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Winter 2014 (28.4) Feature

The “Responsibility to Prevent”: An International Crimes Approach to the Prevention of Mass Atrocities

Insights from criminology suggest that an international crimes approach to the prevention of mass atrocities upends many of the usual assumptions on the preventive dimension ...

Winter 2014 (28.4) Essay

Risse on Justice in Trade

Risse tries to stake out a middle ground between those who fail to recognize the full normative significance of contemporary international relationships and those who ...

Winter 2014 (28.4) Essay

Response to Arneson, de Bres, and Stilz

The author discusses his attempt at constructing a multilayered theory of global justice, where many considerations must be brought into reflective equilibrium.

Online Exclusive 12/3/2014 Blog

An Introduction to the New Centennial Ebook from EIA

This podcast introduces EIA's new ebook on the most critical issues facing the world today. Ebook free for a limited time!

Online Exclusive 12/3/2014 Blog

Animals as Citizens: A Response to Will Kymlicka

Kymlicka believes that animals should be considered citizens. But the animal-human relationship seems fundamentally dissimilar to its human-human counterpart.

Winter 2014 (28.4) Journal Issue

Winter 2014 (28.4)

This issue includes an essay by Jacinta O’Hagan and Miwa Hirono on "cultures of humanitarianism" in East Asia; articles by Christopher Kutz on torture, ...

Online Exclusive 11/12/2014 Blog

Challenge from the East

An alternative vision to global order—distinct from the assumptions put forward in Washington and Brussels—is acquiring coherence.

Online Exclusive 11/10/2014 Blog

EIA Interview with Philip Alston on a World Court for Human Rights

A special EIA interview between Philip Alston, author of "Against a World Court for Human Rights," and John Tessitore, editor of the journal.

Online Exclusive 10/21/2014 Blog

The Ottoman Road to War: Mustafa Aksakal on the Ottoman Empire and WWI

For Aksakal, World War I informs national identities in the Middle East even today, even though it is itself poorly understood.

Online Exclusive 10/18/2014 Blog

The Ethics of Intervention

An overly literal application of just war concepts might eliminate many of the proposed and recently undertaken U.S. interventions; on the other hand, using ...