Wednesday, November 10, 2021

New Issue: International Theory

The latest issue of International Theory (Vol. 13, no. 3, November 2021) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Kenneth W. Abbott & Benjamin Faude, Choosing low-cost institutions in global governance
    • Sean Fleming, Leviathan on trial: should states be held criminally responsible?
    • Stephen Aris, International vs. area? The disciplinary-politics of knowledge-exchange between IR and Area Studies
    • Gabriel Mares, Just war theory after colonialism and the war on terror: reexamining non-combatant immunity
  • Symposium: In the Midst of Theory and Practice
    • Hannes Peltonen & Knut Traisbach, In the midst of theory and practice
    • Hannes Peltonen & Knut Traisbach, In the midst of theory and practice: a foreword
    • Antje Wiener, A field day with Fritz: introduction to the Symposium
    • Nicholas Onuf, Bewitching the world: remarks on ‘Inter-disciplinarity, the epistemological ideal of incontrovertible foundations, and the problem of praxis’
    • Knut Traisbach, On concepts, conceptions, and conceptors: remarks ‘On the concept of law’
    • Xymena Kurowska, Politics as Realitätsprinzip in the debate on constitutions and fragmented orders: remarks ‘On constitutions and fragmented orders’
    • Christian Bueger, Meditating deformalization: remarks on ‘Of experts, helpers, and enthusiasts’
    • Guilherme Vasconcelos Vilaça, Hope behind the critique of grand narratives of collective salvation: remarks on ‘The power of metaphors and narratives’
    • Oliver Westerwinter, From meditation to action – a research agenda for studying informal global rule-making: remarks on ‘Cosmopolitanism, publicity, and the emergence of a “global administrative law”’
    • Jennifer M. Welsh, Unsettling times for human rights: remarks on ‘The politics of rights’
    • Kathryn Sikkink, Meditating on rights and responsibility: remarks on ‘the limits and burdens of rights’
    • Hannes Peltonen, Sense and sensibility or: remarks on the ‘bounds of (non)sense’
    • Friedrich Kratochwil, On engagement and distance in social analysis: a reply to my critics