The quarterly journal of Carnegie Council
The aim of Ethics & International Affairs, the quarterly journal of Carnegie Council, is to help close the gap between theory and practice (and between theorists and practitioners) by publishing original articles, essays, and book reviews that integrate rigorous thinking about principles of justice and morality into discussions of practical dilemmas related to current policy developments, global institutional arrangements, and the conduct of important international actors.
Theoretical discussions that originate in philosophy, religion, or the social sciences should connect with such interests and concerns as the function and design of international organizations (for example, the United Nations, World Bank, and International Monetary Fund); institutions of accountability (such as the International Criminal Court and ad hoc tribunals); arrangements governing trade and the global economy; as well as issues of human rights, the environment, and the use of force.
Ethics & International Affairs has its own website.
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Available through Cambridge University Press
Leadership
Joel H. Rosenthal
President, Carnegie Council
Adam Read-Brown
Editor, Carnegie Council's journal, "Ethics & International Affairs"
Priya Chokshi
Associate Editor, Carnegie Council's journal, "Ethics & International Affairs"
Issues

SEP 10, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.3 (Fall 2015): International Judges: Is There a Global Ethic?
Thousands of judges from across the globe now sit on international courts. It is time to systematically consider professional ethical standards.

SEP 10, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.3 (Fall 2015): Rescuing Democracy in the Age of the Internet
There is a growing awareness that the greatest threat to democracy may no longer derive from human agency, but from new forms of technology.

SEP 10, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.3 (Fall 2015): Table of Contents Volume 29.3 (Fall 2015)
"Ethics & International Affairs" is pleased to announce the publication of its fall 2015 issue. This issue includes an essay by Richard Goldstone on global ethical standards ...

JUN 17, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.2 (Summer 2015): "Reason in a Dark Time: Why the Struggle Against Climate Change Failed—and What It Means for Our Future" by Dale Jamieson
Jamieson is interested in the real rather than the ideal world. The result is a book that is uncommonly accessible to nonspecialists, and will resonate ...

JUN 17, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.2 (Summer 2015): "The Ethics of Immigration" by Joseph Carens
The current ethical debate about the legitimacy of migration controls would not exist but for Joseph Carens' writing. At last the book-length version of his ...

JUN 17, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.2 (Summer 2015): "Political Order and Political Decay: From the Industrial Revolution to the Globalization of Democracy" by Francis Fukuyama
Where did strong, adaptable, accountable states come from, and why do some countries have them and others do not? Fukuyama discusses three main paths to ...

JUN 17, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.2 (Summer 2015): Table of Contents Volume 29.2 (Summer 2015)
This issue includes essays by Jim Sleeper on liberal education in illiberal societies and by Rahul Sagar on the ethics of surveillance and disclosure; features ...

JUN 15, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.2 (Summer 2015): Innocents Abroad? Liberal Educators in Illiberal Societies
Is anything in liberal education nonnegotiable? With numerous expansions abroad, American universities are testing these limits.

MAR 10, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.1 (Spring 2015):
It includes an essay by Shefa Siegel on Liberia, Ebola, and the "Cult of Bankable Projects"; a symposium on imagining a "Drone Accountability Regime," featuring ...

MAR 10, 2015 • Journal
Ethics & International Affairs Volume 29.1 (Spring 2015): "The Endtimes of Human Rights" by Stephen Hopgood
Is the Human Rights "project" coming to an end? Hopgood believes it has sold its moral clarity for an alliance with interventionist liberal states.