CONTRIBUTORS
AMY E. ECKERT is associate professor of political science at the Metropolitan State University of Denver. Her work has appeared in International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Global Ethics, International Political Theory, and the Denver Journal of International Law and Policy. She is the coeditor, with Laura Sjoberg, of Rethinking the Twenty-First Century: New Problems, Old Solutions and author of a forthcoming textbook on ethics and international relations. She is program chair of the 2013 International Studies Association–West meeting and secretary of ISA’s International Ethics section.
CARON E. GENTRY is lecturer in the School of International Relations at the University of St. Andrews. Her research interests include feminism and gender studies, terrorism, and political theology. She is the author of Offering Hospitality: Questioning Christian Approaches to War (University of Notre Dame, 2013). She coauthored Mothers, Monsters, Whores: Women’s Violence in Global Politics (Zed, 2007) and coedited Women, Gender, and Terrorism (University of Georgia Press, 2011) with Laura Sjoberg. She is published in International Feminist Journal of Politics, International Relations, Terrorism and Political Violence, and Critical Studies in Terrorism.
LUKE GLANVILLE is a fellow in the Department of International Relations at the Australian National University. He has a forthcoming book titled Sovereignty and the Responsibility to Protect and has published articles in journals including International Studies Quarterly, European Journal of International Relations, and Human Rights Law Review.
HARRY D. GOULD is associate professor in the Department of Politics and International Relations at Florida International University. He is the author of The Legacy of Punishment in International Law, as well as numerous articles and book chapters on topics in normative international political theory, constructivist international relations theory, and international legal theory. He is currently completing a book on the concept of prudence and is coediting a volume on political judgment in international relations.
ERIC A. HEINZE is associate professor of political science and international studies at the University of Oklahoma. He is the author of Waging Humanitarian War: The Ethics, Law and Politics of Humanitarian Intervention (SUNY, 2009), editor (with Brent Steele) of Ethics, Authority, and War: Non-state Actors and the Just War Tradition (Palgrave, 2010), and editor of Justice, Sustainability, and Security: Global Ethics for the 21st Century (forthcoming, Palgrave, 2013). He has published numerous scholarly journal articles and book chapters, with research most recently appearing in the Review of International Studies, Global Governance, Political Science Quarterly, and the Journal of International Political Theory. He is currently writing a book on the ethics of global violence. He teaches courses on international relations, human rights, Just War theory, international law, international organizations, and international relations theory.
DAN HENK retired in 2012 after forty years of government service. At the time, he was serving as a social anthropologist on the faculty of Air University and simultaneously as the director of the U.S. Air Force Culture and Language Center. Since 2005 he also served as director of African studies at the U.S. Army War College and as chair, Department of Security Strategy, (DoD) Africa Center for Strategic Studies. He researched and lectured widely in Europe and Africa. He holds a B.A. in history from The Citadel and an M.A. and PhD in anthropology from the University of Florida. His later publications explore defense budgeting in African countries, evolving military roles and missions, and emerging new definitions of “security,” with a focus on environmental security.
KIMBERLY A. HUDSON is assistant professor of international security at the Air War College, Montgomery, Alabama. She received her PhD in 2008 from the Political Science Department at Brown University. Her research and teaching interests include Just War theory and conflict resolution/negotiation. She is the author of Justice, Intervention, and Force: Re-assessing Just War Theory in the Twenty-First Century (Routledge, 2009), which focuses on moral arguments surrounding the resort to war, with particular emphasis on armed humanitarian intervention.
SEBASTIAN KAEMPF is lecturer in peace and conflict studies at the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland. His research interests lie in the moral and legal questions surrounding the use of force, historical and contemporary asymmetric conflicts, and the role of war in a transforming global media landscape. His research has been published—among other sources—in Third World Quarterly, Review of International Studies, International Relations, and Small Wars and Insurgencies. He also co-runs a new website dedicated to media, war, and peace called TheVisionMachine, at www.thevisionmachine.com.
ALEXA ROYDEN is an associate professor and the director of international studies at Queens University of Charlotte in Charlotte, North Carolina. She teaches courses in international relations and political theory. Her research interests include global governance, international security, human rights, and the ethics of warfare. A former defense consultant, she continues to explore emerging military technologies, their effect on the battlefield, and the legal and ethical implications associated with contemporary and future forms of warfare.
LAURA SJOBERG is associate professor of political science at the University of Florida. Her research on gender and international security has been published in dozens of scholarly journals and eight authored or edited books, including, most recently, Gendering Global Conflict: Toward a Feminist Theory of War (Columbia University Press, 2013). She is homebase editor of the International Feminist Journal of Politics.
BRENT J. STEELE is an associate professor of political science and international relation, and the director of faculty programs for the Office of International Programs at the University of Kansas. His research interests include U.S. foreign policy, Just War theory, torture, and accountability in global politics. He is the author of three books and also the coeditor of two volumes. His research has been published in a number of international studies journals, with articles appearing most recently in Critical Studies on Security, Millennium, International Studies Review, Journal of International Political Theory, and Review of International Studies. He teaches courses on international relations theory, international ethics, United States foreign policy, and critical security studies.
ROBERT E. WILLIAMS JR. is professor of political science at Pepperdine University, where he teaches courses on international ethics and international organization and law. He is the author, with Dan Caldwell, of Seeking Security in an Insecure World (2nd ed., 2012) and the editor, with Paul Viotti, of the two-volume Arms Control: History, Theory, and Policy (2012). He also writes on international human rights.