Deen Chatterjee is a faculty affiliate at the Oxford Consortium for Human Rights at Oxford University. From 2012 to 2020, he was professorial fellow in normative jurisprudence at the S.J. Quinney College of Law. He has been a member of the philosophy faculty at the University of Utah since 1975. He has held visiting appointments at the University of Washington, The New School, University of Colorado, University of Oregon, U.S. Naval Academy, and Harvard University. His research and publications in political philosophy focus on theories of global justice, especially on the intersections of human rights, democracy, justice, and war and peace. deen.chatterjee@law.utah.edu
Yuna Han is a departmental lecturer in international relations in the Department of Politics & International Relations at the University of Oxford. yuna.han@politics.ox.ac.uk
Jesse Kirkpatrick is a research assistant professor and the acting director of the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy at George Mason University. He is also an international security fellow at New America and serves as a consultant for numerous organizations. jkirkpat@gmu.edu
Megan Price is a sessional lecturer at the School of Political Science & International Studies at the University of Queensland, where she was awarded her PhD in international relations in 2019. Her work is broadly concerned with the politics of international legitimacy and military action. She also has a keen interest in contributing to debates on Australian foreign policy. Her doctoral thesis—now forthcoming as a book in the Routledge Contemporary Security Studies Series for 2022—examines the crucial but understudied question of how states justify domestic military action to foreign audiences. m.price2@uq.edu.au
Daniel Rothenberg is professor of practice in the School of Politics and Global Studies and co-director of the Center on the Future of War at Arizona State University, as well as a senior fellow at New America, a D.C.-based think tank. He works on the intersection of storytelling, truth, ethics, and politics with a focus on fieldwork-based research on human rights and conflict. daniel.rothenberg@asu.edu
David Wood is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and author who has covered combat operations for more than thirty years. His most recent book arising from that experience is What Have We Done: The Moral Injury of Our Longest Wars (2016). davidbownewood@gmail.com