Episodi
-
Adam, Daniela and Jarrod discuss the challenge of thinking about climate justice in the context of IR and existing models of justice and reparations.
-
Jarrod is joined by Daniela Lai and Adam Lerner to talk about the role of big questions in IR scholarship and teaching.
-
Episodi mancanti?
-
Jarrod talks with Lisel Hintz of Johns Hopkins University and Sibel Oktay of the University of Illinois Springfield and the Chicago Council on Global Affairs about the complex history of Turkey in NATO as well as the domestic and intralliance sources of Turkey's current resistance to Finnish and Swedish accession to NATO.
-
Jarrod talks with Professor Marwa Daoudy about her new book, The Origins of The Syrian Conflict: Climate Change and Human Security (Cambridge, 2020). Daoudy challenges the conventional wisdom in some policy circles that climate change was the primary driver behind the start of the Syrian conflict. We discuss some of the difficult questions about causality and the ability of IR theory to provide adequate tools for addressing climate change. We also discuss the origins of the book and her broad, multidisciplinary approach.
-
Duck podcast with Philip Cunliffe, Senior Lecturer at the University of Kent, on his new book The New Twenty Year's Crisis
-
Professor Julie Kaarbo (U. of Edinburgh) discusses role theory, the relationship between FPA and IR theory, and a new project she is calling Breaking Bad. As always thanks go to Steve Dancz (https://stevedancz.com) for our theme music.
-
In episode two, former ISQ editor Dan Nexon takes us behind the scenes a bit to discuss editing a major IR journal and shares insights and advice on publishing.
-
In this inaugural Duck of Minerva podcast, we talk with Professor Jelena Subotic about her new book, Yellow Star, Read Star: Holocaust Remembrance after Communism due out with Cornell University Press at the end of 2019 (https://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/9781501742408/yellow-star-red-star/).