Sunday, November 13, 2011

New Issue: Review of International Studies

The latest issue of the Review of International Studies (Vol. 37, no. 5, December 2010) is out. Contents include:
  • International law and global justice: a happy marriage
    • Laura Valentini & Tiziana Torresi, Introduction - International law and global justice: a happy marriage
    • Helga Varden, A Kantian conception of global justice
    • Terry Nardin, Justice and authority in the global order
    • Saladin Meckled-Garcia, International law and the limits of global justice
    • Elisa Orrù & Miriam Ronzoni, Which supranational sovereignty? Criminal and socioeconomic justice compared
    • Peter Dietsch, Rethinking sovereignty in international fiscal policy
    • David Armstrong, Evolving conceptions of justice in international law
    • Margot E. Salomon, Why should it matter that others have more? Poverty, inequality, and the potential of international human rights law
  • Mobilising uncertaining and responsibility in international politics and law
    • Tranja E. Aalberts & Erna Rijsdijk, Mobilising uncertainty and responsibility in international politics and law: guest editors' introduction
    • Oliver Kessler, The same as it never was? Uncertainty and the changing contours of international law
    • Tanja E. Aalberts & Wouter G. Werner, Mobilising uncertainty and the making of responsible sovereigns
    • Bartholomew Paudyn, The uncertain (re)politicisation of fiscal relations in Europe: a shift in EMU's modes of governance
    • Erna Rijsdijk, The politics of hard knowledge: uncertainty, intelligence failures, and the ‘last minute genocide’ of Srebrenica
    • Filip Gelev, Checks and balances of risk management: precautionary logic and the judiciary
    • Anna Leander, Risk and the fabrication of apolitical, unaccountable military markets: the case of the CIA ‘Killing Program’
    • Jorg Kustermans, Republican security theory revisited
    • Julia Gallagher, Ruthless player or development partner? Britain's ambiguous reaction to China in Africa
    • Ayşe Zarakol, What makes terrorism modern? Terrorism, legitimacy, and the international system
  • Adam Lockyer, Foreign intervention and warfare in civil wars
  • Eduard Jordaan, Including the excluded: communitarian paths to cosmopolitanism
  • Kathy Powers & Gary Goertz, The economic-institutional construction of regions: conceptualisation and operationalisation
  • Martin Shaw, Britain and genocide: historical and contemporary parameters of national responsibility
  • Gordon D. Cumming & Tony Chafer, From rivalry to partnership? Critical reflections on Anglo-French cooperation in Africa
  • Julian Gruin, ‘Freedom’ through repression: epistemic closure in agricultural trade negotiations
  • Holger Stritzel, Security as translation: threats, discourse, and the politics of localisation
  • Li Sheng, Theorising free capital mobility: the perspective of developing countries
  • David Roberts, Beyond the metropolis? Popular peace and post-conflict peacebuilding
  • Jonathan Symons, The legitimation of international organisations: examining the identity of the communities that grant legitimacy
  • Ronnie Hjorth, Equality in the theory of international society: Kelsen, Rawls and the English School
  • Brent J. Steele, Alternative accountability after the ‘naughts’
  • Zeynep Taydas, Jason Enia, & Patrick James, Why do civil wars occur? Another look at the theoretical dichotomy of opportunity versus grievance