Avatar
Canada's pre-eminent scholarly publication on international relations.

International Journal is a
publication of the
Canadian International Council.


Issues

About

Store

Submissions

Awards

Staff

Contact

 VOLUME 65 ISSUE 3 SUMMER 2010
DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE
Democracy around the world: Introduction—what can Canadians do? - Christopher Sands
European approaches to democracy promotion - Lindsay Lloyd
Party-building in the Middle East - Leslie Campbell
Democracy assistance in Asia and the role of China - L.C. Russell Hsiao
Learning the hard way: Defending democracy in Honduras - Thomas Legler
Democracy activism and assistance in Burma: Sites of resistance - Linnea M. Beatty
Towards state legitimacy in Afghanistan - Richard Kraemer
Enhancing public governance in fragile states: A case study in Haiti - Sophie Brière, Sébastien Jobert, & Yves Poulin
Democracy assistance and ἄτεχνον - Jeffrey Poushter
Over the transom
Don’t drink the water: Politics and cholera in Zimbabwe - Jeremy Youde
Canadian civil-military relations: International leadership, military capacity, and overreach  - M.L. Roi & Gregory Smolynec
Where have all of Canada’s diplomatic historians gone? - Adam Chapnick
The lessons of history
Self-fulfilling prophecies and human rights in Canada’s foreign policy: Lessons from East Timor - David Webster
Blasts from the past
The practice, purpose, and perils of list-making: A response to John Kirton’s “10 most important books on Canadian foreign policy”  - Claire Turenne Sjolander & Heather A. Smith
Coming attractions
Canada and the G8 global partnership program: Tackling the WMD threat - Stéfanie von Hlatky
Reviews
Gerald Wright on Adam Roberts and Timothy Garton Ash, eds., Civil Resistance and Power Politics
Manuel Lafont Rapnouil on Bruce D. Jones, Shepard Forman, and Richard Gowan, eds., Cooperating For Peace and Security
Randall Germain on Patrick J. McDonald’s The Invisible Hand of Peace
Mischa Kaplan on Harvey M. Sapolsky’s, Eugene Gholz’s, and Caitlin Talmadge’s US Defense Politics, Julian E. Zelizer’s Arsenal of Democracy, Stuart Kinross’s Clausewitz and America, and William O. Walker’s National Security and Core Values in American History
Surinder Mohan on Scott D. Sagan, ed., Inside Nuclear South Asia
Michel Fortmann on Frédéric Bozo’s Mitterrand, the End of the Cold War, and German Unification


VOLUME 65 ISSUE 3 SUMMER 2010

DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE

Democracy around the world: Introduction—what can Canadians do? - Christopher Sands

European approaches to democracy promotion - Lindsay Lloyd

Party-building in the Middle East - Leslie Campbell

Democracy assistance in Asia and the role of China - L.C. Russell Hsiao

Learning the hard way: Defending democracy in Honduras - Thomas Legler

Democracy activism and assistance in Burma: Sites of resistance - Linnea M. Beatty

Towards state legitimacy in Afghanistan - Richard Kraemer

Enhancing public governance in fragile states: A case study in Haiti - Sophie Brière, Sébastien Jobert, & Yves Poulin

Democracy assistance and ἄτεχνον - Jeffrey Poushter

Over the transom

Don’t drink the water: Politics and cholera in Zimbabwe - Jeremy Youde

Canadian civil-military relations: International leadership, military capacity, and overreach  - M.L. Roi & Gregory Smolynec

Where have all of Canada’s diplomatic historians gone? - Adam Chapnick

The lessons of history

Self-fulfilling prophecies and human rights in Canada’s foreign policy: Lessons from East Timor - David Webster

Blasts from the past

The practice, purpose, and perils of list-making: A response to John Kirton’s “10 most important books on Canadian foreign policy”  - Claire Turenne Sjolander & Heather A. Smith

Coming attractions

Canada and the G8 global partnership program: Tackling the WMD threat - Stéfanie von Hlatky

Reviews

Gerald Wright on Adam Roberts and Timothy Garton Ash, eds., Civil Resistance and Power Politics

Manuel Lafont Rapnouil on Bruce D. Jones, Shepard Forman, and Richard Gowan, eds., Cooperating For Peace and Security

Randall Germain on Patrick J. McDonald’s The Invisible Hand of Peace

Mischa Kaplan on Harvey M. Sapolsky’s, Eugene Gholz’s, and Caitlin Talmadge’s US Defense Politics, Julian E. Zelizer’s Arsenal of Democracy, Stuart Kinross’s Clausewitz and America, and William O. Walker’s National Security and Core Values in American History

Surinder Mohan on Scott D. Sagan, ed., Inside Nuclear South Asia

Michel Fortmann on Frédéric Bozo’s Mitterrand, the End of the Cold War, and German Unification


 
VOLUME 65 ISSUE 2 SPRING 2010
ANNUAL JOHN W. HOLMES ISSUE ON CANADIAN FOREIGN POLICY


Table of contents

John W. Holmes: A re-introduction
Adam Chapnick & Kim Richard Nossal

John W. Holmes and the diplomacy of lesser powers: Do his guidelines still apply?
Denis Stairs

Negotiating with Uncle Sam: Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose
Fen Osler Hampson

John W. Holmes and the reconciliation of immoderate views
Claire Turenne Sjolander

Grappling with peace
Hugh Segal

Seeing the glass half full: John W. Holmes, optimism, and the making of Canadian foreign policy
David Eaves

Canada’s international security strategy: Beyond reason but not hope?
Douglas Alan Ross

Can the United Nations do anything? John W. Holmes and the political will of member states
Elizabeth Riddell-Dixon

Paradigms and paradoxes: Canadian foreign policy in
theory, research, and practice
Brian Bow

John W. Holmes and Canadian international relations theory
Patrick Lennox

Over the transom

Toward a more managed international monetary system?
Mansoor Dailami & Paul R. Masson

From obscurity to action: Why Canada must tackle the security dimensions of climate change
Margaret Purdy & Leanne Smythe

The Indo-US civilian nuclear agreement: What’s the big deal?
Prashant Hosur

The lessons of history

The deeper roots of faith and foreign policy
Andrew Preston

Blasts from the past

Nils Ørvik’s “defence against help”: The descriptive appeal of a prescriptive strategy
Philippe Lagassé

Coming attractions

Deadly decay: Great power decline and cataclysmic war
Sean Clark

Reviews

John J. Noble on Adam Chapnick’s Canada’s Voice

JH Taylor on Charles A. Ruud’s The Constant Diplomat

Christopher G. Anderson on David Webster’s Fire and the
Full Moon

Jack Cunningham on Mark Mazower’s No Enchanted Palace
and Richard Jolly’s, Louis Emmerij’s, and Thomas G.
Weiss’s UN Ideas That Changed The World

Richard Gowan on Mary Elise Sarotte’s 1989 and Ronald D.
Asmus’s A Little War That Shook The World

Aaron B. O’Connell on Beth Bailey’s America’s Army

Review roundtable: Three perspectives on Alliance and
Illusion: Canada and the World, 1945-1984, by Robert Bothwell
Reviews by Allan Gotlieb, Michael Hart, and Tom Keating
and a response by the author

Review essay

David O’Brien on Lester B. Pearson’s Partners in Development

VOLUME 65 ISSUE 2 SPRING 2010

ANNUAL JOHN W. HOLMES ISSUE ON CANADIAN FOREIGN POLICY

Table of contents

John W. Holmes: A re-introduction

Adam Chapnick & Kim Richard Nossal

John W. Holmes and the diplomacy of lesser powers: Do his guidelines still apply?

Denis Stairs

Negotiating with Uncle Sam: Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose

Fen Osler Hampson

John W. Holmes and the reconciliation of immoderate views

Claire Turenne Sjolander

Grappling with peace

Hugh Segal

Seeing the glass half full: John W. Holmes, optimism, and the making of Canadian foreign policy

David Eaves

Canada’s international security strategy: Beyond reason but not hope?

Douglas Alan Ross

Can the United Nations do anything? John W. Holmes and the political will of member states

Elizabeth Riddell-Dixon

Paradigms and paradoxes: Canadian foreign policy in

theory, research, and practice

Brian Bow

John W. Holmes and Canadian international relations theory

Patrick Lennox

Over the transom

Toward a more managed international monetary system?

Mansoor Dailami & Paul R. Masson

From obscurity to action: Why Canada must tackle the security dimensions of climate change

Margaret Purdy & Leanne Smythe

The Indo-US civilian nuclear agreement: What’s the big deal?

Prashant Hosur

The lessons of history

The deeper roots of faith and foreign policy

Andrew Preston

Blasts from the past

Nils Ørvik’s “defence against help”: The descriptive appeal of a prescriptive strategy

Philippe Lagassé

Coming attractions

Deadly decay: Great power decline and cataclysmic war

Sean Clark

Reviews

John J. Noble on Adam Chapnick’s Canada’s Voice

JH Taylor on Charles A. Ruud’s The Constant Diplomat

Christopher G. Anderson on David Webster’s Fire and the

Full Moon

Jack Cunningham on Mark Mazower’s No Enchanted Palace

and Richard Jolly’s, Louis Emmerij’s, and Thomas G.

Weiss’s UN Ideas That Changed The World

Richard Gowan on Mary Elise Sarotte’s 1989 and Ronald D.

Asmus’s A Little War That Shook The World

Aaron B. O’Connell on Beth Bailey’s America’s Army

Review roundtable: Three perspectives on Alliance and

Illusion: Canada and the World, 1945-1984, by Robert Bothwell

Reviews by Allan Gotlieb, Michael Hart, and Tom Keating

and a response by the author

Review essay

David O’Brien on Lester B. Pearson’s Partners in Development


VOLUME 65 ISSUE 1 WINTER 2009-10
UN SANCTIONS: NEW DILEMMAS AND UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES


Table of contents

Evaluating UN sanctions: New ground, new dilemmas, and unintended consequences
Jane Boulden & Andrea Charron

National implementation of United Nations sanctions: Towards fragmentation
Clara Portela

The evolution of security council innovations in sanctions
Joanna Weschler

The impact of UN sanctions and their panels of experts: Sierra Leone and Liberia
Alex Vines and Tom Cargill

United Nations nonproliferation sanctions
Sue E. Eckert

Assessing UN sanctions after the Cold War: New and evolving standards of measurement Kimberly Ann Elliott

Targeted sanctions and individual human rights
Thomas J. Biersteker

Security council change: The pressure of emerging international public policy
Vera Gowlland-Debbas


Over the transom 

Short shrift for the long war: NATO’s neglect of the Afghan mission
Carl Cavanagh Hodge

Is peace possible— and how? The four-fold response of international relations theory
Benjamin Miller

Études internationales

Introducing the best of Études internationales
David G. Haglund & Joseph T. Jockel

Flag-planting: What legal framework governs the division of the Arctic continental shelf?
Kristin Bartenstein

The lessons of history

Canada’s cold front: Lessons of the Alaska boundary dispute for Arctic boundaries today
Christopher Sands

Blasts from the past

Canada in World Affairs
Hector Mackenzie

Coming attractions

The India-Canada civilian nuclear deal: Implications for Canadian foreign policy
Anita Singh


Reviews

Kim Richard Nossal on Robert Bothwell and Jean Daudelin, eds.,Canada Among Nations 2008 

Ryan Touhey on Brian Bow and Patrick Lennox, eds., An Independent Foreign Policy For Canada?

Daniel Weinstock on Will Kymlicka’s Multicultural Odysseys 

David Tal on T.V. Paul’s The Tradition Of Non-Use Of Nuclear Weapons 

Paul Chastko on Andrew Nikiforuk’s The Tar Sands

Mark Sedra on Hans-Georg Ehrhart and Charles C. Pentland, eds., The Afghanistan Challenge 

Nicholas Gammer on Virginia Page Fortna’s Does Peacekeeping Work?and Lise Morje Howard’s Un Peacekeeping In Civil Wars 

James Eldin Reed on Walter Russell Mead’s God And Gold

VOLUME 65 ISSUE 1 WINTER 2009-10

UN SANCTIONS: NEW DILEMMAS AND UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES

Table of contents


Evaluating UN sanctions: New ground, new dilemmas, and unintended consequences

Jane Boulden & Andrea Charron


National implementation of United Nations sanctions: Towards fragmentation

Clara Portela


The evolution of security council innovations in sanctions

Joanna Weschler


The impact of UN sanctions and their panels of experts: Sierra Leone and Liberia

Alex Vines and Tom Cargill


United Nations nonproliferation sanctions

Sue E. Eckert


Assessing UN sanctions after the Cold War: New and evolving standards of measurement Kimberly Ann Elliott


Targeted sanctions and individual human rights

Thomas J. Biersteker


Security council change: The pressure of emerging international public policy

Vera Gowlland-Debbas



Over the transom 

Short shrift for the long war: NATO’s neglect of the Afghan mission

Carl Cavanagh Hodge

Is peace possible— and how? The four-fold response of international relations theory

Benjamin Miller

Études internationales

Introducing the best of Études internationales

David G. Haglund & Joseph T. Jockel

Flag-planting: What legal framework governs the division of the Arctic continental shelf?

Kristin Bartenstein

The lessons of history

Canada’s cold front: Lessons of the Alaska boundary dispute for Arctic boundaries today

Christopher Sands

Blasts from the past

Canada in World Affairs

Hector Mackenzie

Coming attractions

The India-Canada civilian nuclear deal: Implications for Canadian foreign policy

Anita Singh

Reviews

Kim Richard Nossal on Robert Bothwell and Jean Daudelin, eds.,Canada Among Nations 2008 

Ryan Touhey on Brian Bow and Patrick Lennox, eds., An Independent Foreign Policy For Canada?

Daniel Weinstock on Will Kymlicka’s Multicultural Odysseys 

David Tal on T.V. Paul’s The Tradition Of Non-Use Of Nuclear Weapons 

Paul Chastko on Andrew Nikiforuk’s The Tar Sands

Mark Sedra on Hans-Georg Ehrhart and Charles C. Pentland, eds., The Afghanistan Challenge 

Nicholas Gammer on Virginia Page Fortna’s Does Peacekeeping Work?and Lise Morje Howard’s Un Peacekeeping In Civil Wars 

James Eldin Reed on Walter Russell Mead’s God And Gold

Next page Something went wrong, try loading again? Loading more posts