- Bruce Jones & Shepard Forman, Introduction: 'two worlds' of international security
- Stewart Patrick, 'The mission determines the coalition': the United States and multilateral cooperation after 9/11
- Stephen John Stedman, UN transformation in an era of soft balancing
- David Malone, An evolving UN Security Council
- Richard Gowan & Sara Batmanglich, Too many institutions? European security cooperation after the Cold War
- Mats Berdal & David Ucko, Whither NATO?
- Christine Wing, The evolution of nuclear non-proliferation institutions
- Eric Rosand & Sebastian von Einsiedel, 9/11, the 'war on terror' and the evolution of counter-terrorism institutions
- Fiona Simpson, Evolution and innovation: biological and chemical weapons
- Ian Johnstone, Normative evolution at the UN: impact on operational activities
- Barnett R. Rubin, Constructing sovereignty for security
- Teresa Whitfield, New arrangements for peace negotiation
- Abby Stoddard, International humanitarian cooperation: aiding war's victims in a shifting strategic environment
- Sarjoh Bah, The evolution of regional and sub-regional collective security mechanisms in post-Cold War Africa
- Cesare Romano, International courts and tribunals
- Richard Gowan & Bruce Jones, Conclusion: international institutions and the problems of adaptation
Friday, January 22, 2010
Jones, Forman, & Gowan: Cooperating for Peace and Security
Bruce D. Jones (New York Univ. - Center on International Cooperation), Shepard Forman (New York Univ. - Politics), & Richard Gowan (New York Univ. - Center on International Cooperation) have published Cooperating for Peace and Security: Evolving Institutions and Arrangements in a Context of Changing U.S. Security Policy (Cambridge Univ. Press 2010). Contents include: