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Contributors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 September 2019

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Copyright © Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs 2019 

Janina Dill is the John G. Winant Associate Professor of U.S. Foreign Policy in the Department of Politics and International Relations of the University of Oxford and a professorial Fellow at Nuffield College. She is also a co-director of the Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law, and Armed Conflict. Her first book, Legitimate Targets? Social Construction, International Law and US Bombing, was published in 2015, and her second book, Law Applicable to Armed Conflict (co-edited with Ziv Bohrer and Helen Duffy), is forthcoming with Cambridge University Press.

Claudia Fuentes-Julio is professor of international relations at the Department of Politics and Government at Alberto Hurtado University in Santiago. Her work has been published in several edited books and journals in the areas of human rights, foreign policy, and Latin-American politics. She recently co-edited with Paula Drummond the volume Human Rights and Conflict Resolution: Bridging the Theoretical and Practical Divide (2018).

Joy Gordon is the Ignacio Ellacuría, S.J. Chair in Social Ethics in the philosophy department and School of Law at Loyola University Chicago. She has published extensively on legal and ethical aspects of economic sanctions, including articles in Harvard International Law Journal, Foreign Policy, Georgetown Journal of International Law, Ethics & International Affairs, Le Monde diplomatique, and Journal of International Development. She is also the author of Invisible War: The United States and the Iraq Sanctions (2010).

Raslan Ibrahim is assistant professor of political science and international relations at the State University of New York at Geneseo. His research interests include international relations theory, human rights, sovereignty, and international politics of the Middle East.

Idriss Jazairy is a graduate of Oxford University, the École Nationale d'Administration, and Harvard University. He is currently the executive director of the Geneva Centre for Human Rights Advancement and Global Dialogue as well as the UN special rapporteur on the negative impact of unilateral coercive measures on the enjoyment of human rights. He previously served as Algeria's ambassador to Belgium, the United States, the Holy See, and the United Nations Office at Geneva. Jazairy was a founding member of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and of the United Nations Human Rights Council, and served two terms as president of the International Fund for Agricultural Development.

Dursun Peksen is professor of political science at the University of Memphis. His primary research interests are in the areas of economic sanctions, armed interventions, human rights, political violence, and shadow economies. His articles have appeared in International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of Politics, Journal of Peace Research, Political Research Quarterly, European Journal of International Relations, Word Development, and International Interactions.

Neil C. Renic is currently based at the Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy at the University of Hamburg. His research focuses on the changing character of war, emerging combat technologies, and the regulation of armed conflict. Previously, he lectured in peace and conflict analysis and international security at the University of Queensland. During this time, his research addressed the moral right to kill in war, and the extent to which this right is challenged by the growing capability of certain states to kill with little or no physical risk to their own forces.

William Smith is associate professor in government and public administration at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He works in the field of contemporary political theory, with a particular focus on civil disobedience, direct action, deliberative democracy, and international political thought. He is author of Civil Disobedience and Deliberative Democracy (2013) and has published in a wide range of journals, including Global Constitutionalism, International Theory, Journal of Political Philosophy, and Public Affairs Quarterly.