Addresses fundamental problems in international justice by identifying, problematic practices and trends in the in the global order and offering normative views on policies and institutions including international health policies, the World Bank, taxation policies and the World Trade Organization...
This volume argues that while the phenomenon of ‘emergence’ was celebrated as the conquest of more authority for Brazil on the global stage, the discourses about Brazil as a global player were also perpetuating a spatiotemporal structure that rewards some societies at the expense of many others...
The Evolution of Migration Management in the Global North explores how the radically violent migration management paradigm that dominates today's international migration has been assembled...
Edited by leading academic authorities from the fields of human geography and international relations, this is the first handbook to deal with resilience as a new conceptual approach to understanding and addressing problems. The collection highlights that resilience-thinking is increasingly transfor..
How do emerging states become full, functioning members of the international system? Cameron G. Thies develops a theoretical approach to understanding how states socialize each other into and out of different roles in the international system, such as regional power, ally, and peacekeeper. The conce..
How do emerging states become full, functioning members of the international system? Cameron G. Thies develops a theoretical approach to understanding how states socialize each other into and out of different roles in the international system, such as regional power, ally, and peacekeeper. The conce..
How do emerging states become full, functioning members of the international system? Cameron G. Thies develops a theoretical approach to understanding how states socialize each other into and out of different roles in the international system, such as regional power, ally, and peacekeeper. The conce..
Embracing a broad range of mainstream traditional theories as well as emerging and critical perspectives, this is an original and groundbreaking textbook for students of international relations...
Breaking away from the conventional way to study transatlantic relations, Serena Simoni uses a Constructivist theoretical lens to argue that the transatlantic partners’ changing identities since the early 1990s have influenced their political interests and, as a consequence, their national security ..
This book directly addresses the question of what it means to act ethically in times of war by drawing upon first-hand accounts of U.S. war fighting in Iraq during the 2003 invasion and occupation...
This book argues that in order for their agential power to be more fully harnessed in the opening up of IR, critical ‘self’-reflection and ‘collective’ empathy and collaboration among marginalised scholars are all essential...