2001 and 2008. LSE COVID-19 Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Cooper, Luke, Aitchison, Guy (2020). The dangers ahead: Covid-19, authoritarianism and democracy. Conflict and Civil Society Research Unit, LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • 2015
  • Cooper, Luke (2015). The international relations of the 'imagined community': explaining the late nineteenth-century genesis of the Chinese nation. Review of International Studies, 41(3), 477 - 501. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210514000254
  • 2013
  • Cooper, Luke (2013). Can contingency be 'internalized' into the bounds of theory? Critical realism, the philosophy of internal relations and the solution of 'uneven and combined development'. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 26(3), 573 - 597. https://doi.org/10.1080/09557571.2013.814045