VOLUME 66 ISSUE 3: THE FUTURE OF DIPLOMACY
Diplomats as permanent representatives: The practical logics of the multilateral pecking order by Vincent Pouliot
Peace and reconciliation efforts as systems-maintaining diplomacy: The case of Norway by Iver B. Neumann
Law and the practice of diplomacy by Ian Hurd
“Defence diplomacy” in north-south relations by Tarak Barkawi
Christian ethics, actors, and diplomacy: Mediating universalist pretentions by Cecelia Lynch
Economists and diplomacy: Professions and the practice of economic policy by Leonard Seabrooke
United by difference: Diplomacy as a thin culture by Ole Jacob Sending
Over the transom
Policy or posturing: The US nuclear posture review in an international context by Paul Meyer
Agriculture in the Canada-EU economic and trade agreement by Crina Viju & William A. Kerr
Canada’s credibility as an actor in the Middle East peace process: The refugee working group, 1992-2000 by Andrew Robinson
The lessons of history
The conspiracy that never was: The surprising lessons of 1891 by Christopher Pennington
Blasts from the past
Now and then: The “Open Canada” report in historical perspective by John Keess
Coming attractions
Neoliberalism and the rise of the private military industry by Aaron Ettinger
Reviews
Charles C. Pentland on Vincent Pouliot, International Security in Practice
Robert Bothwell on Amanda Foreman, A World on Fire
John Conrad on Sean M. Maloney, Confronting the Chaos
James Eldin Reed on Andrew J. Bacevich, Washington Rules
Robert Rakove on Stephen G. Rabe, John F. Kennedy
