
The latest issue of the
European Journal of International Relations (Vol. 21, no. 4, December 2015) is out. Contents include:
- Sophia Dingli,
We need to talk about silence: Re-examining silence in International Relations theory
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Taesuh Cha,
The formation of American exceptional identities: A three-tier model of the “standard of civilization” in US foreign policy
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Matthew D. Stephen,
‘Can you pass the salt?’ The legitimacy of international institutions and indirect speech
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Latha Varadarajan,
The trials of imperialism: Radhabinod Pal’s dissent at the Tokyo tribunal
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Martin J. Bayly,
Imperial ontological (in)security: ‘Buffer states’, International Relations and the case of Anglo-Afghan relations, 1808–1878
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Alexander Anievas,
Revolutions and international relations: Rediscovering the classical bourgeois revolutions
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Werner Bonefeld,
European economic constitution and the transformation of democracy: On class and the state of law
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Laura J. Shepherd,
Constructing civil society: Gender, power and legitimacy in United Nations peacebuilding discourse
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Faye Donnelly,
The Queen’s speech: Desecuritizing the past, present and future of Anglo-Irish relations
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James Pattison,
The ethics of diplomatic criticism: The Responsibility to Protect, Just War Theory and Presumptive Last Resort