Hostname: page-component-745bb68f8f-5r2nc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-02-11T11:11:48.559Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Contributors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2016

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Contributors
Copyright
Copyright © Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs 2016 

Hartmut Behr is professor of international politics at Newcastle University (U.K.). His work includes studies in political theory and sociology of knowledge, and critical European studies. Recent books include A History of International Political Theory (2010); Hans J. Morgenthau, The Concept of the Political (2012, co-edited with Felix Rösch); and Politics of Difference (2014). He is currently preparing a monograph on Conditions of Critique: On Humane and Responsible Politics. He is Principal Investigator of the Leverhulme-funded research network on “Critical Theory Meets Classical Realism.”

Daniel R. Brunstetter is associate professor in the department of political science and co-director of the Program in International Studies at the University of California, Irvine. His more than a dozen articles and book chapters on the ethics of the use of force have appeared in Ethics & International Affairs, The Atlantic, the Journal of Military Ethics, Political Studies, the Review of International Studies, and the International Journal of Human Rights, among other venues. He is the author of Tensions of Modernity: Las Casas and His Legacy in the French Enlightenment (2012) and co-editor of the forthcoming The Just War Tradition from Cicero to Today.

Amitai Etzioni is a University Professor and professor of international relations at the George Washington University. His books include Hot Spots: American Foreign Policy in a Post–Human-Rights World (2012), Security First (2007), From Empire to Community (2004), The Common Good (2004), and Political Unification Revisited (2001). He has served as a senior advisor to the White House and as president of the American Sociological Association, and has taught at Columbia University, Harvard University, and the University of California, Berkeley. He was listed as one of the top 100 American intellectuals in Richard Posner's book Public Intellectuals.

Christoph Frei is associate professor of political science and Academic Director of the International Affairs and Governance Programme at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland. He is the author of Hans J. Morgenthau: An Intellectual Biography (2001). His current research interests focus on the evolution of democracy in France and the history of political thought, notably of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Anthony de Jasay.

Helen Frowe is professor of practical philosophy and Wallenberg Academy Research Fellow in Philosophy at Stockholm University, where she directs the Stockholm Centre for the Ethics of War and Peace. Her main research interests are permissible harming and the ethics of war. Her recent publications include Defensive Killing (2014), How We Fight (co-edited with Gerald Lang, 2014), and The Ethics of War and Peace: An Introduction (2011).

Douglas B. Klusmeyer teaches in the department of justice, law, and criminology and is an affiliate faculty member of the history department at American University, Washington, D.C. He has published several articles exploring various aspects of Morgenthau's thought, including “The American Republic, Executive Power and the National Security State: Hannah Arendt's and Hans Morgenthau's Critiques of the Vietnam War,” Journal of International Political Theory (2011); “Contesting Thucydides' Legacy: Comparing Hannah Arendt and Hans Morgenthau on Imperialism, History and Theory,” International History Review (2011); “Hans Morgenthau and Republicanism,” International Relations (2010); and “Beyond Tragedy: Hannah Arendt and Hans Morgenthau on Responsibility, Evil and Political Ethics,” International Studies Review (2009).

Richard Ned Lebow is professor of international political theory in the war studies department of King's College London; Bye-Fellow of Pembroke College, University of Cambridge; and the James O. Freedman Presidential Professor Emeritus of Government at Dartmouth College. His most recent books—in print and in press—address the politics and ethics of identity, national identifications and international relations, causation in international relations, and Max Weber and international relations.

Patti Tamara Lenard is associate professor of ethics in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, University of Ottawa, Canada. She is the author of Trust, Democracy, and Multicultural Challenges (2012). Her research focuses on the moral questions raised by immigration in an era of security, as well as on multiculturalism, trust/social cohesion, and democratic theory. She is Principal Investigator of a Canadian government–funded project that focuses on the experience of Muslim Canadians, in particular their response to changes in immigration policy, in an increasingly securitized political environment.

Cornelia Navari is honorary senior lecturer at the University of Birmingham (U.K.) and visiting professor of international affairs at the University of Buckingham (U.K.). She is the former chair and current program director of the English School section of the International Studies Association. She is the editor of Theorising International Society (2009), Ethical Reasoning in International Affairs: Arguments from the Middle Ground (2013), and (with Daniel M. Green) Guide to the English School in International Studies (2014). She is the author of Internationalism and the State in the Twentieth Century (2000) and Public Intellectuals and International Affairs (2013) and contributed the chapter on “Europe's Public Intellectuals” to the two-volume Handbook of European Foreign Policy (2015). Currently, Navari is editing (with Molly Cochran) Progressivism and American Foreign Policy During the Inter-War Period (Palgrave), and modeling the role of international organizations in international society with Tonny Brems Knudsen and a team of young European scholars.

Felix Rösch is senior lecturer in international relations at Coventry University (U.K.) and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Currently, his research focuses on the history of international political thought, the sociology of knowledge in international relations, and intercultural knowledge exchanges. Rösch is the author of Power, Knowledge, and Dissent in Morgenthau's Worldview (2015) and the editor of Émigré Scholars and the Genesis of International Relations A European Discipline in America? (2014) and Hans Morgenthau, The Concept of the Political (2012, co-edited with Hartmut Behr). He is also co-editor of the Global Political Thinkers book series (Palgrave Macmillan) and he has published in the Review of International Studies, International Politics, and the Journal of International Political Theory, among others.

Robert Sparrow is a professor in the philosophy program, a chief investigator in the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science, and an adjunct professor in the Centre for Human Bioethics at Monash University, where he works on ethical issues raised by new technologies. He is the author of some seventy-five refereed papers and book chapters on topics as diverse as the ethics of military robotics, aged-care robotics, just war theory, human enhancement, preimplantation genetic diagnosis, and nanotechnology. He is a co-chair of the IEEE Technical Committee on Robot Ethics and was one of the founding members of the International Committee for Robot Arms Control.