Friday, August 30, 2019

New Issue: International Studies Quarterly

The latest issue of the International Studies Quarterly (Vol. 63, no. 3, September 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Special Section: Judicializing International Relations
    • Karen J Alter, Emilie M Hafner-Burton, & Laurence R Helfer, Theorizing the Judicialization of International Relations
    • Marc L Busch & Krzysztof J Pelc, Words Matter: How WTO Rulings Handle Controversy
    • Jeffrey K Staton & Alexia Romero, Rational Remedies: The Role of Opinion Clarity in the Inter-American Human Rights System
    • Olof Larsson & Daniel Naurin, Split Vision: Multidimensionality in the European Union's Legal Policy Space
    • Yonatan Lupu, Pierre-Hugues Verdier, & Mila Versteeg, The Strength of Weak Review: National Courts, Interpretive Canons, and Human Rights Treaties
    • Daniel Abebe & Tom Ginsburg, The Dejudicialization of International Politics?
  • Diplomacy
    • Rebecca Adler-Nissen & Alena Drieschova, Track-Change Diplomacy: Technology, Affordances, and the Practice of International Negotiations
    • David E Banks, Fields of Practice: Symbolic Binding and the Qing Defense of Sinocentric Diplomacy
  • IPE
    • Pippa Morgan & Yu Zheng, Tracing the Legacy: China's Historical Aid and Contemporary Investment in Africa
    • Daniela Donno & Nita Rudra, David and Goliath? Small Developing Countries, Large Emerging Markets, and South-South Preferential Trade Agreements
    • Witold J Henisz & Edward D Mansfield, The Political Economy of Financial Reform: de Jure Liberalization vs. de Facto Implementation
    • Todd Allee & Manfred Elsig, Are the Contents of International Treaties Copied and Pasted? Evidence from Preferential Trade Agreements
  • Civil War Processes
    • Stuart J Kaufman, War as Symbolic Politics
    • Marisella Rodriguez & Brandon J Kinne, Blue Helmets, Red Flags: Institutional, Societal, and Military Determinants of Peacekeeping Abuses
    • Caroline A Hartzell & Matthew Hoddie, Power Sharing and the Rule of Law in the Aftermath of Civil War
    • Inken von Borzyskowski, The Risks of Election Observation: International Condemnation and Post-Election Violence
    • Laura McLeod, Investigating “Missing” Women: Gender, Ghosts, and the Bosnian Peace Process
    • Sarah G Phillips, Proximities of Violence: Civil Order Beyond Governance Institutions
    • Noel Anderson, Competitive Intervention, Protracted Conflict, and the Global Prevalence of Civil War
  • IR Theory
    • Seva Gunitsky, Rival Visions of Parsimony
    • Joseph MacKay, Legitimation Strategies in International Hierarchies
  • Domestic Politics
    • Suthan Krishnarajan, Economic Crisis, Natural Resources, and Irregular Leader Removal in Autocracies
    • Michael E Flynn, Carla Martinez Machain, & Alissandra T Stoyan, Building Trust: The Effect of US Troop Deployments on Public Opinion in Peru
    • Hannah S Chapman & Theodore P Gerber, Opinion-Formation and Issue-Framing Effects of Russian News in Kyrgyzstan