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Spring 2019 (33.1) Review

Crime and Global Justice: The Dynamics of International Punishment, by Daniele Archibugi and Alice Pease

In this book, Archibugi and Pease survey familiar territory, but they distinguish their contribution by using case studies to tell their story, focusing on the ...

Spring 2019 (33.1) Review

Should We Control World Population? by Diana Coole

This book provides an antidote to the commonly held assumption that procreation is beyond the legitimate scope of governmental influence.

Spring 2019 (33.1) Review

Wars of Law: Unintended Consequences in the Regulation of Armed Conflict

This book convincingly shows that efforts to regulate and govern the conduct of war have bred counteracting reactions by warring parties.

Online Exclusive 03/8/2019 Review

Briefly Noted: Burying Jihadis: Bodies Between State, Territory, and Identity

A short book review of "Burying Jihadis: Bodies Between State, Territory, and Identity"

Online Exclusive 03/6/2019 Blog

Climate Change and Competing Ethical Visions

Online Exclusive 03/6/2019 Blog

What We've Been Reading

The NSA's Freedom Act Program, the INF Treaty, and Venezuela. Here's what we've been reading.

Online Exclusive 02/19/2019 Essay

Tackling Climate Change: Why Us Now?

Professor Henry Shue writes that we are the pivotal generation, and acting now is not only a matter of self-interest but also of our unique ...

Online Exclusive 02/15/2019 Blog

Competing Bipartisan Consensuses?

Online Exclusive 02/5/2019 Blog

The New Congress and U.S. Foreign Policy

Online Exclusive 01/29/2019 Interview

EIA Interview with Ronald Deibert on a Human-Centric Approach to Cybersecurity

Discussions around cybersecurity often focus on the security and sovereignty of states, not individuals, says Professor Ronald Deibert, director of University of Toronto's Citizen Lab. ...