Journal Articles:

Matthew D. Stephen (2024) China and the Limits of Hypothetical Hegemony. Security Studies, 33(1): 152–159

Matthew D. Stephen (2021) China’s New Multilateral Institutions: A Framework and Research Agenda. International Studies Review, 23(3): 807–834.

Michal Parizek and Matthew D. Stephen (2021) The Long March through the Institutions: Emerging Powers and International Organizations’ Secretariats. Cooperation and Conflict, 56(2): 204–223

Matthew D. Stephen and Kathrin Stephen (2020) The Integration of Rising Powers into Club Institutions: China and the Arctic Council. Global Policy, 11(S3): 51–60.

Matthew D. Stephen and David Skidmore (2019) The AIIB in the Liberal International Order. Chinese Journal of International Politics, 12(1): 61–91.

Matthew Stephen and Michal Parízek (2019) New Powers and the Distribution of Preferences in Global Trade Governance: From Deadlock and Drift to Fragmentation. New Political Economy, 24(6): 735–758.

Matthew D. Stephen (2018) Legitimacy Deficits of International Organizations: Design, Drift, and Decoupling at the UN Security Council. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 31(1): 96–121.

Matthew D. Stephen (2017) Emerging Powers and Emerging Trends in Global Governance. Global Governance, 23(3): 483–502.

Matthew D. Stephen (2015) ‘Can You Pass the Salt?’ The Legitimacy of International Institutions and Indirect Speech. European Journal of International Relations, 21(4): 768–792.

Matthew D. Stephen (2014) Rising Powers, Global Capitalism, and Liberal Global Governance: A Historical Materialist Account of the BRICS Challenge. European Journal of International Relations, 20(4): 912–938.

Matthew D. Stephen (2014) States, Norms and Power: Rising Powers and Global Order (Review Article). Millennium – Journal of International Studies, 42(3): 888–896.

Matthew D. Stephen (2013) The Concept and Role of Middle Powers during Global Rebalancing. Seton Hall Journal of Diplomacy and International Relations, 14(2): 36–52.

Matthew D. Stephen (2012) Rising Regional Powers and International Institutions: The Foreign Policy Orientations of India, Brazil and South Africa. Global Society, 26(3): 289–309.

Matthew D. Stephen (2011) Globalisation and Resistance: Struggles Over Common Sense in the Global Political Economy. Review of International Studies, 37(1): 209–228.

Michael Zürn and Matthew Stephen (2010) The View of Old and New Powers on the Legitimacy of International Institutions. Politics, 30(S1): 91–101.

Matthew D. Stephen (2009) Alter-Globalism as Counter-Hegemony: Evaluating the ‘Postmodern Prince’. Globalizations, 6(4): 483–498.
Edited Volume:

Matthew D. Stephen and Michael Zürn (Eds.) (2019) Contested World Orders: Rising Powers, Non-Governmental Organizations, and the Politics of Authority Beyond the Nation-State. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 978-0-19-884304-7.
Book Chapters:

Matthew D. Stephen (2021) Emerging Powers and Emerging Trends in Global Governance. In Kurt Mills and Kendall Stiles (Eds.), Understanding Global Cooperation: Twenty-Five Years of Research on Global Governance, Leiden: Brill, 445–465.

Michal Parízek and Matthew D. Stephen (2020) The Representation of BRICS in Global Economic Governance: Reform and Fragmentation of Multilateral Institutions. In Soo Yeon Kim (Ed.), BRICS and the Global Economy, Singapore: World Scientific Publishing, 361–390.

Matthew D. Stephen and Michael Zürn (2019) Rising Powers, NGOs and Demands for New World Orders: An Introduction. In Matthew D. Stephen and Michael Zürn (Eds.), Contested World Orders: Rising Powers, Non-Governmental Organizations, and the Politics of Authority Beyond the Nation-State, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1–36.

Matthew D. Stephen (2019) Contestation Overshoot: Rising Powers, NGOs, and the Failure of the WTO Doha Round. In Matthew D. Stephen and Michael Zürn (Eds.), Contested World Orders: Rising Powers, Non-Governmental Organizations, and the Politics of Authority Beyond the Nation-State, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 39–81.

Michael Zürn, Klaus Dieter Wolf and Matthew D. Stephen (2019) Conclusion: Contested World Orders – Continuity or Change? In Matthew D. Stephen and Michael Zürn (Eds.), Contested World Orders: Rising Powers, Non-Governmental Organizations, and the Politics of Authority Beyond the Nation-State, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 368–389.

Matthew D. Stephen (2018) Rising Regional Powers and International Institutions: The Foreign Policy Orientations of India, Brazil and South Africa. In Philip Nel, Dirk Nabers and Melanie Hanif (Eds.), Regional Powers and Global Redistribution, Abingdon: Routledge, Ch. 2.
Book Reviews:

Matthew D. Stephen (2022) Kristen Hopewell, Clash of Powers: US-China Rivalry in Global Trade Governance (Cambridge University Press, 2020). Perspectives on Politics, 20(1): 379–380.

Matthew D. Stephen (2014) Henry R. Nau and Deepa M. Ollapally (Eds.), Worldviews of Aspiring Powers: Domestic Foreign Policy Debates in China, India, Iran, Japan and Russia (Oxford University Press, 2012). Political Studies Review, 12(2): 279–280.

Matthew D. Stephen (2012) Christophe Jaffrelot (Ed.), The Emerging States: The Wellspring of a New World Order (Columbia University Press, 2008). Millennium – Journal of International Studies, 41(1): 153–154.

Matthew D. Stephen (2011) Patrick Thaddeus Jackson, The Conduct of Inquiry in International Relations: Philosophy of Science and Its Implications for the Study of World Politics (Routledge, 2010). Political Studies Review, 9(3): 400–401.
Other Publications

Matthew D. Stephen (2016) India and the BRICS: Global Bandwagoning and Regional Balancing. Vestnik RUDN: International Relations, 16(4): 597–604.

Matthew D. Stephen (2015) India, Emerging Powers and Global Human Rights: Yes, But… In Doutje Lettinga and Lars van Troost (Eds.), Shifting Power and Human Rights Diplomacy: India, Amsterdam: Amnesty International Netherlands, 55–63.

Matthew D. Stephen (2012) Imperialism. In Helmut Anheier, Mark Juergensmeyer and Victor Faessel (Eds.), The Encyclopedia of Global Studies, Los Angeles: Sage, 884–886.
Letzte Änderung: 21. May 2025