- Grandmother genealogies: Feminist/ised, indigenist decolonising pedagogies against and beyond the university
- (Post)-pandemic subversive pedagogies: Slowness, relationality and care
- Learning how to count: Pedagogies of accountability in the pandemic university
- The art of listening in the age of AI
- Power and pedagogic failure: Seeking a politics of empathy towards an anti-racist academy
- Joy as subversive defiance
- Teaching with wonder: Engaged pedagogy and attentive listening
- Solidarity as subversion: Attempting climate justice practice within the Neoliberal University
- Pedagogy as care: Love, loss, and learning in the world politics classroom
- Cosmologies, coloniality and quantum critique: Exploring conversations with Native American ways of knowing
- We need to talk about Jus ad vim
- The global dimension of domestic regulatory agencies: Why do we need a networked perspective of political legitimacy?
- Global justice must be seen to be done—A defense of integrated pluralism
- Arguing and bargaining in international forums: The need for a novel approach
- The peace/violence nexus: Fundamental, multiple, contingent
- Mining the past: The case for historical narratives in global justice theorizing
- Beyond the Eurocentrism of immigration ethics: Tanzania and pan-African Ujamaa
- Impartial third and disinterested judgment: Kojève and Arendt’s cosmopolitan phenomenologies of human rights as a response to Schmitt
- Mental pictures, structural constraints: Kenneth N. Waltz’s approach to theory
- A world waiting to be born: Charting a liberatory anti-war praxis
- Business authority in global governance: Companies beyond public and private roles
- Varieties of international pluralism
- Worlding war as a primary institution of international society
- Self-interest, transitional cosmopolitanism and the motivational problem
- The theoretical case against offshore balancing: Realism, liberalism, and the limits of rationality in U.S. foreign policy
- Militarized interstate manhunts, “absent/presence” and the spectral logic of the U.S. war on terror: The Ballad of Pancho and Bin Laden
- Looking for Utopia: Experts and Global Governance
- ‘Strange multiplicity’ as a moral-political value: Potential and costs of normativity in world politics
- False friends: Leftist nationalism and the project of transnational solidarity
- What reading Montaigne during the Second World War can teach us about just war
- What is an emancipatory peace?
- Securitizing cyberspace: Protecting political judgment
- Sacrificial causalities of nuclear weapons: Takashi Nagai and Albert Wohlstetter
- Nonviolent struggle between norm and technique
- Restraining the fox: Minimalism in the ethics of war and peace
- In the eyes of all mankind: Interests and independence in Vattelian statehood
- Proclaiming a prophecy empty of substance? A pragmatist reconsideration of global governance
- Free states for free citizens!? Arguments for a republicanism of plural polities
- Approaching the boundary problem: Self-determination, inclusion, and the unpuzzling of transboundary conflicts
- The sense of being-in-common and international relations
- Recognition, multiplicity and the elusive international
- From critique to reaction: The new right, critical theory and international relations
- Mimetic rivalry in practice: The case of Kosovo
- On the global politics of “decency” and “restraint”
- Pufendorf and Leibniz on duties of esteem in diplomatic relations
- ‘The cruelty of righteous people’: Niebuhr on the urgency of cruelty
- Reinhold Niebuhr: The law of love and the omnipresence of power
- Of Camus and Rebels
- Cosmopolitan Global Politics
- Remarks from the Incoming Editor
- Teaching as Amor Mundi
- Remarks from the Outgoing Editor
- Conversations in international political theory
- Patrick Hayden /pætrik heidεn/
- Political friendship: Gardens, bees and Patrick Hayden
- The international politics of amour propre: Revisiting Rousseau’s place in international relations theory
- Asking the fox to guard the chicken coop: In defense of minimalism in the ethics of war and peace
- Why read Reinhold Niebuhr now?
- ‘The Impossible Possibility of Love’: Reinhold Niebuhr’s Thought on Racial Justice
- Re-reading Niebuhr’s The Children of Light and the Children of Darkness: The crisis of democracy in an interdependent world then and now
- From revolutionary Paris to Nootka Sound to Saint-Domingue: The international politics and prejudice behind Wollstonecraft’s theory of the rights of humanity, 1789–91
- Reinhold Niebuhr and the Christian realist pendulum
- A Niebuhrian pacifism for an imperfect world
- Law and virtue in a post-sovereign “Commonwealth:” Neil MacCormick and the political theory of constitutional pluralism
- The Concept of the Kurdish Political
- What is a minor international theory? On the limits of ‘Critical International Relations’
- Conceptualising peace and its preconditions: The anti-Pelagian imagination and the critical turn in peace theory
- De-colonizing the political ontology of Kantian ethics: A quantum perspective
- The balance of power and the power struggles of the polis
- The nineteenth century liberal tradition and the English School historical narrative
- Shape shifting: Civilizational discourse and the analysis of cross-cultural interaction in the constitution of international society
- Interpreting great power rights in international society: Debating China’s right to a sphere of influence
- The dangers of interpretation: C.A.W. Manning and the “going concern” of international society
- John Stuart Mill and the practice of colonial rule in India
- Agents versus structures in English School theory: Is co-constitution the answer?
- Responsibility to Protect goes to China: An interpretivist analysis of how China’s coexistence policy made it a Responsibility to Protect insider
- Interpreting the English school: History, science and philosophy
- The English school and the classical approach: Between modernism and interpretivism
- The lex of the Earth? Arendt’s critique of Roman law
- Ciceronian international society
- Let’s quarrel (streiten)! Introducing a Kantian framework for social interaction in international politics
- A pragmatic methodology for studying international practices
- On biodiplomacy: Negotiating life and plural modes of existence
- On the relevance of Carl Schmitt’s concept of Großraum in contemporary international politics
- Rethinking harmony in international relations
- The patronising Kantianisms of hospitality ethics in International Relations: Towards a politics of imposition
- Taking responsibility in an unjust world
- Max Weber’s ethics
- Potentiality, political protest and constituent power: A response to the special issue
- Challenging borders: The case for open borders with Joseph Carens and Jean-Luc Nancy
- Global justice, sovereignty, and the problem of perspective
- Cosmopolitan disobedience
- Democracy, free association and boundary delimitation: The cases of Catalonia and Tabarnia
- Debating global justice with Carr: The crisis of laissez faire and the legitimacy problem in the twenty-first century
- The nuclear condition in the twenty-first century: Techno-political aspects in historical and contemporary perspectives
- How geopolitical becomes personal: Method acting, war films and affect
- Revisiting Rosa Luxemburg’s internationalism
- Responding to terrorism with peace, love and solidarity: ‘Je suis Charlie’, ‘Peace’ and ‘I Heart MCR’
- Visualisation and knowledge production in international relations: The role of emotions and identity
- Are human rights western—And why does it matter? A perspective from international political theory
- The reflexive potential of silence: Emotions, the ‘everyday’ and ethical international relations
- Feminist foreign policy as ethical foreign policy? A care ethics perspective
- Introduction: Interrogating the ‘everyday’ politics of emotions in international relations
- Closing traps: Emotional attachment, intervention and juxtaposition in cosplay and International Relations
- Emotions and the everyday: Ambivalence, power and resistance
- Can the bereaved speak? Emotional governance and the contested meanings of grief after the Berlin terror attack
- Sovereign myths in international relations: Sovereignty as equality and the reproduction of Eurocentric blindness
- Defining a relationship between transitional justice and jus post bellum: A call and an opportunity for post-conflict justice
- Daring and deliberation: Virtue, rhetoric, and diplomacy in Thucydides’ account of the Athenian empire
- Towards International Relations beyond the mind
- Opposition and dissidence: Two modes of resistance against international rule
- Constituent power beyond exceptionalism: Irregular migration, disobedience, and (re-)constitution
- Reframing civil disobedience: Constituent power as a language of transnational protest
- Introduction: Resistance, disobedience or constituent power? Emerging narratives of transnational protest
- Constituent power of the multitude
- Destituent power in the European Union: On the limits of a negativistic logic of constitutional politics
- Enacting a parallel world: Political protest against the transnational constellation
- Constituent power and civil disobedience: Beyond the nation-state?
- Why does global democracy not inspire explanatory research? Removing conceptual obstacles toward a new research agenda
- Can federations expel member states? On the political theory of expulsion
- Rawls’s duty of assistance and relative deprivation: Why less is more and more is even more
- Solving the nuclear dilemma: Is a world state necessary?
- Appetite for destruction: Günther Anders and the metabolism of nuclear techno-politics
- A new “nuclear normalcy”?
- Going critical: Toward a modified nuclear one worldism
- Integration after totalitarianism: Arendt and Habermas on the postwar imperatives of memory
- After tragedy: Melodrama and the rhetoric of realism
- Life in the nuclear age: Classical realism, critical theory and the technopolitics of the nuclear condition
- The next great hope: The humanitarian approach to nuclear weapons
- On the ambivalent politics of human rights
- The historical approach and the ‘war of ethics within the ethics of war’
- State civil disobedience: A republican perspective
- The ethics of Carr and Wendt: Fairness and peace
- Gift-giving and reciprocity in global society: Introducing Marcel Mauss in international studies
- Civil association across borders: Law, morality and responsibility in the post-Brexit Era
- Refugees welcome: Arrival gifts, reciprocity, and the integration of forced migrants
- The gift as colonial ideology? Marcel Mauss and the solidarist colonial policy in the interwar era
- Generous corporations? A Maussian analysis of international drug donations
- Reciprocity, hierarchy, and obligation in world politics: From Kula to Potlatch
- Technology and moral vacuums in just war theorising
- Hostageship: What can we learn from Mauss?
- How to understand international society differently: Mauss and the chains of reciprocity
- Assessing the Responsibility to Protect’s motivational capacity: The role of humanity
- Trauma as counter-revolutionary colonisation: Narratives from (post)revolutionary Egypt
- The contradictions of Diaspora: A reflexive critique of the Jewish Diaspora’s relationship with Israel
- The invention of Hobbesian anarchy
- Anarchy and international relations theory: A reconsideration
- Schizorevolutions versus microfascisms: The fear of anarchy in state securitisation
- Collective intentionality, complex pluralism and the problem of anarchy
- Heteronymous politics beyond anarchy and hierarchy: The multiplication of forms of rule 750–1300
- David Mitrany on the international anarchy. A lost work of classical realism?
- The new anarchy: Globalisation and fragmentation in world politics
- Why anarchy still matters for International Relations: On theories and things
- The ethics of whistleblowing: Creating a new limit on intelligence activity
- The invisible structures of anarchy: Gender, orders, and global politics
- Genealogy as critique in International Relations: Beyond the hermeneutics of baseless suspicion
- Adam Smith: So what if the sovereign shares in ignorance?
- How cosmopolitanism reduces conflict: A broad reading of Kant’s third ingredient for peace
- Pregnant woman versus mosquito: A feminist epidemiology of Zika virus
- Understanding differing conceptions of violence through Self–Other relations in Gandhi and Fanon
- Too liberal for global governance? International legal human rights system and indigenous peoples’ right to self-determination
- The Law of Peoples as inclusive international justice
- The new nomos of the earth and the channelling of violence
- Between regional community and global society: Europe in the shadow of Schmitt and Kojève