Sunday, October 16, 2022

New Issue: International Studies Review

The latest issue of International Studies Review (Vol. 24, no. 3, September 2022) is out. Contents include:
  • Audrey Alejandro & Eleanor Knott, How to Pay Attention to the Words We Use: The Reflexive Review as a Method for Linguistic Reflexivity
  • Adam Scharpf & Christian Gläßel, Career Pressures and Organizational Evil: A Novel Perspective on the Study of Organized Violence
  • Nina C Krickel-Choi, The Concept of Anxiety in Ontological Security Studies
  • Eglantine Staunton & Luke Glanville, Selling the Responsibility to Protect: The False Novelty but Real Impact of a Norm
  • Giuliano Espino, Rediscovering Epistemic Coalitions Twenty Years Later: Using the International Olympic Committee to Build toward A Literature on Epistemic Institutionalism
  • Larissa Fast & Róisín Read, Using Data to Create Change? Interrogating the Role of Data in Ending Attacks on Healthcare
  • Michelle Bentley, A New Model of “Taboo”: Disgust, Stigmatization, and Fetishization
  • Mark Stephen Berlin & Anum Pasha Syed, The Middle East and North Africa in Political Science Scholarship: Analyzing Publication Patterns in Leading Journals, 1990–2019
  • Victor A Ferguson, Economic Lawfare: The Logic and Dynamics of Using Law to Exercise Economic Power
  • Sarah von Billerbeck, Talk from the Top: Leadership and Self-Legitimation in International Organizations
  • Bohdana Kurylo, Emergency: A Vernacular Contextual Approach
  • Chong Chen, Jordan Roberts, Shikshya Adhikari, Victor Asal, Kyle Beardsley, Edward Gonzalez, Nakissa Jahanbani, Patrick James, Steven E Lobell, Norrin M Ripsman, Scott Silverstone, & Anne van Wijk, Tipping Points: Challenges in Analyzing International Crisis Escalation
  • Changwook Ju, Why Do Military Officers Condone Sexual Violence? A General Theory of Commander Tolerance
  • Patrick Vernon, Sexuality, Gender, and the Colonial Violence of Humanitarian Intervention
  • Thomas Risse, Wiebke Wemheuer-Vogelaar, & Frank Havemann, IR Theory and the Core–Periphery Structure of Global IR: Lessons from Citation Analysis
  • Jonathan Ring & Gary Uzonyi, Rethinking Tests of the IO Effectiveness Hypothesis: Evidence from Counter-Piracy Efforts in the Global South
  • Brian J Phillips & Kevin T Greene, Where is Conflict Research? Western Bias in the Literature on Armed Violence
  • Hans Peter Schmitz & George E Mitchell, Understanding the Limits of Transnational NGO Power: Forms, Norms, and the Architecture
  • Jodok Troy, Intermediation between International Society and World Society: The Pope and the UN Secretary-General on “the Figure of the Refugee”