Table of Contents

Introduction and Welcome……………………………………………………………..1

Trustees Board 2011………………………………………………………………….....2

Conference Timetable………………………………………………………………...3-4

ECPR Advert………………………………………………………………………………5

Conference Panel grid………………………………………………………………...7-8

Conference 2012 announcement…………………………………………………….9-10

Conference Panel Programme………………………………………………………11-36

Exhibitors…………………………………………………………………………………37

Delegates List……………………………………………………………………….....39-46

Working Group Business Meetings……………………………………………………47

Manchester Conference centre Plan……………………………………………….....49

Manchester City centre map……………………………………………………………51

Notes

35th BISA ANNUAL CONFERENCE

27th to 29th April 2011 - Manchester Conference Centre

Dear Colleague

Welcome to the Manchester Conference Centre and to the 35th BISA Annual Conference. There are a number of changes to this year’s conference such as date, venue type, no conference dinner etc following consultation with members in 2009 this is the first conference in the new format.

In this booklet you will find:

• Details of the conference organisational team • The conference timetable, which contains the essential details of the timing and location of the main events. • A conference grid sheet with titles, places and times of all the conference panels • The conference panel programme details the panel papers and speakers • A list of publishers exhibiting or advertising at the conference • A list of delegates attending the conference

At registration you will be provided with a delegates badge which we ask that you wear at all times so the conference centre staff know you are delegates of our conference, there will be other people staying in the accommodation at the conference centre so we do not have exclusive use of the facilities therefore need to be able to identify you.

Registration will be in the lower main foyer of the conference centre.

The Conference Organising Team

BISA Chair Professor Inderjeet Parmar – Manchester University

BISA Secretary Professor Richard Jackson – Aberystwyth University

BISA Administrator – Conference bookings, arrangements and BISA membership Gail Birkett

MSG – Registration desk Amanda Macchi

Panel Programme Organiser Patrick Thomas – Aberystwyth University

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Officers of the British International Studies Association

Executive Committee

Chair Vice-Chair Honorary Secretary Inderjeet Parmar Theo Farrell Richard Jackson University of Manchester Kings College London Aberystwyth University Honorary Treasurer Chief Executive Hugh Dyer Gail Birkett University of Leeds

Trustees Board

The trustees’ board consists of the Executive committee above, trustees elected from the membership listed here and one editor from each of the publications, the FCO, C-SAP and PSA representatives and the chair of the PGN.

Trustee Trustee Trustee Lee Marsden George Lawson Jason Ralph University of East Anglia London School of University of Leeds Economics Trustee Trustee Trustee Adam Quinn Bela Arora Marie Breen Smyth University of Birmingham Newport University University of Surrey Trustee Trustee PGN Rep Sophie Harman Ruth Blakeley James Malcolm City University University of Kent PSA Rep FCO Rep C-SAP Rep Paul Carmichael Paul Bentall Steven Curtis

Editors of Publications

Review of International Cambridge Book series International Studies Studies Christian Reus-Smit Today Newsletter Kim Hutchings Nicholas Wheeler Adam Quinn

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Conference Timetable Tuesday 26th April 2011 11.00 - 13.00 BISA officers Management/Finance meeting (closed meeting)

14.00 - 17.00 BISA Trustees sub - committee meetings (closed meetings)

Wednesday 27th April 2011 9.30 - 12.00 BISA Trustees Board meeting (closed meeting)

Conference Opens 12.00 midday - 4.30pm Registration in the lower foyer

13.00 - 14.30 Working Group Meetings

14.30 - 15.00 Refreshments

15.00 - 16.30 Panel Session 1

16.45 - 17.45 BISA Annual General Meeting and BISA awards ceremony

18.00 - 19.00 Plenary Lecture - The Global Transformation: Understanding the 19th Century in Montague Burton Professor Barry Buzan London School of Economics and Politics former BISA Chair

19.00 - 19.30 Wine reception

Thursday 28th April 2011 9.15 - 16.30 Registration lower foyer

9.30 - 11.00 Panel Session 2

11.00 - 11.30 Refreshments

11.30 -13.00 Panel Session 3

13.00 - 14.30 Buffet Lunch

13.30 - 14.30 Working group convenors meeting with BISA

14.30 - 16.00 Panel Session 4

16.00 - 16.30 Refreshments

16.30 - 18.00 Panel Session 5

18.00 – 19.00 Working Group Meetings

Friday 29th April 2011 3

9.15 - 11.30 Registration lower foyer

9.30 - 11.00 Panel Session 6

11.00 - 11.30 Refreshments

11.30 - 13.00 Panel Session 7

Conference Closes 13.00

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INTERNATIONAL political science matters RELATIONS

PEOPLE, STATES & FEAR The second edition of this widely acclaimed book takes as its main theme the question An Agenda for International Security of how states and societies pursue freedom from threat in an environment in which Studies in the Post-Cold Era competitive relations are inescapable across the political, economic, military, societal Barry Buzan and environmental landscapes. Barry Buzan argues that the concept of security is a versatile, penetrating and useful way to approach the study of international relations. Pub Date: March 2007 ISBN: 9780955248818 The ECPR Classics edition includes a new introduction from the author placing this Price: £31.00 €36.00 classic text within a current context. BISA PRICE £21.00

CAUSES OF WAR “An excellent book on the neglected topic of recognition in international relations. This The Struggle for Recognition solid and historically rich analysis of international violence from an identity-based per- Thomas Lindemann spective synthesizes work from Political Science, Sociology, and Philosophy in French, German, and English in a novel perspective.” Pierre Allan, University of Geneva Pub Date: October 2010 ISBN: 9781907301018 Price: £21.00 €25.00 BISA PRICE £15.00

THE RETURN OF THE STATE The Return of the State of War is an attempt to understand the war waged by the United OF WAR States against Saddam Hussein in 2003. Dario Battistella claims that the war signifies the return of Hobbesian values, showing that the Lockean norms, which America itself Dario Battistella had worked to consolidate since joining the international system, have progressively Pub Date: June 2008 been abandoned by the American administration. The author evaluates the impact of ISBN: 9780955248856 this unusual American behaviour upon the evolution of the contemporary international Price: £27.00 €33.00 system and analyses the different causes that might explain the decision to launch BISA PRICE £15.00 Operation Iraqi Freedom.

SYSTEM AND PROCESS IN “Every profession is occasionally inflicted with challenges that loom large.... INTERNATIONAL POLITICS in economics these would include Keynes General Theory, Hicks’s Value and Capital, [and] Samuelson’s Foundations... In short, Kaplan’s book is a must.” Morton A. Kaplan Charles Kindleberger, World Politics Pub Date: April 2005 ISBN: 9780954796624 Price: £24.00 €29.00 BISA PRICE £8.00

BEYOND THE Beyond the Nation-State contains the most complete and definitive statement of “neo- NATION-STATE functionalism” – the theory of transnational integration for which Ernst B. Haas is best beyond the nation-state functionalism and known. Focusing on the International Labor Organization (ILO), Beyond the Nation-State international organization Ernst B. Haas Ernst B. Haas was one of the first efforts to analyse the dynamics and effects of a global international Pub Date: August 2008 institution and a classic in comparative politics and international relations. First published SBN: 9780955248870 in 1964, this edition includes a new introduction by Peter M. Haas, John G. Ruggie, Price: £36.00 €42.00 Philippe Schmitter and Antje Wiener.

with a new introduction by Pete John G. Ruggie, Philippe Schmitter and An BISA PRICE £14.00

COERCING, CONSTRAINING “In his important contribution to the field of UN and EU targeted sanctions, Francesco AND SIGNALLING Giumelli provides an excellent conceptual account of the challenges this strategic tool confronts in today’s world. He does so by providing both an excellent theoretical as well Francesco Giumelli COMING as methodological analysis, especially with regard to strategies of coercing, constraining SOON Pub Date: May 2011 and signalling. What’s more is that Dr. Giumelli also provides scientific recommendations ISBN: 9781907301209 for how to move the field forward. In short then, this book should be a required reading Price: TBA for anyone interested in the state of the art of sanctions.” Dr Mikael Eriksson, Swedish Defence Research Agency

Books can be bought online at www.ecprnet.eu/ecprpress For exclusive book promotions, previews and news go to www.ecprnet.eu/myecpr. Create an account and subscribe to “ECPR Publications”.

Wednesday 15.00 – Thursday 9.30 – 11.00 Thursday 11.30 – 13.00 Thursday 14.30 – 16.00 16.30 1.1) Advancing the 2.1) Expanding the 3.1) 30 Years of Critique 4.1) Reconceptualising neoliberal cultural Disciplinary and Gender, Race and transformation in Methodological Sexuality after 9/11: 2 Africa Boundaries of IR 1.2) Causal 2.2) Historical Sociology 3.2) Ten Years On: The 4.2) Ethical, Explanation in IR and War Construction of Nuclear Methodological and Threats since September Autobiographical Tensions 11 in Counter-Insurgency Warfare 1.3) New Critical 2.3) International 3.3) Security governance 4.3) Africa and Theory I: Perspectives on the Relations through or strategic theory? Exposing conceptual limit WTO International Organisations 1.4) Power Shifts, 2.4) Power in US Foreign 3.4) The Chilcot Inquiry: A 4.4) Building Trust, Global Health Policy Critical Examination Avoiding Deception Diplomacy & Foreign Policy 1.5) Reconceptualising 2.5) Rethinking 3.5) Gender, Biopolitics 4.5) Realism and Reason Gender, Race and Desecuritization Practices and Contemporary Sexuality after 9/11: 1 in World Politics Security Practices 1.6) he Study of State 2.6) Rethinking 3.6) The Middle East: 4.6) Forgotten Histories: Violence and State Intervention Realism’s Last Outpost? Review of International Terrorism Studies 1.7) Religion and 2.7) Teaching About 3.7) Peace through 4.7) Obama's Foreign Security Studies Terrorism 1 Europeanisation Policy: Early Assessments 1 1.8) International 2.8) The Critical Turn in 3.8) Teaching About 4.8) Supporting and Cooperation and the Study of Classical Terrorism 2 Engaging Students of Conflict in East Asia Realism International Relations 1.9) Forum on 2.9) The Financial 3.9) The Missing Link? 4.9) Perspectives on the Democracy Promotion Architecture after the International energy-climate nexus as foreign Policy: Implosion of the Financial- Organisations and the Perspectives, Issues, led Growth Model Evolution of the and Challenges International 1.10) The Micro- 2.10) Foreign Policy and 3.10) Putting the Politics 4.10) The Responsibility to Politics of Global Security back into Global Public Rebuild Humanitarianism Health 2.11) Wealth, Health and 3.11) Defeat, Desistance, 4.11) The International Food (In)Security Degeneration and Failed Political Economy of Henri Resuscitation Lefebvre 2.12) The principles of 3.12) Labour Rights and 4.12) Identity in Russia and war and the military Wrongs in International Eurasia profession Politics 2.13) US, UK and Wider 3.13) Religion and US 4.13) Roundtable on Concepts of Minimum Foreign Policy Anarchism in IR Nuclear Deterrence 2.14) BISA 2011 Journal 3.14) BISA 2011 Journal 4.14) The Self and the Workshop Open Workshop 1 – African Other: Displacement, Roundtable Affairs Identity and Violence 3.15) BISA 2011 Journal 4.15) BISA 2011 Journal Workshop 2 – Review of Workshop 3 – Conflict, African Political Economy Security and Development

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Thursday 16.30 – Friday 9.30 – 11.00 Friday 11.30 – 13.00 18.00 5.1) Barack Obama's 6.1) Capitalism, Uneven 7.1) British foreign policy: foreign policy strategy Development and Modern lessons from the past for State Formation the Coalition

5.2) Ideologies and 6.2) Coalition foreign 7.2) Beyond the Resource Armed Intervention policy: What's new? Curse

5.3) Africa and Theory 6.3) Neoliberlaism in the 7.3) Temporality in World II Foreign Policy of the Politics Global North

5.4) Peacemaking, 6.4) Russian Foreign Policy 7.4) Exceptional, Peacemakers and in the Post-Cold War World Extraordinary, Extra- Diplomacy, 1914-1939 judicial? 5.5) Diverse Agents of 6.5) The Politics Of Climate 7.5) Local and global in the Development Change Liberal Peace project

5.6) Capitalism, 6.6) Re-imagining the 7.6) Re-imagining the Uneven Development world (I) world (II) and Modern State Formation 5.7) Ethical 6.7) The EU as an 7.7) IPE and the Dimensions of Non- International Actor international political State Forces in War economy 5.8) Teaching circle on 6.8) Conceptualising 7.8) International Feedback on Resistance in International Organisations & Assessment Politics Governance 5.9) Foreign Policy, 6.9) Neoliberal 7.9) States, Limits, Laws Internationalism and Resurgence and the Limits and Exceptions Political Possibility of the Biopolitical Imaginary

5.10) New dimensions, 6.10) Borders, Belonging 7.10) NATO strategies for new targets and Slavery the 21st Century

5.11) Political Realism, 6.11) Studies of the Politics the Concept of the of Oil and Historical Political Sociology 5.12) Security in Russia 6.12) The Emerging Post- and Eurasia Washington Consensus

5.13) Climate change governance

5.14 BISA 2011 Journal Workshop 4 – Review of International Studies

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BRITISH INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION & INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION JOINT INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

20-22 JUNE 2012 Edinburgh Scotland UK

Announcing the Theme: DIVERSITY IN THE DISCIPLINE: TENSION OR OPPORTUNITY IN RESPONDING TO GLOBAL CHALLENGES

Joint Programme Chairs: Professor Colin McInnes Aberystwyth University and Professor Karen Rasler Indiana University

Call for papers goes live on BISA and ISA websites 24th June 2011

Deadline for panel and paper submissions 1st September 2011

The global financial crisis, continued concerns over terrorism, the projection of Western power into and Afghanistan, the growing significance of China and the emergence of the G20 states as major players, and political revolution in the Middle East, are amongst the challenges shaping contemporary international relations. Power is changing. Alliances are being reconfigured, and institutions are evolving. Security challenges are being articulated in a variety of areas including through technological change, health, natural disasters, and food scarcity.

In addressing these issues, International Studies is characterised by diversity. This includes differences in how global challenges are understood. Divergent methodological approaches shape the ways in which the substance of these global challenges is analysed. In turn, competing understandings lead to academics offering distinct responses to pressing issues in contemporary global politics.

We invite papers and panels which explore diversity in the discipline, particularly in relation to how competing approaches define and understand contemporary global challenges, and how those competing approaches have led to quite different proposals for responding to those challenges.

We especially welcome proposals for panels which consist of a diverse grouping of scholars from various countries and regions, from different career stages and which represent both genders. Joint submissions from ISA Sections and BISA working groups are warmly encouraged.

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Proposals that address the following questions are invited:

• How do diverse perspectives in International Studies help us to understand and respond to contemporary global challenges?

• Are there regional divides in International Studies? What impact does this have on how contemporary global challenges are substantively understood? Does it lead to considerable differences in the responses proposed to face such challenges?

• In what ways does representation from the Global South strengthen approaches, understandings and solutions to contemporary challenges?

• Is there substantial theoretical diversity in the discipline? In what ways might this help or hinder International Studies in responding to contemporary global challenges?

• What is the research agenda of International Studies? How is this reflected in teaching? How does teaching shape our research?

• Can multi-disciplinarity improve our understandings of contemporary global challenges? Does engagement with other disciplines also present difficulties for International Studies?

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Wednesday 27th Session 1: 15.00 – 16.30

1.1) Advancing the neoliberal cultural transformation in Africa: Sites, actors, leverages (Boardroom Level 5) Working Group: Africa &IS Convenor: Jörg Wiegratz (Sheffield) Chair: Jörg Wiegratz (Sheffield) Discussant: Carl Death (Aberystwyth) Sophie Harman (City) Governing Health Risk in Africa by Buying Behaviour Nadine Beckmann (Oxford) The commodification of misery: Markets for healing, markets for sickness Sojin Lim (Manchester) The neoliberal legacy of the Paris Declaration: different responses, practices and outcomes of implementation in Tanzania

1.2) Causal Explanation in IR (Boardroom Level 6) Convenor: Joerg Friedrichs (Oxford) Chair: Milja Kurki (Aberystwyth) Discussant: Milja Kurki (Aberystwyth) Adam Humphreys (Oxford) Explaining International Relations: A Question-Based Approach Hidemi Suganami (Aberystwyth) Causal explanations and moral judgements: their linkages in history and social science Joerg Friedrichs (Oxford) Causal mechanisms and social patterns: thinking within or without the box

1.3) New Critical Perspectives on the WTO (Conference Room 1) Working Group: IPEG Convenor: Matthew Eagleton-Pierce (LSE) Chair: Matthew Eagleton-Pierce (LSE) Robert Ackrill (Nottingham Trent), Adrian Kay (ANU) & Ben Richardson (Warwick) Sustainability and WTO Disputes: The Case of Biofuel Certification and Polycentric Governance Valbona Muzaka (Southampton) & Matthew L. Bishop (University of the West Indies) Whither the WTO? Matthew Eagleton-Pierce (LSE) Beyond Mere Symbolism: An Anatomy of Symbolic Power in the WTO Rorden Wilkinson (Manchester) & James Scott (Manchester) The Politics of Predictions: The Role of Computer Modelling in the Doha Round

1.4) Power Shifts, Global Health Diplomacy & Foreign Policy (Conference Room 2) Convenor: Adam Kamradt-Scott (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) Chair: Stefan Elbe (Sussex) Discussant: Stefan Elbe (Sussex) Jenny Qu Wang (Vienna) Global Health Governance in China: The Case of Chin’s Health Aid to Foreign Countries Alexia Duten (Westfalische Wilhelms-Universitat, Munster) The Oslo Declaration: flogging a dead horse?

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1.5) Reconceptualising Gender, Race and Sexuality after 9/11: Panel 1 (Conference Room 3) Working Group: Gendering IR Convenor: Nicola Pratt (Warwick) Chair: Catherine Eschle (Strathclyde) Katherine Allison (Manchester) The War on Terror and the Agential Muslim Woman Rosa Vasilaki (Bristol) 'Resistance' versus 'victimization' the dilemmatics of Islamic agency Khursheed Wadia (Warwick) Muslim Women as Political Actors in the UK since 9/11

1.6) The Study of State Violence and State Terrorism: Overcoming the Theoretical, Conceptual, Methodological and Political Challenges (Conference Room 3a) Convenor: Ruth Blakeley (Kent) Chair: Richard Jackson (Aberystwyth) Discussant: Ruth Blakeley (Kent) David Maher (Kent) and Andrew Thomson (Kent) The Political Economy of Colombia's Demobilisation Process and the Continuation of State Terror Anthony Mckeown (Bristol) The structural production of state terrorism: capitalism, imperialism and international class dynamics Asima Shaikh (KCL) (Title not provided)

1.7) Religion and Security Studies (Conference Room 4) Working Group: IR, Security and Religion Convenor: Luca Mavelli (Sussex) Chair: Stuart Croft (Warwick) Discussant: Stuart Croft (Warwick) Luca Mavelli (Sussex) The Securitization and Desecuritization of Islam Stacey Gutkowski (Sussex) Emotion, Military Orientalism and the Secular

1.8) International Cooperation and Conflict in East Asia (Conference Room 4a) Convenor: BISA Chair: Lee Marsden (UEA) Mutsumi Hirano ( ) Search of Visions: Japan’s Foreign Policy since 1989 Alex Miles (John Moores) Dealing with a Rogue: US-North Korea relations in the Clinton era Yeon Ho LEE (Yonsei University) & Jeong Shim KANG (Yonsei University) The Changjitu Project and China-North Korea Economic Cooperation: Agential Interests and the Institutionalization of Cooperation David Blagden (Oxford) International Commerce, Power Convergence and Conflict Incentives

1.9) Forum on Democracy Promotion as foreign Policy: Perspectives, Issues, and Challenges (Conference Room 5) Convenor: Nicolas Bouchet Chair: Inderjeet Parmar (Manchester) Jonas Wolff (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt) German democracy promotion as foreign policy Pär Engström (Human Rights Consortium, University of London) Swedish democracy promotion as foreign policy Tsveta Petrova (Cornell) Polish democracy promotion as foreign policy Jörg Faust (German Development Institute) Citizens' Attitudes towards European 12

Democracy Promotion Hans Agné (Stockholm) Democracy promotion as foreign policy – theoretical issues and challenges Renske Doorenspleet (Warwick) Democracy promotion as foreign policy – the democratization perspective on the recipient’s side

1.10) The Micro-Politics of Global Humanitarianism (Conference Room 6) Convenor: John Heathershaw Chair: Stephen Hopgood (SOAS) John Heathershaw (Exeter) Humanitarian Reasoning: Legends and Lives in Contemporary Global Humanitarianism Lisa Smirl (Sussex) Drive-By Development: The Micro-Politics of Sports Utility Vehicles in Humanitarian Assistance Jenny Peterson (Manchester) Individual agency as humanitarian politics: when individual and institutional responses diverge

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BISA Plenary Lecture 18.00-19.00

Location: Weston Theatre

The Global Transformation

Understanding the 19th Century in International Relations

Montague Burton Professor

Barry Buzan

London School of Economics and Politics

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Thursday 28th Session 2: 9.30 – 11.00

2.1) Expanding the Disciplinary and Methodological Boundaries of IR (Boardroom Level 5) Convenor: BISA Chair: Ruth Blakely (Kent) Vincent Druliolle (Essex) Remembering and its places in post-dictatorship Argentina Stephan Petzold (Aberystwyth) Towards a sociology of knowledge production in IR. Understanding scholarly practices in the history of an academic discipline Katerina Dalacoura (LSE) Culture and International Relations Theory: Mapping the Field through an Interdisciplinary Approach

2.2) Historical Sociology and War (Boardroom Level 6) Convenor: Bryan Mabee (Queen Mary) Chair: Bryan Mabee (Queen Mary) Tarak Barkawi (Cambridge) Bombing Asians: Orientalism and the Rise of American Airpower Bryan Mabee (Queen Mary) Liberal Militarism, National Security Ideology and the US National Security State: Revisiting the 'Liberal Moment' Alex Anievas (Cambridge) The Cataclysm of Development: The Thirty Years ™ Crisis of 1914-1945

2.3) International Relations through International Organisations (Conference Room 1) Convenor: BISA Chair: Jason Ralph (Leeds) Andrea Betti (Trento) Invoking International Justice: The UK and the Process of Ratification of the International Criminal Court Treaty Alexander Brown (UEA) CERF, Hypothetical Insurance, and Global Justice David Lewis (Bradford) The OSCE and the SCO: regional organisations and contested norms in Central Asia

2.4) Power in US Foreign Policy (Conference Room 2) Working Group: US Foreign Policy Convenor: Adam Quinn (Birmingham) and Lee Marsden (UEA) Chair: Inderjeet Parmar (Manchester) Felix Berenskoetter (SOAS) Hegemony by Invitation: Neoclassical realism, soft power and US-European relations Nicholas Kitchen (LSE) Still the American System: Structural Power and the durability of Hegemony Edward Lock (UWE) How hard is military power? A call for Constructivist Realism. Adam Quinn (Birmingham) In defence of Waltzian simplicity: the nature of power and the coming American decline Patrick Thomas (Aberystwyth) Paine's Failed Vision of an Exceptional America: The Images and Debates that Haunt Obama's America

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2.5) Rethinking Desecuritization Practices in World Politics (Conference Room 3) Convenor: Thierry Balzacq (Namur) Chair: TROMBETTA M. Julia (Delft) BALZACQ, DEPAUW & Sarah Leonard (University of Salford/Sciences Po Paris, CEE) The Political Limits of Desecuritization:Security, Arms Trade, and the EU’s Economic Targets Juha VUORI (Turku) Peace, Harmony, and Development Chinese Foreign Policy Maxims as Pre-Emptive Desecuritization Lene Hansen (Copenhagen) “Re-reading Desecuritization: Uncovering the Normative- Political in the Copenhagen School”

2.6) Rethinking Intervention (Conference Room 3a) Convenor: John MacMillan (Brunel) Chair: George Lawson (LSE) John MacMillan (Brunel) Rethinking Intervention David Williams (City) Development, 'Intervention' and International Order Lee Jones (Queen Mary) Sovereignty, Intervention and Social Order: The Case of Cold- War Southeast Asia

2.7) Teaching About Terrorism 1: Academic freedom, Terrorism and Power (Conference Room 4) Working Group: Critical Studies on Terrorism Convenor: David Miller (Strathclyde) Chair: Helen Dexter (Manchester) Discussant: Richard Jenkins Rod Thornton (Nottingham) No judgement was made by us: How two innocent men came to be arrested on terrorism charges at the in May 2008 David Miller (Strathclyde), Tom Mills (Strathclyde) & Steven Harkins (Strathclyde) Teaching About Terrorism The debate about Academic Freedom

2.8) The Critical Turn in the Study of Classical Realism: Current Achievements and Future Prospects (Conference Room 4a) Working Group: CRIPT Convenor: Vassilis Paipais (LSE) Chair: Beate Jahn (Sussex) Alexander Reichwein (Goethe University-Frankfurt) The Critical Moment in Classical Realism Kamila Stullerova (Aberystwyth) Realism must live dangerously: Political theory's contribution to classical realism Sean Molloy (Edinburgh) Deleuze and Guattari and the Reinterpretation of Realism Daniel Levine (Colgate) Why Hans Morgenthau Was Not a Critical Theorist Vassilis Paipais (LSE) Realism, Tragedy and Critical International Theory

2.9) The Financial Architecture after the Implosion of the Financial-led Growth Model: Is Europe Proposing an Alternative System? (Conference Room 5) Working Group: IPEG Convenor Miguel Otero-Iglesias (Oxford Brookes) Chair: Philip G Cerny (Rutgers) Stefano Pagliari (LSE) Protection or protectionism? Comparing the US and European response to the global financial crisis Mattias Vermeiren (Ghent) The Global Imbalances and the Contradictions of 16

European Monetary Power Miguel Otero-Iglesias (Oxford Brookes)`Currency War' between the US and China: Where Does the EU Stand? Huw Macartney (Manchester) Reconstituting Neoliberalism: the politics of EU-level crisis responses

2.10) Foreign Policy and Security: Middle East, Pakistan, and America (Conference Room 6) Convenor: BISA Chair: Stuart Croft (Warwick) Amnon Aran (City) Containing Territorial Transnational Actors: Israel, Hezbollah, and Hamas Oz Hassan (Warwick) America’s Imperial Right and Emancipatory Wrongs for the Middle East M W Aslam (Fordham) Understanding the ‘Pak’ in ‘AfPak’: The Obama Administration’s Policy towards Pakistan at the Mid-Term in 2010

2.11) Wealth, Health and Food (In)Security (Syndicate C/D) Convenor: BISA Chair: Sophie Harman (City) Carol Longbottom (Bradford) Will the recently reformed Committee on World Food Security become ‘the’ international forum for food and agricultural governance or just another talking shop? Joao Nunes (Warwick) Health, Security and Emancipatory Politics Jonathon Louth (Chester) Security and Reproductive Health in Cambodia: A ‘Pro- Natalist’ Agenda? Preslava Stoeva (Richmond) Governance of Health or Management of Disease? - Constructing a Framework for Analysis

2.12) The principles of war and the military profession (Syndicate E/F) Convenor: Jan Angstrom (Uppsala) Chair: Jan Angstrom (Uppsala) Anders Palmgren (Swedish National Defence College) Clausewitz and German Military Thought between Paris and Verdun Alaric Searle (Salford) Fuller, the and the institutionalization of the Principles of War Jan Angstrom (Uppsala) & JJ Widen (Swedish National Defence College) Modern Armed Forces and the Spread of the idea of Principles in War

2.13) US, UK and Wider Concepts of Minimum Nuclear Deterrence (Cockcroft Theatre) Working Group: US Foreign Policy Convenor: Andrew Futter (Birmingham) Chair: Nick Ritchie (Bradford) UK Nuclear Weapons Policy: Deconstructing Minimum Deterrence Tom Sauer (Antwerp) Conceptualizing and Operationalizing Minimum Deterrence Andrew Futter (Birmingham) US Ballistic Missile Defence and Minimum Nuclear Deterrence Kristan Stoddart (Aberystwyth) Minimum Nuclear Deterrence in Theory and Practice

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2.14) BISA 2011 Journal Workshop Open Roundtable (Weston Theatre) Convenors: Sara Dorman (Edinburgh) & William Brown (Open) Chair: Sara Dorman (Edinburgh) Editors Kim Hutchings (LSE) Review of International Studies Sara Dorman (Edinburgh) African Affairs Giles Mohan (OU) Review of African Political Economy Catherine Scott (KCL) Conflict Security and Development

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Session 3: 11.30 – 13.00

3.1) 30 Years of Critique: Critical Theorizing and World Politics (Boardroom Level 5) Convenor: Joao Nunes (Warwick) Chair: Joao Nunes (Warwick) Kimberly Hutchings (LSE) Mustapha Pasha (Aberdeen) Michael C. Williams (Ottawa) Richard Wyn Jones (Cardiff University)

3.2) Ten Years On: The Construction of Nuclear Threats since September 11 (Boardroom Level 6) Working Group: US Foreign Policy Convenors: Michelle Bentley (Southampton) & Chris Kitchen (Sheffield) Chair: Jamie Gaskarth (Plymouth) Trevor McCrisken (Warwick) The Anonymous Little Man in the Raincoat with a Heavy Suitcase: Nuclear Fear in an Age of Terror Chris Kitchen (Sheffield) Constructions of the Nuclear Threat from Iran in British Foreign Policy since September 11 Michelle Bentley (Southampton) 9/11 Times a Thousand: Constructing the Threat of Nuclear Terrorism

3.3) Security governance or strategic theory? Different theoretical approaches to the study of asymmetric security relations (Conference Room 1) Convenor: Charlotte Wagnsson (Swedish National Defence College) Chair: Charlotte Wagnsson (Swedish National Defence College) Discussant: Jan Ãngstrom (Uppsala) Arita Holmberg (Swedish National Defence College) Relations among state and non- state actors and the prospects for security governance: The case of the implementation of UN Security Council resolution 1325 Malena Britz (Swedish National Defence College) Non-governmental actors in Nordic Security Co-operation Magnus Christiansson (Swedish National Defence College) Risk Societies at War: What Consequences for the Strategist?

3.4) The Chilcot Inquiry: A Critical Examination (Conference Room 2) Working Group: Security & Intelligence Studies Convenor: Robert Dover (Loughborough) Chair: Mark Phythian (Leicester) Paul Rogers (Bradford) Robert Dover (Loughborough)

3.5) Gender, Biopolitics and Contemporary Security Practices (Conference Room 3) Convenor: BISA Chair: James Pattison (Manchester) Linda Åhäll (Birmingham) Heroines, Monsters, Victims: Telling stories of female agency in political violence

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Julia Welland (Manchester) Haunted soldiers: doings, undoings and the need for a bio- male body James Fitzgerald (Dublin City) & Maura Conway (Dublin City) Between ‘Post-Politics’ and ‘Bio-Politics’: What Space for Right-Wing Terrorism Halit Mustafa Tagma (Sabanci) A Coalition of Killing: Sovereignty and Subjectivity in the War on Terror

3.6) The Middle East: Realism’s Last Outpost? The Challenge of Alternative Theoretical Voices (Conference Room 3a) Convenor: James Worrall (Leeds) Chair: Naomi Head (Glasgow) James Worrall (Leeds) Reading Booth in Beirut: Is Hezbollah an Emancipatory actor? Faiz Sheikh (Leeds) Islamic ideology's challenge to the discipline of International Relations (IR) Simon Mabon (Leeds) Ayatollah Khomeini: Or how I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb Alam Saleh (Leeds) Identity and Societal Security in Iran

3.7) Peace through Europeanisation: Assessing the Export of Governance to the Western Balkans (Conference Room 4) Working Group: South East Europe Convenor: Jelena Obradovic-Wochnik (Aston) Chair: Jelena Obradovic-Wochnik (Aston) Discussant: Jelena Obradovic-Wochnik (Aston) Dimitris Papadimitriou (Manchester) & Petar Petrov (Maastricht) The EU in Kosovo: Conflict Prevention through Conditionality or Europeanisation through Crisis Management? Adam Fagan (Queen Mary) Building the Kosovan state: EU development assistance in Mitrovica and Pristina Vesna Bojicic-Dzelilovic (LSE) Limits of Europeanisation as State-building: Private Sector Development Agenda in Bosnia-Herzegovina Gemma Collantes-Celador (City) 'Europeanising' Bosnia: The Fabrication of Statehood through Police Reform

3.8) Teaching About Terrorism 2: Academic Freedom, Pedagogy and Practice (Conference Room 4a) Working Group: Critical Studies of Terrorism & BISA Leaning and Teaching Convenor: Helen Dexter (Manchester) Chair: Ayla Gol (Aberystwyth) Designing modules for research-based teaching in Islamic Studies James Fitzgerald (Dublin City) & Anthony F. Lemieux (Dublin City) Signifying ‘Terrorism’ in a post-9/11 Academic Environment: Reflections on a Collaborative Class Helen Dexter (Manchester) and Emmanuel-Pierre Guittet (Manchester) Teaching terrorism: ethical and methodological problems, pedagogical suggestions David Miller (Strathclyde), Tom Mills (Strathclyde) and Steven Harkins (Strathclyde) Teaching about Terrorism: How it is done in the UK and what problems it causes.

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3.9) The Missing Link? International Organisations and the Evolution of the International (Conference Room 5) Working Group: Sovereignty and its Discontents Convenor: Philip Cunliffe (Kent) Chair: Justin Rosenberg (Sussex) Discussant: Justin Rosenberg (Sussex) Kees van der Pijl (Sussex) Imperial Sovereignty and Global Governance Lee Jones (Queen Mary) State Transformation and the Rescaling of Security: Understanding the Politics of Non-Traditional Security Philip Cunliffe (Kent) International Organisation as Social Organisation

3.10) Putting the Politics back into Global Public Health (Conference Room 6) Convenor: Adam Kamradt-Scott (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) Chair: Sophie Harman (City) Discussant: Sophie Harman (City) Adele Langlois (Lincoln) The Global Polio Eradication Initiative: a global success but a local failure? Stefan Elbe (Sussex) Let Them Eat Tamiflu: The Global Rise (and Fall) of a Medical Countermeasure Simon Rushton (Aberystwyth) The power of human rights in global health governance: the case of HIV-related travel restrictions Adam Kamradt-Scott (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) Challenging the Powers That Be: Indonesia, WHO & Virus-sharing

3.11) Defeat, Desistance, Degeneration and Failed Resuscitation: Case Studies in Critical Terrorism Studies (Cockcroft Theatre) Working Group: Critical Studies on Terrorism Convenor: George Kassimeris (Wolverhampton) Chair: George Kassimeris (Wolverhampton) Discussant: Ryan Williams (Cambridge) George Kassimeris (Wolverhampton) Why Terrorists Give Up? Analyzing Individual Exit from Greece's Revolutionary Organizations Charlotte Heath-Kelly (Aberystwyth) Do you remember revolution? 'Radicalisation' and memory. Lee Jarvis (Swansea) Al-Qaeda: No Bark. No Bite. No Problem? Peter Lehr (St Andrews) Nexus Issues: Alliances between International Terrorism and Transnational Organized Crime

3.12) Labour Rights and Wrongs in International Politics (Syndicate C/D) Convenor: BISA Chair: Stuart Shields (Manchester) Mark Duncan (Sheffield) The Governance of Labour Standards in the Apparel Sector - the interpretation of supply chain power Helen Coskeran (Cambridge) Labelling coffee: the role of states, multinationals and social movements in ethical consumerism Catherine Eschle (Strathclyde) Globalisation and Resistance: Revisiting the Significance of the Global Justice Movement for Critical Theorising in IR Anja C Gebel (Aberystwyth) 'As corrupt as the system allows’ – integrity, ethics and prevention in Transparency International’s anticorruption discourse

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3.13) US Foreign Policy Working Group panel on Religion and US Foreign Policy (Weston Theatre) Working Group: US Foreign Policy Convenor: Adam Quinn (Birmingham) & Lee Marsden( UEA) Chair: Gregorio Bettiza (LSE) Religious Resurgence and the Desecularization of American Foreign Policy Sandy Livingstone (Aberdeen) Altering How Theo-Political Conservatives Formulate Foreign Policy Perspectives, One Tea Party at a Time Lee Marsden (UEA) Promoting the American Gospel: Faith based initiatives and USAID

3.14) BISA 2011 Journal Workshop 1 – African Affairs (closed) (Syndicate A) Convenors: Sara Dorman (Edinburgh) & William Brown (Open) Chair: Sara Dorman (Edinburgh) Clare Paine (Aberystwyth) Traditional institutions and international development: an analysis of Ker Kwaro Acholi in northern Uganda Sofie Hellberg (Gothenburg/Manchester) The biopolitics of water management in eThekwini municipality, South Africa Teresa de Almeida Cravo (Cambridge) The Construction of ‘Success’ in Mozambique Isaline Bergamaschi (Sorbonne) The Privatisation of the African State: why and how? The case of the cotton sector reform in Mali

3.15) BISA 2011 Journal Workshop 2 – Review of African Political Economy (closed) (Syndicate B) Convenors: Sara Dorman (Edinburgh) & William Brown (Open) Chair: Giles Mohan (OU) Sojin Lim (Manchester) The Paris Declaration and Aid Effectiveness: a Comparative Study of Donor Behaviour between Sweden and China in Tanzania Huichi Yeh (Sheffield) China’s Foreign Aid: ‘Beijing Consensus’ and its Implications on the Changing Landscape of ODA in Africa Collin Zhuawu (Birmingham) Reconceptualising the African state in the structure agency approach: A case of Mauritius trade policy formulation

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Session 4: 14.30 – 16.00

4.1) Reconceptualising Gender, Race and Sexuality after 9/11: Panel 2 (Syndicate C/D) Working Group: Gendering IR Convenor: Nicola Pratt Chair: Ruth Blakeley (Kent) Paul Kirby (LSE) The Monstrous Masculine: War Rape, Race/Gender, and the Figure of the Rapacious African Warrior Nicola Pratt (Warwick) Intersectionality and positionality in the construction of Middle East women's agency in the post-9/11 moment

4.2) Ethical, Methodological and Autobiographical Tensions in Counter- Insurgency Warfare (Syndicate E/F) Working Group: Insurgencies and Small Convenor: Andrew Mumford (Sheffield) Chair: Andrew Mumford (Sheffield) Huw Bennett (KCL) Baha Mousa and the British Army in Iraq Matthew Ford (Hull) & Glenn Flint (Keele) Finding the Target, Fixing the Method: Methodological Tensions in Counter-Insurgent Identification Andrew Mumford (Sheffield) Prime Ministerial Autobiographies and the Politics of Counter-Insurgency Martin Bayly (KCL) COINing a New Doctrine: Challenging a Military Culture

4.3) Africa and Theory I: Exposing conceptual limits (Boardroom Level 5) Working Group: Africa and IS Convenor: Meera Sabaratnam (LSE) Chair: Sophie Harman (City) Discussant: Sophie Harman (City) Branwen Gruffydd Jones (Goldsmiths) Patrimonialism, personal rule and other wretched concepts: a postcolonial critique David Williams (City) Making Agency: African States and IR Theory Meera Sabaratnam (LSE) The manacles of (uneven and combined) development: can we be released? Teresa de Almeida Cravo (Cambridge) Perceptions of 'success' and 'failure' in the development community: the cases of Mozambique and Guinea-Bissau

4.4) Building Trust, Avoiding Deception (Boardroom Level 6) Convenor: Harmonie Toros (Queensland) Chair: K.M. Fierke (St Andrews) Discussant: K.M. Fierke (St Andrews) Harmonie Toros (Queensland) Talking, deceiving and the illusion of knowledge Nicholas J. Wheeler (Aberystwyth) Sending Vajpayee and Sharif’s bus of trust over a Himalayan sized-cliff: the lessons of the 1999 Lahore peace process for building trust between India and Pakistan Naomi Head (Glasgow) The 'other side of the coin': theorising the role of deception in trust, empathy, and dialogue

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4.5) Realism and Reason (Conference Room 2) Convenor: BISA Chair: Huw Macartney (Manchester) Halit Mustafa Tagma (Sananci) A Double Reading of the Discipline: International Relations in the University Jonathan Boyd (St Andrews) Imperial Leviathan?: The constitution and artificial personality of Hobbes’s commonwealth Magdalena Kirchner (Heidelberg) Why States Rebel’: The domestic limits of international peer pressure

4.6) Forgotten Histories (Conference Room 1) Review of International Studies Convenor: George Lawson (LSE) Chair: George Lawson (LSE) Kimberly Hutchings (LSE) Rendering the unforgettable in IR Barry Buzan (LSE) Forgotten histories in the English School Tarak Barkawi (Cambridge) 'The sovereign veil: the hidden histories of imperial violence George Lawson (LSE) Stories of memory and forgetting

4.7) Re-Thinking Debates on Humanitarian Intervention (Conference Room 3) Convenor:BISA Chair: Philip Cunliffe (Kent) Dean White (Northumbria) The Rwandan Crisis of 1994: A Comparison of the UK and US Responses Mateja Peter (Cambridge) Caught between local and global: how sites of intervention impact relations between situated peace builders and their global centres Karina Z Pawlowska (Warwick) Challenging the moral orthodoxy of humanitarian intervention

4.8) Supporting and Engaging Students of International Relations (Conference Room 3a) Working Group: BISA Learning and Teaching Convenor: Steven Curtis Chair: Richard Jackson (Aberystwyth) Govinda Clayton (Kent) & Ismene Gizelis (Essex) Innovations in Simulating Negotiations Elena Korosteleva (Aberystwyth) & Giles Polglase (Aberystwyth) Supporting the Student Experience in International Politics J Simon Rofe (Leicester) The IR Model: The Next Iteration Carolyn Shaw (Wichita State) Active Learning Across Cultures

4.9) Perspectives on the energy-climate nexus (Weston Theatre) Working Group: Environment Convenor: Adam Simpson (University of South Australia) Chair: Hugh Dyer (Leeds) Adam Simpson (University of South Australia) Transnational energy projects in Burma (Myanmar): Climate change impacts and reflections on justice and security Hayley Stevenson (ANU) The Politics of Climate and Energy in Post-Neoliberal Latin America 24

Caroline Kuzemko (Warwick) Energy Governance in Transition: Sustainable Energy and the Emergence of New Energy Governance Norms Maria Julia Trombetta (Delft) The quest for energy security and global energy governance

4.10) The Responsibility to Rebuild (Conference Room 4a) Convenor: Roberta Guerrina (Surrey) Chair: Sir Mike Aaronson (Surrey) Discussant: Maxine David (Surrey) Stuart Gordon (Sandhurst) Reconstruction, 'Hearts and Minds', Stabilisation and the Fragile States Discourse Roberta Guerrina (Surrey) Intended & Unintended Gendered Consequences of Interventions: Mainstreaming and the impact of 1325 Marie Breen-Smyth (Surrey) ‘Towards a more critical approach to international intervention’

4.11) The International Political Economy of Henri Lefebvre (Conference Room 5) Working Group: IPEG Convenor: Japhy Wilson (Manchester) Chair: Stuart Shields(Manchester) Matt Davies (Newcastle) Did Daily Life Replace the Colonies? Henri Lefebvre, International Political Economy, and Everyday Life Greig Charnock (Manchester) 'A New Space for Knowledge and People'? Henri Lefebvre, Representations of Space, and the Production of `22@Barcelona' Japhy Wilson (Manchester) Henri Lefebvre and the Re-Colonization of Everyday Life: Schemes to Achieve the Millennium Development Goals

4.12) Identity in Russia and Eurasia (Conference Room 6) Working Group: Russia and Eurasia Convenor: Natasha Kuhrt (KCL) Chair: Natasha Kuhrt (KCL) Aglaya Snetkov/Stephen Aris (Centre for Security Studies Zurich) The narrative of rising powers: Russia and the BRIC narrative Valentina Feklyuina (Newcastle) & Stephen White (Glasgow) Europe? Which Europe? National Identity Discourses in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus Aida Abzhaparova (UWE) (Re)Imagining Eurasianism: (Geo)political and (geo)cultural practices of Kazakhstan in the preservation of its security

4.13) Roundtable on Anarchism in IR: Latent Ideal or Subversive Analytic? (Cockcroft Theatre) Convenor: Adam Goodwin (Ottawa) Chair: Adam Goodwin (Ottawa) Alex Prichard (LSE) Luke Ashworth (Limerick) Stephen Hobden (University of East London) Chris Rossdale (Warwick)

4.14) The Self and the Other: Displacement, Identity and Violence (Conference Room 4) Convenor: BISA Chair: Govinda Clayton (Kent) 25

Suda Perera (Kent) Displacement, Identity and Conflict in the African Great Lakes Tendayi Bloom (Queen Mary) and Katie Tonkiss (Birmingham) European Union and Commonwealth Free Movement: An Historical-Comparative Perspective on Fear of the ‘Other’ Christina Steenkamp (Oxford Brookes) Coping with Violence: The responses of Zimbabwean migrants in South Africa to xenophobia Alex Balch (Liverpool) Free movement of what? The European debate over the expulsion of Roma in France Sarah Jenkins (Aberystwyth) Towards a cultural approach to political violence: The 2007 post-election violence in Kenya

4.15) BISA 2011 Journal Workshop 3 – Conflict, Security and Development (closed) (Syndicate B) Convenors: Sara Dorman (Edinburgh) & William Brown (Open) Chair: Cathy Scott (KCL) Christine Cheng (Oxford) China vs. The West: Competing Norms of Post-Conflict Statebuilding in Africa Jonathan Fisher (Oxford University) Managing donor perceptions and securing agency: the UPDF in Somalia since 2007

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Session 5: 16.30 – 18.00

5.1) Barack Obama's foreign policy strategy - what's working and what isn't (Cockcroft Theatre) Working Group: US Foreign Policy Convenor: Lee Marsden (UEA) Chair: Lee Marsden (UEA) Lee Marsden (UEA) John Drumbell (Durham) Inderjeet Parmer (Manchester) Stuart Croft (Warwick) Steven Hurst (Manchester Met) Mark Ledwidge (Manchester)

5.2) Ideologies and Armed Intervention (Syndicate C/D) Convenor: Annika Bergman Rosamond (Danish Institute for International Studies) Chair: Annika Bergman Rosamond (Danish Institute for International Studies) Mark Phythian (Leicester) Military Intervention and Social Democracy: New Labour's Politics of (Humanitarian) Military Interventionism and the Contemporary Social Democratic Dilemma Ben Rosamond (Copenhagen) European liberalisms and the rationalities of intervention Annika Bergman Rosamond (Danish Institute for International Studies) Swedish social democracy and forcible intervention Christine Agius (Salford) Swedish social democracy and forcible intervention

5.3) Africa and Theory II: Re-imagining international relations (Boardroom Level 5) Working Group: Africa & IS Convenor: Meera Sabaratnam (LSE) Chair: Branwen Gruffydd Jones Disscusant: Branwen Gruffydd Jones Carl Death (Aberystwyth) Foucault and Africa: Governmentality, IR theory, and the limits of advanced liberalism Julia Gallagher (Royal Holloway) The researcher as protagonist: how to make the most out of difference Jeremy Larkins (Leeds) Coloniality and the Renaissance Expansion of International Society

5.4) Peacemaking, Peacemakers and Diplomacy, 1914-1939 (Boardroom Level 6) Convenor: John Fisher (UWE) Chair: Gaynor Johnson (Salford) Gaynor Johnson (Salford) 'A Work in Progress': the operation and implementation of the Covenant of the League of Nations and the origins of the Geneva Protocol 1924 Lorna Lloyd (Keele) The lucky ones: the dominions, India and the League of Nations in the 1920s John Fisher (UWE) Curzon’s war and Curzon’s Peace

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5.5) Diverse Agents of Development (Syndicate E/F) Convenor: BISA Chair: Oz Hassan (Warwick) Roisin Read (Manchester) Grammatically reading Oxfam in Sudan: mapping the space available for relief and reconstruction Jonathan Agensky (Cambridge) The biopolitics of faith–based humanitarianism and the shifting rationalities of faith-based actors Huw Lloyd Williams (Aberystwyth) ‘Wacky Races: On David Miller’s (Mis)conception of Development’ Claire Paine (Aberystwyth) Traditional institutions and international development: an analysis of Ker Kwaro Acholi in northern Uganda.

5.6) Capitalism, Uneven Development and Modern State Formation: Approaching Passive Revolutions (Conference Room 1) Working Group: Historical Sociology & International Relations Convenor: Adam David Morton (Nottingham) Chair: Adam David Morton (Nottingham) Discussant: Alex Anievas (Cambridge) Stuart Shields (Manchester) Towards Passive Revolution: The Development of Underdevelopment in Modern Poland

5.7) Ethical Dimensions of Non-State Forces in War (Conference Room 2) Working Group: Global Ethics Convenor: Christopher J Finlay (Birmingham) Chair: Christopher J Finlay (Birmingham) James Pattison (Manchester) Legitimate Authority and the Privatisation of Military Force Andrew Todd (Cardiff) British Military Chaplains contributing to the practical ethics of war Cian O'Driscoll (Glasgow) A Fighting Chance? Greeks, Guerrillas, and Michael Gross

5.8) Teaching circle on Feedback on Assessment (Conference Room 3) Working Group: BISA Learning and Teaching Convenor: Steven Curtis Facilitator: Samantha McGinty

5.9) Foreign Policy, Internationalism and Political Possibility (Conference Room 3a) Convenor: Matt McDonald (Queensland) Chair: Ed Lock (UWE) Jack Holland (Surrey) Foreign Policy and Political Possibility Matt McDonald (Queensland) Foreign Policy, Legitimacy and Identity Katie Linnane (Queensland) Ocean Diplomacy, National Identity and Good International Citizenship: An Examination of Australia's Commitment to the International Ban on Whaling Chris Browning (Warwick) National Self Esteem and Internationalism: Branding a Nation of Little Ahtisaaris in Finland

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5.10) New dimensions, new targets: the politics of the contemporary battlespace",The revolution in military affairs (Conference Room 4) Working Group: PPWG Convenor: Alison Williams (Newcastle) Chair: Mike Hart (Oxford) Air Power in the New Wars Martin Coward (Newcastle) Shock and awe and the refiguring of contemporary battlespace Allison Williams (Newcastle) Beyond urbicide: vertical geopolitics as air defence

5.11) Political Realism, the Concept of the Political: The Political Theory of Hans Morgenthau (Conference Room 4a) Convenor: Hartmut Behr (Newcastle) Chair: Michael C. Williams (Ottawa) Vibeke Tjalve (Geneva) Realism, Pragmatism and the Public Sphere Oliver Jutersonke (Copenhagen) Morgenthau and the World State Revisited: the influence of Kelsen and Baumgarten Felix Roesch (Newcastle) Morgenthau - Power - Politics Hartmut Behr (Newcastle) Knowledge - Power - Interest: Political Realism as Critical Epistemology

5.12) Security in Russia and Eurasia (Conference Room 5) Working Group: Russia and Eurasia Convenor: Natasha Kuhrt (KCL) Chair: Valentina Feklyunina (Newcastle) Natasha Kuhrt (KCL) Human security in the Russian Far East Jennifer Mathers (Aberystwyth) Reform of the Russian ARmed Forces: Implications for Foreign and Security Policy Elena Korosteleva-Polglase (Aberystwyth) Between a rock and a hard place: security dilemmas for the contested neighbourhood Derek Averre (Birmingham) Russia and the European security community

5.13) Climate change governance (Conference Room 6) Working Group: Environment Convenor: Hannes R. Stephan Chair: John Vogler (Keele) Hugh Dyer (Leeds) Climate Anarchy: New Sociologies of International Politics? Owen Greene (Bradford) The emerging characteristics of the climate-change regime complex: how much does fragmentation matter? Nicholas Chan (Oxford) Hierarchy in climate governance Chukwumerije Okereke (Oxford) Governing low-carbon development in Africa (Eskom, SA and Shell, Nigeria)

5.14 BISA 2011 Journal Workshop 4 – Review of International Studies (closed) (Syndicate A) Convenors: Sara Dorman (Edinburgh) & William Brown (Open) Chair: Kimberley Hutchings (LSE) Eunjeong Cho (Warwick) Norm-Entrepreneurship at the Margins: Beyond Big-Small Dichotomies in IR Louise Walker (Warwick) The Global Fund: Institutional Innovation or Same Old, Same 29

Old. Astrid Nordin (Manchester) Space for difference: China exhibits the World at Expo 2010 Shanghai China Julia Welland (Manchester) Haunted soldiers: doing, undoing and the need for a bio- male body

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Friday 29th Session 6: 09.30 – 11.00

6.1) Capitalism, Uneven Development and Modern State Formation: Approaching Passive Revolutions (Boardroom Level 5) Working Group: Historical Sociology and International Relations Convenor: Adam David Morton (Nottingham) Chair: Adam David Morton (Nottingham) Peter Ives (Winnipeg) and Nicola Short (Winnipeg) Gramsci's Internationalism: Against Cosmopolitanism and Economism Hannes Lacher (York) and Sabine Dreher (York) Capitalist Late-industrialisation and Democratisation in Turkey: The Promises and Pitfalls of 'Passive Revolution' Peter Thomas (Brunel) Modernity as 'passive revolution': Gramsci and the Fundamental Concepts of Historical Materialism

6.2) Coalition foreign policy: What's new? (Boardroom Level 6) Working Group: British Foreign Policy Convenor: Jamie Gaskarth (Plymouth) Chair: Jamie Gaskarth (Plymouth) Trevor Taylor (Cranfield) 'The SDSR and its implementation: Linking the political with the managerial Martin Williamson (Kent) British foreign policy in Cyberspace: At the Frontier of Diplomacy Pauline Schnapper (Sorbonne) The Coalition and its European policy Nichola Harmer (Plymouth) Building a new relationship? The Coalition Government and the United Kingdom Overseas Territories.

6.3) Neoliberlaism in the Foreign Policy of the Global North (Conference Room 2) Convenor: BISA Chair: Richard Jackson (Aberystwyth) Jörg Wiegratz (Sheffield) The morality of economic malpractice and crime in neoliberal capitalism Emmanuel Yujuico (LSE) Selling the drama: "Strong Dollar" Policy as ritual incantation Alex Sutton (Warwick) An imperial relationship: Britain, Malaya and the Sterling Area, 1945 – 1955

6.4) Russian Foreign Policy in the Post-Cold War World (Conference Room 1) Working Group: Russian and Eurasian Security Convenor: Valentina Feklyunina (Newcastle) Chair: Jennifer Mathers (Aberystwyth) Gonzalo Pozo (UCL) Russian Foreign Policy and the Changing Geopolitics of the Arctic James Brown (Aberdeen) The Energy Impact Theory of Foreign Policy: The Soviet Union and Russian Federation, 1970 to 2010 Tracey German (KCL) Russia and the Competition for Influence in the South Caucasus

6.5) The Politics Of Climate Change (Conference Room 3) Convenor: BISA Chair: Christine Agius (Salford) Amanda Machin (Warwick) Political Responsibility and Climate Change: Markets, Morality or More? 31

David Layfield (Maryland) Turning Carbon into Gold: The Financialisation of International Climate Policy James Baker (UBC) international Order in the Oceans

6.6) Re-imagining the world (I): boundaries, timespace and political community (Conference Room 3a) Convenor: Elena Barabantseva (Manchester) Chair: Kelvin Cheung (Manchester) Astrid Nordin (Manchester) China performs the world: Ordering timespace at Expo 2010 David Kerr (Durham) International Historical Sociology, Asian IR, and the Re-invention of China David Tobin (Manchester) Competing Nationalisms Along the Silk Road: Ethnic Unity and Ethnic Violence on China's North-West Frontier

6.7) The EU as an International Actor (Conference Room 4) Convenor: BISA Chair: Maxine David (Surrey) Klaus Brummer (Erlangen-Nuremberg) Uniting Europe. The Council of Europe’s Unfinished Mission Veronica Lenzi (IMT, Lucca) Energy and Soft Power: a Chance for the Role of the European Union in the International Order? Milja Kurki (Aberystwyth) and Dr Jeff Bridoux (Aberystwyth) Conceptualising Politico-economic Models of EU and US Democracy Promotion: A Comparative Approach Eva Strickmann (KCL) Applying Realist Constructivism: Understanding the behaviour of states in EU military operations

6.8) Conceptualising Resistance in International Politics: Challenging Ontology in Theory and Practice (Conference Room 4a) Convenor: Aggie Hirst (Manchester) Chair: Kimberley Hutchings (LSE) Chris Rossdale (Warwick) Anarchism, Critical Security Studies, and Anti-Arms Trade Resistance: Securing Insecurity? Michael Dillon (Lancaster & Şehir) Specters of Biopolitics: Finitude, Eschaton, Katechon Aggie Hirst (Manchester) Deconstruction and/as Resistance: Unsettling the Reign of Ontology in International Politics Tom Houseman (Manchester) Screaming at a Locked Gate: A Dialectic of Resistance and Totality

6.9) Neoliberal Resurgence and the Limits of the Biopolitical Imaginary: Resilience, Security and Subjectivity (Conference Room 5) Working Group: PGWG Convenor: Mustapha K. Pasha (Aberdeen) Chair: Giorgio Shani (International Christian University) Martin Coward (Newcastle)

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6.10) Borders, Belonging and Slavery (Conference Room 6) Convenor: BISA Chair: Inderjeet Parmar (Manchester) Katy Long (Oxford) Citizenship and residency: rights, mobility and refugees Rebecca Ehata (Manchester) The impact of autochthony on practices of belonging in the UK

6.11) Studies of the Politics of Oil and Historical Sociology (Syndicate C/D) Convenor: Wojciech Ostrowski (Dundee) Chair: Roland Dannreuther (Westminster) Roland Dannreuther (Westminster) Cycles and Curses: Homogenizing the Politics of Oil Wojciech Ostrowski (Dundee) Obsolescing bargaining and the oil industries in Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan Adham Saouli (Edinburgh) Oil and State Formation and Deformation in the Middle East

6.12) The Emerging Post-Washington Consensus: What Impact for International Aid and Domestic Policies in Africa? (Cockcroft Theatre) Working Group: Africa & IS Convenor: Elsje Fourie (Trento) Chair: William Brown (Open) Elsje Fourie (Trento) Modernisation Returns to Africa: Ethiopia's Emulation of the East Asian Model Lord Mawuko-Yevugah (Athabasca) Democratizing Development? The Politics of Good Governance and Development Policy Reform in Ghana Rachel Tate (Leicester) Can Development Corridors Now Produce Sustainable Domestic Outcomes in Mozambique? Isaline Bergamaschi (Warwick) Is a Post-Washington Consensus Emerging in Africa? The Case of the Cotton Sector in Mali

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Session 7: 11.30 – 13.00

7.1) British foreign policy: lessons from the past for the Coalition (Boardroom Level 5) Working Group: British Foreign Policy Convenor: Jamie Gaskarth (Plymouth) Chair: David Allen (Loughborough) Jamie Gaskarth (Plymouth) Britain as a normative actor: a journey into the ethical dimension Helen Parr (Keele) Between Europe and America: The politics of Anglo-French nuclear co-operation under Heath Kai Oppermann (Sussex) and Alexander Spencer (Munich) Thinking Alike? Salience and Metaphor Analysis as Cognitive Approaches to Foreign Policy Analysis

7.2) Beyond the Resource Curse: Growth, Development and the Global Production Hierarchy (Boardroom Level 6) Working Group: IPEG Convenor: Marc Froese (CaUC) Chair: Ben Richardson (Warwick) Adam Sneyd (Guelph) Timber, Country Ownership and Poverty Reduction: The Case of Cameroon Marc Froese (CaUC) Canadian Trade Diversification: Is there a Case to be made for pursuing bilateral FTAs?

7.3) Temporality in World Politics (Conference Room 1) Convenor: Heikki Patomaki (Helsinki) Chair: Ariel Colonomos (CNRS CERI Sciences Po) Ariel Colonomos (CNRS CERI Sciences Po) Felix Berenskoetter (SOAS) Reclaiming the Vision Thing: Constructivists as Students of the Future Heikki Patomaki (Helsinki) Global Futures: On the Temporality of the Human Condition Andrew R. Hom (Aberystwyth) David’s stone: time, cosmology and the (early) Judeo- Christian approach to time in IR

7.4) Exceptional, Extraordinary, Extra-judicial? Interrogating practices of 'Empire' in the 'War on Terror and Beyond' (Conference Room 2) Convenor: Ruth Blakeley (Kent) Chair: Andrew Thomson (Kent) Discussant: Nicola Pratt (Warwick) Jason Ralph (Leeds) Do liberal norms still have power? Human rights and US practice in the war on terror. Laleh Khalili (SOAS) The Extraterritorial Invisible: Law and Procedure in the War on Terror Ruth Blakeley (Kent) Theorising the Global System of Rendition and Secret Detention

7.5) Local and global in the Liberal Peace project (Conference Room 3) Convenor: BISA Chair: Adam Quinn (Birmingham) Briony Jones (Manchester) Resistance, Response, and Reconciliation in Brcko District,

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Bosnia-Herzegovina: Questioning the Success of Liberal Peace-Building Michael Urban (Oxford) (Re)Constructing the liberal peace; How narratives, identification and trust make the peace possible Kirsten Howarth (Manchester) El Salvador: A Case of Illiberal Peace?

7.6) Re-imagining the world (II): shifting geopolitics and the new articulation of Asia (Conference Room 3a) Convenor: Elena Barabantseva (Manchester) Chair: Elena Barabantseva (Manchester) Discussant: Elena Barabantseva (Manchester) Ramon Pacheco Pardo (KCL) The 'Chinese School' of International Relations: Chinese or Western Theory-Building? Linsay Cunningham-Cross (Manchester) Re-imagining the World through Chinese Eyes: The search for a `Chinese School' of international relations theory Kelvin Cheung (Manchester) Conception of Threat in Chinese Strategic Culture: Medicine as Analogy

7.7) IPE and the international political economy (Conference Room 4) Convenor: Stuart Shields (Manchester) Chair: Greig Charnock (Manchester) Werner Bonefeld (York) State and Market: Crisis of Neoliberal Political Economy and Strong State Peter Burnham (Warwick) State, capital and crisis: the limits of IPE Alex Nunn (Leeds Met) Countering the cuts myths

7.8) International Organisations & Governance: Governance challenges at the global, regional, sub-regional, and national levels (Conference Room 4a) Convenor: Adam Kamradt-Scott (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) Chair: Adam Kamradt-Scott (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) Discussant: Adam Kamradt-Scott (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine) Pak K. Lee (Kent) & Gerald Chan (Auckland) International Organisations and Governance: The China Challenge Louise Walker (Warwick) The Global Fund: Aging gracefully or mid-life crisis? Kirsten Haack (Northumbria) The role of the UN Secretary-General: discourse leader and knowledge manager?

7.9) States, Limits, Laws and Exceptions (Conference Room 5) Convenor: BISA Chair: Richard Jackson (Aberystwyth) Ronnie Hjorth (Linköping) The Poverty of Exceptionalism in International Theory Adriana Sinclair (UEA) The reassurance of limit: exploring the idea of limitation in International Relations and International Law Julian Gruin (Oxford) Having it both ways: The role of the state in the critical analysis of global politics

7.10) NATO strategies for the 21st Century (Conference Room 6) Convenor: Magnus Petersson (The Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies) Chair: Magnus Petersson (The Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies) Discussant: Jan Angstrom (Uppsala) Magnus Petersson (The Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies) The future of NATO's enlargement and partnership policy 35

Damon Coletta (US Air Force Academy) NATO and extended deterrence Paal Hilde (The Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies) NATO's Changing Role and the NATO Command Structure Kersti Larsdotter (Swedish National Defence College) Does Strategic Guidance Matter? NATO in Bosnia-Herzegovina

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List of Exhibitors

The exhibitors/publishers are located in the Weston Rooms 1, 2 & 3, BISA would like to encourage delegates to visit them, refreshments throughout the conference and lunch on the Thursday will be served in these rooms.

Palgrave Macmillan

Taylor & Francis Routledge

Wiley-Blackwell

Manchester University Press

Oxford University Press

Ashgate Publishing

Cambridge University Press

Edward Elgar Publishing

Zed Books

Bloomsbury Academic

Verso Books

Pearson Education

SAGE Publishing

Lynne Rienner Publishing

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Delegate List

Title Name Surname University/Organisation Sir Michael Aaronson University of Surrey Aida Abzhaparaova University of West of England Mr Jonathan Agensky University of Cambridge Dr Christine Agius University of Salford Hans Agne Ms Linda Ahall University of Birmingham Group Captain John Alexander University of Birmingham Professor David Allen University of Loughborough Katherine Allison University of Manchester LTC Palmgren Anders Swedish National Defence College Dr Jan Angstrom Uppsala University Mr Alexander Anievas University of Cambridge Dr Amnon Aran City University Stephen Aris ETH Zurich Dr Lucian Ashworth University of Limerick Mr Wali Aslam Dr Derek Averre University of Birmingham Mr James Baker University of British Columbia Dr Alex Balch University of Liverpool Professor Thierry Balzacq University of Namur and Louvain Dr Elena Barabantseva University of Manchester Mr Tarak Barkawi University of Cambridge Mr Moritz Baumgaertel University of Cambridge Mr Stephen Bayego African International Investment Mr Martin Bayly Kings College London Nadine Beckmann University of Oxford Professor Hartmut Behr Newcastle University Dr Huw Bennett King's College London Mr Paul Bentall Foreign & Commonwealth Office Mrs Michelle Bentley University of Southampton Dr Felix Berenskoetter SOAS Isaline Bergamaschi Sciences - Po Bergman - Dr Annika Rosamond Danish Institute for International Studies Andrea Betti University of Trento Mr Gregorio Bettiza London School of Economics Dr Matthew Bishop University of the West Indies Mr David Blagden University of Oxford Dr Ruth Blakeley University of Kent Dr Vesna Bojicic London School of Economics Werner Bonefeld Mr Nicolas Bouchet University of London Mr Jonathan Boyd University of St Andrews Professor Marie Breen-Smyth University of Surrey 39

Dr Jeff Bridoux Aberystwyth University Dr Malena Britz Swedish National Defence College Dr William Brown The Open University Alexander Brown University of East Anglia Mr John Brown University of Aberdeen Dr Christopher Browning University of Warwick Dr. Susan Brown-Shafii WTI, UNIBE Dr Klaus Brummer Erlangen-Nuremberg University Professor Peter Burnham University of Birmingham Professor Barry Buzan London School of Economics Professor Philip Cerny Rutgers University Professor Gerald Chan University of Auckland Mr Nicholas Chan University of Oxford Mr Greig Charnock University of Manchester Dr Christine Cheng University of Oxford Dr. Kelvin Cheung University of Manchester Ms Eunjeong Cho University of Warwick Magnus Christiansson Mr Govinda Clayton University of Kent Dr. Damon Coletta US Air Force Academy Dr Gemma Collantes Celador City University London Ariel Colonomos Sciences Po Dr Maura Conway Dublin City University Ms Hilary Cornish Helen Coskeran University of Cambridge Dr Martin Coward Newcastle University Ms Teresa Cravo Cambridge University Professor Stuart Croft University of Warwick Dr Philip Cunliffe University of Kent, Mrs Linsay Cunningham-Cross University of Manchester Mr Steven Curtis London Metropolitan Dr Oliver Daddow Loughborough University Dr Katerina Dalacoura London School of Economics Dr Roland Dannreuther University of Westminster Dr Maxine David University of Surrey Dr Matt Davies University of Newcastle Dr Carl Death Aberystwyth University Sara Depauw Dr Helen Dexter University of Manchester Professor Michael Dillon University of Lancaster Miss Sophia Dingli University of Hull Dr Renske Doorenspleet University of Warwick Sara Rich Dorman Dr Robert Dover Loughborough University Dr Vincent Druliolle Professor John Dumbrell University of Durham Mark Duncan University of Sheffield

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Westfalische Wilhelms-Universitat, Alexia Duten Munster Dr Hugh Dyer University of Leeds Dr Matthew Eagleton- Pierce London School of Economics Mrs Rebecca Ehata University of Manchester Professor Stefan Elbe Dr Par Engstrom University of London Dr Catherine Eschle University of Strathclyde Edwin Ezeokafor University of Dundee Adam Fagan Queen Mary Joerg Faust Dr Valentina Feklyunina Newcastle University Professor Karin Fierke University of St Andrews Dr Christopher Finlay Mr Jonathan Fisher University of Birmingham John Fisher University of West of England Mr James Fitzgerald Dublin City University Mr Glenn Flint Keele University Mr Curran Flynn London School of Economics Professor Michael Foley Aberystwyth University Matthew Ford University of Hull Elsje Fourie University of Trento Dr Joerg Friedrichs University of Oxford Dr Marc Froese Canadian University College Mr Andrew Futter University of Birmingham Dr Julia Gallagher Royal Holloway, University of London Dr. Maria Melody Garcia German Development Institute Mr Jamie Gaskarth University of Plymouth Ms Anja Gebel Aberystwyth University Tracey German Kings College London Dr Ayla Gol Aberystwyth University Adam Goodwin Dr Owen Greene University of Bradford Dr Branwen Gruffydd Jones Goldsmiths, University of London Mr Julian Gruin University of Oxford Dr Roberta Guerrina University of Surrey Dr Stacey Gutkowski University of Sussex Mr David S. Guttormsen University of Warwick Dr Kirsten Haack Northumbria University Ms Camilla Hagelund Kings College London Dr Lene Hansen University of Copenhagen Dr Sophie Harman City University Mrs Nichola Harmer University of Plymouth Mr Mike Hart Defence Academy Mr Osman Hassan University of Birmingham Dr Naomi Head University of Glasgow Dr John Heathershaw University of Exeter Ms Charlotte Heath-Kelly Aberystwyth University 41

Sofie Hellberg University of Gothenburg Paal Sigurd Hilde Dr Mutsumi Hirano Dr Aggie Hirst Liverpool Hope University Dr Ronnie Hjorth Dr Stephen Hobden University of East London Dr Jack Holland University of Surrey Dr Arita Holmberg Swedish National Defence College Mr Andrew Hom Aberystwyth University Dr Steven Hopgood SOAS, University of London Mr Thomas Houseman University of Manchester Kirsten Howarth University of Manchester Dr Adam Humphreys University of Oxford Dr Steven Hurst Manchester Metropolitan University Professor Kimberly Hutchings London School of Economics Peter Ives Graduate Institute of International Studies, Dr Oliver Jutersonke Geneva Professor Richard Jackson Aberystwyth University Dr Beate Jahn University of Sussex Dr Lee Jarvis Swansea University Miss Sarah Jenkins Aberystwyth University Dr Gaynor Johnson University of Salford Dr Richard Wyn Jones Cardiff University Dr Briony Jones University of Manchester Dr Lee Jones Mr Andrew Judge University of Strathclyde London School of Hygiene & Tropical Dr Adam Kamradt-Scott Medicine Jeongshim Kang Yonsei University Dr George Kassimeris University of Wolverhampton Dr David Kerr Durham University Dr Laleh Khalili University of Oriental and African Studies Mr Paul Kirby London School of Economics M.A. Magdalena Kirchner Heidelberg University Dr Nicholas Kitchen London School of Economics Mr Christopher Kitchen University of Sheffield Dr Elena Korosteleva Aberystwyth University Dr Natasha Kuhrt King's College, London Dr Milja Kurki Aberystwyth University Mrs Caroline Kuzemko University of Warwick Mr Hannes Lacher York University Adele Langlois University of Lincoln Dr Jeremy Larkins University of Leeds Mrs Kersti Larsdotter Swedish National Defence College Dr George Lawson London School of Economics University of Maryland - University Dr David Layfield College 42

Mr Mark Ledwidge University of Manchester Dr Pak K Lee University of Kent Miss Veronica Lenzi IMT - Institute for Advanced Studies Dr Sarah Leonard-Kaunert University of Salford Dr David Lewis University of Bradford Mr Jiesheng Li University of Birmingham Ms. Sojin Lim University of Manchester Ms Katie Linnane University of Queensland Mrs Alexandra Livingston University of Aberdeen Dr Lorna Lloyd University of Keele Dr Edward Lock Victoria University Dr Katy Long University of Oxford Ms Carol Longbottom University of Bradford Dr Jonathon Louth University of Chester Dr Bryan Mabee Queen Mary, University of London Simon Mabon University of Leeds Dr Huw Macartney University of Manchester Miss Amanda Machin University of Westminster Dr John Macmillan Brunel University Mr James Malcolm University of Warwick Dr Lee Marsden University of East Anglia Dr Victoria Mason University of Lancaster Ms Jennifer Mathers University of Wales, Aberystwyth Dr Luca Mavelli University of Canterbury Dr. Lord Mawuko-Yevugah Athabasca University, Canada Dr Trevor McCrisken University of Warwick Dr Matt McDonald University of Queensland Dr. Jeffrey Michaels Kings College London DR Alex Miles Liverpool John Moore’s University Mr Tom Mills University of Strathclyde Giles Mohan Open University Dr Sean Molloy University of Edinburgh Dr Cerwyn Moore University of Birmingham Dr Adam Morton University of Nottingham Dr Andrew Mumford University of Sheffield Dr. Valbona Muzaka University of Southampton Ms Astrid Nordin Mr Joao Nunes Aberystwyth University Alex Nunn Dr Cian O'Driscoll University of Glasgow Dr Chukwumerije Okereke University of East Anglia Dr Kai Oppermann University of Cologne Dr Wojciech Ostrowski University of Dundee Mr Miguel Otero Oxford Brookes Dr Ramon Pacheco Pardo King's College London Mr Stefano Pagliari University of Waterloo Ms Clare Paine Aberystwyth University

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Mr Vassilios Paipais London School of Economics Dimitris Papadimitriou University of Manchester Professor Inderjeet Parmar University of Manchester Dr Helen Parr University of Keele Professor Mustapha Pasha University of Aberdeen Professor Heikki Patomaki RMIT University Dr James Pattison University of Manchester Dr Karina Z Pawlowska University of Warwick Sudakshini Perera University of Kent Ms Mateja Peter University of Cambridge Jenny Peterson University of Manchester Dr Magnus Petersson Norwegian Defence University College Petar Petrov University of Maastricht Dr Tsveta Petrova Mr Stephan Petzold Aberystwyth University Professor Mark Phythian University of Leicester Mr Gonzalo Pozo-Martin University of London Dr Nicola Pratt University of Warwick Dr Alex Prichard London School of Economics Shahid Quadir Third World Quarterly Dr Adam Quinn University of Birmingham Professor Jason Ralph University of Leeds Ms Roisin Read University of Manchester Dr Paul Reilly Mr Ben Richardson University of Warwick Mr Sean Richmond University of Oxford Miss Fiona Ritchie University of Hull Mr Nick Ritchie University of Bradford Mr Felix Roesch Newcastle University J Simon Rofe University of Leicester Professor Paul Rogers University of Bradford Professor Ben Rosamond University of Copenhagen Professor Justin Rosenberg University of Sussex Mr Chris Rossdale University of Warwick Dr Simon Rushton Aberystwyth University Ms Meera Sabaratnam London School of Economics Dr Alam Saleh University of Leeds Dr Adham Saouli University of Edinburgh Professor Tom Sauer University of Antwerp Professor Pauline Schnapper Paris 3 Sorbonne Nouvelle Mrs Catherine Scott Kings College London Dr James Scott University of Manchester Alaric Searle University of Salford Asima Shaikh King's College London Dr Giorgio Shani International Christian University, Japan Dr Carolyn Shaw Wichita State University Mr Faiz Sheikh University of Leeds

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Dr Stuart Shields University of Manchester Dr Nicola Short York University Dr Adam Simpson University of South Australia Dr Adriana Sinclair University of East Anglia Ms Lisa Smirl University of Sussex Dr Aglaya Snetkov ETH Dr. Adam Sneyd University of Guelph Ms Adele Stanislaus University of Surrey Dr Christina Steenkamp Oxford Brookes University Hayley Stevenson Australia National University Kristan Stoddart University of Aberystwyth Dr Preslava Stoeva University London Ms Eva Strickmann Kings College London Dr Kamila Stullerova Aberystwyth University Dr Marie Suetsugu Aberystywyth University Professor Hidemi Suganami Aberystwyth University Alex Sutton University of Warwick Dr. Halit Mustafa Tagma Sabanci University Mrs Rachel Tate University of Leicester Professor Trevor Taylor University of Cranfield Peter Thomas Brunel University Mr Patrick Thomas Aberystwyth University Dr Rod Thornton University Of Nottingham Vibeve Schou Tjalve Revd Canon Dr Andrew Todd University of Cardiff Katie Tonkiss Dr Harmonie Toros University of Queensland Mr. Luca Trenta University of Durham Dr Julia Trombetta Delft University of Technology Mr Chin-Kuei Tsui Aberystwyth University Dr Hana Umezawa UNU-CRIS Michael Urban MA Carina van de Wetering University of Bristol Professor Kees Van der Pijl University of Sussex Rosa Vasilaki University of Bristol Mattias Vermeiren Universiteit Gent Professor John Vogler University of Keele Dr Juha Vuori University of Turku Dr Khursheed Wadia University of Warwick Dr Lotta Wagnsson Swedish National Defence College Ms Louise Walker University of Warwick Qu Wang Mr Yu Wang Brunel University Julia Welland University of Manchester Professor Nicholas Wheeler University of Wales, Aberystwyth Mr Dean White University of Northumbria Dr. Jake Widen Swedish National Defence College 45

Mr Jorg Wiegratz University of Sheffield Professor Peter Willetts City University Dr David Williams City University Dr Michael Williams University of Ottawa Dr Alison Williams University of Newcastle Ryan Williams Dr Huw Williams Aberystwyth University Mr Martin Williamson University of Kent Japhy Wilson University of Manchester Dr. Jonas Wolff Peace Research Institute Frankfurt Dr James Worrall University of Leeds Dr. Emmanuel Yujuico London School of Economics Collin Zhuawu University of Birmingham

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Working group business meetings

Working group Time and Place Convenor Critical Studies on 18.00-19.00 Thursday 28th Helen Dexter Terrorism April Conference Room 3

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