Showing results 1 - 10 of 21
In this article, we explore historical trends in gender-attentive transitional justice policies using a new global dataset of truth commissions, prosecutions and reparations…
ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø Professor Kathryn Sikkink and Research Coordinator Helen Clapp examine the origins and impact of feminist foreign policies in the Georgetown Journal of International…
Vol. 57, Issue 1, Pages 36-39
To confront the climate crisis, we need political change involving a dramatic shift in domestic and transnational norms. Norm models should be recognized as one of the theoretical…
Transitional justice database projects continue to multiply, even amid mounting suspicion that systematic comparative analysis has little to offer the field. In an effort to…
In November 2022, the Ethiopian government signed a cease-fire with the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. The international community hailed the agreement as a possible turning…
Vol. 77, Issue 4, Pages 871-880
With the untimely death of our colleague and friend, John G. Ruggie, the world has lost a brilliant international relations scholar and a global public servant who made enduring…
As Ukrainian forces aim at a major counteroffensive against Russia, the issue of collaborators, especially in Russian-occupied areas, has drawn renewed attention. If Kyiv…
Kathryn Sikkink (* 1955) is a political scientist who has contributed considerably to making human rights a field of research. Born into a liberal academic family, she started…
Mis diálogos con Elizabeth [Shevy] Jelin sobre derechos humanos y ciudadanÃa datan de comienzos de la década de 1990, cuando yo recién comenzaba a investigar en esta área y ella…
Vol. 13, Issue 3, Pages 574-580
Kratochwil's critique of rights as a dominant moral theory that cannot avoid ‘hegemonic’ politics appears to be too crude. This article suggests that more theoretical and…