The latest issue of the Review of International Studies (Vol. 45, no. 4, October 2019) is out. Contents include:
- Nina Caspersen, Human rights in territorial peace agreements
- Robert Lamb, Pragmatism, practices, and human rights
- Maja Zehfuss, Military refusers and the invocation of conscience: Relational subjectivities and the legitimation of liberal war
- Henry Redwood & Alister Wedderburn, A cat-and-Maus game: the politics of truth and reconciliation in post-conflict comics
- Scott Hamilton, I am uncertain, but We are not: a new subjectivity of the Anthropocene
- Lisa Maria Dellmuth, Jan Aart Scholte, & Jonas Tallberg, Institutional sources of legitimacy for international organisations: Beyond procedure versus performance
- Jack Corbett, Yi-chong Xu, & Patrick Weller, Norm entrepreneurship and diffusion ‘from below’ in international organisations: How the competent performance of vulnerability generates benefits for small states
- Thomas Müller, The variety of institutionalised inequalities: Stratificatory interlinkages in interwar international society
- Alexander Cooley, Daniel Nexon, & Steven Ward, Revising order or challenging the balance of military power? An alternative typology of revisionist and status-quo states
New Issue: Review of International Studies
Reviewed by Ladi Michael
on
September 13, 2019
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