Interviews

Interview – Timothy Garton Ash

E-International Relations • May 3 2013 • Features

Timothy Garton Ash – British historian, author and commentator – answers your questions about the Euro crisis, EU integration, the UK royal charter on the press, and more.

Interview – Barry Buzan

E-International Relations • Mar 27 2013 • Features

Professor Barry Buzan answers reader questions about the English School and the securitization of global finance, and discusses his view of the next era of world history.

Interview – Cynthia Enloe

E-International Relations • Mar 13 2013 • Features

Cynthia Enloe answers your questions about women in combat, the meaning of the feminist slogan “the personal is political” and feminism’s contributions to IR scholarship.

Interview – Joseph S. Nye, Jr.

E-International Relations • Jan 3 2013 • Features

e-IR kicks off its brand new monthly interviews feature with Harvard University’s Joseph S. Nye, Jr. who answers some of your questions on soft power, China, and the Arab Spring & offers advice for young scholars.

Interview – Bas de Gaay Fortman (Part Two)

E-International Relations • Dec 19 2012 • Features

The second part of e-IR’s exclusive interview with Professor Bas de Gaay Fortman, Chair in Political Economy of Human Rights at Utrecht University Law School, Netherlands.

Interview – Bas de Gaay Fortman (Part One)

E-International Relations • Aug 27 2012 • Features

This is the first part of a series of exclusive interviews with Professor Bas de Gaay Fortman about his book ‘Political Economy of Human Rights: Rights, Realities and Realization,’ conducted by e-IR’s Maysam Behravash.

Interview – Gareth Evans

E-International Relations • Sep 2 2011 • Features

One of the most depressing, and distressing, realities we have to acknowledge has been our inability to prevent or halt the recurring horror of mass atrocity crimes.

Interview – Arshin Adib-Moghaddam

E-International Relations • Apr 27 2011 • Features

Arshin Adib-Moghaddam searches for the theoretical underpinnings of the clash of civilizations. Expanding critical theory to include Islamic philosophy and poetry, this metahistory refuses to treat the Orient and the Occident as separate entities.

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