Online Exclusives

Online Exclusive 05/20/2026 Online Essay

Trump’s Imperial Infantilism and Europe’s Failure of Moral Witness: What Arendt Can Teach us About Political (Im)Maturity

Online Exclusive 05/14/2026 Essay

Leverage through Complicity

The essay explores risks of the U.S. presidential pardon system, analyzing how individuals can be compelled to do bad things through complicity in wrongdoing.

Online Exclusive 04/27/2026 Online Essay

Humanitarian Aid for Minerals: Trump’s Transactional Statecraft and the Weaponization of Dependency

Framed as a pragmatic “America First” foreign policy, conditioning aid risks institutionalizing exploitative dynamics and contributing to human suffering under the guise of development cooperation.

Online Exclusive 11/16/2011 Feature

The Implications of Drones on the Just War Tradition [Full Text]

The aim of this article is to explore how the brief history of drone warfare thus far affects and potentially alters the parameters of ad ...

Online Exclusive 06/2/2011 Interview

Leif Wenar on Natural Resources and Clean Trade Policies

Consumers in countries that import natural resources are often unwittingly in business with dictators, corrupt officials, and armed groups, says Leif Wenar. Yet we could ...

Online Exclusive 04/6/2011 Essay

A Response to "Precommitment Regimes for Intervention"

Buchanan and Keohane argue that institutional reform is required to reverse the inertia that has too often constituted the international response to intra-state crises. Their ...

Online Exclusive 02/23/2011 Interview

Interview with John Tessitore, Editor of Ethics & International Affairs

Julia Taylor Kennedy interviews editor John Tessitore on the occasion of the Carnegie Council's upcoming 25th-anniversary edition of its Ethics & International Affairs journal.

Online Exclusive 09/28/2010 Essay

How to Punish Collective Agents: Non-Compliance with Moral Duties by States (Response to Toni Erskine)

If individual moral agents do wrong they usually deserve and are liable to some kind of punishment. But how can states be punished for failing ...