Salter, Mark B, Emily Gilbert, Jairus Grove, Jana Hönke, Doerthe Rosenow, Anna Stavrianakis, and Maria Stern. Security dialogue 52, no. 1_suppl (2021): 3–7.
Examines how the pressing issues of 'human rights', 'globalization', 'peace and security', and 'indigeneity' are simultaneously normative inventions meant to sustain particular power structures and sites for insurgent and subversive attempts to live IR at the margins.
Georgetown U's portal to scholarship by diverse authors, as well as material addressing key elements of diversity in the field of International Relations.
Essays describe the origins and histories of US-based Area Studies programs, highlighting their complex, generative, and sometimes contentious relationships with the social science and humanities disciplines.
In this Handbook, historians and scholars of international relations examine the past and present of the intersection between History and IR, as well as looking to the future by laying out new questions and directions for research.
Critical international relations is both firmly established and rapidly expanding, and this Handbook offers a wide-ranging survey of contemporary research. It affords insights into examining debates around questions of imperialism, race, gender, ethics and aesthetics.