Winter 2019 (33.4) • Review
The New Rules of War: Victory in the Age of Durable Disorder
McFate challenges much conventional wisdom and his “rules” point the way to a strategy for twenty-first century defense and security.
Winter 2019 (33.4) • Review
Expanding Responsibility for the Just War: A Feminist Critique
Kellison’s new book builds on the growing body of feminist just war scholarship to pose a critique of the just war tradition that draws ...
Winter 2019 (33.4) • Review
The Politics of the Anthropocene
Foregrounding both justice and environmental integrity, this book offers a vision of how to manage a world in which human activities have extensive, lasting effects ...
Online Exclusive • 12/3/2019 • Review
Briefly Noted: Fully Human: Personhood, Citizenship, and Rights
A short book review of "Fully Human: Personhood, Citizenship, and Rights"
Winter 2019 (33.4) • Journal Issue
Winter 2019 (33.4)
The editors of Ethics & International Affairs are pleased to present the Winter 2019 issue of the journal! The centerpiece of this issue is a symposium entitled “...
Online Exclusive • 11/22/2019 • Blog
Trump is the Symptom, Not the Problem
Astute observers of U.S. foreign policy have been making the case, as we move into the 2020 elections, not to see the interruptions in the ...
Online Exclusive • 11/8/2019 • Blog
A Washington Insider Take on the Narratives
Are we in a moment? Ever since Trump was elected I have been trying to sort out whether we have reached a critical turning point ...

Online Exclusive • 11/7/2019 • Online Essay
Book Symposium: A Discussion on Clifford Bob's Rights as Weapons
The editors of Ethics & International Affairs are pleased to present an online exclusive book symposium featuring responses to Rights as Weapons: Instruments of Conflict, Tools ...
Online Exclusive • 11/7/2019 • Online Essay
Rights as Weapons: A Rejoinder
It is an honor for Ethics & International Affairs to have chosen my book, Rights as Weapons: Instruments of Conflict, Tools of Power, for an online ...
Online Exclusive • 11/7/2019 • Online Essay
Rethinking the Politics of Rights
Many international human rights advocates have long assumed that rights are natural, universal, indivisible, and absolute–or, as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights puts ...