Journal of International Political Theory
The field of political theory has changed dramatically in recent years, as the international and global dimensions of contemporary life have driven political inquiry beyond its traditional domestic boundaries. The Journal of International Political Theory (JIPT) aspires to enhance the possibilities for the development and exchange of ideas regarding political theory into the realm of international and world affairs, and encourages innovative theoretical engagement with a wide array of issues including human rights, global social justice, world order, armed conflict, peace, neocolonialism, climate change, international history, and globalization.
International in coverage and broad in scope, the Journal of International Political Theory is committed to theoretical and philosophical diversity in the study of international political thought. JIPT welcomes submissions that focus on individual thinkers, particular social and political concepts (such as justice, power, equality, sovereignty, hegemony, freedom, responsibility, dialogue, and democracy), and various schools of thought (such as liberalism, feminism, cosmopolitanism, poststructuralism, realism, postcolonialism, critical theory, and comparative political theory). JIPT asks contributors to draw out the international or global implications of the theories or ideas concerned.
The Journal of International Political Theory invites submissions from diverse approaches across disciplines including political theory, philosophy, international relations, legal studies, the history of ideas, sociology, and cultural studies. Through a rigorous process of initial editorial screening and subsequent double-blind external peer review, JIPT publishes theoretically guided articles and thematic symposia contributing to the burgeoning scholarship on international political theory.
Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jipt.
The Journal of International Political Theory (JIPT) is an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed forum to explore international and global politics from a range of theoretical and philosophical perspectives. The journal welcomes approaches that are historical, analytical, comparative and normative, and it provides a common venue for scholars across the social sciences and humanities seeking to advance a new generation of thinking on the breadth of interests concerning international political theory.
Anthony F Lang, Jr | University of St Andrews, UK |
Patrick Hayden | University of St Andrews, UK |
Natasha Saunders | University of St Andrews, UK |
William Bain | National University of Singapore, Singapore |
Richard Beardsworth | University of Leeds, UK |
Garrett Wallace Brown | University of Leeds, UK |
Jean Cohen | Columbia University, New York, USA |
Toni Erskine | Australian National University, Australia |
Antonio Franceschet | University of Calgary, Canada |
Harry Gould | Florida International University, USA |
Ayten Gündogdu | Barnard College-Columbia University |
Kimberly Hutchings | Queen Mary University of London, UK |
Beate Jahn | University of Sussex, United Kingdom |
Sungmoon Kim | City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong |
Tarik Kochi | University of Sussex, UK |
Catherine Lu | McGill University, Canada |
Thaddeus Metz | University of Pretoria, South Africa |
Jeanne Moorefield | Oxford University, UK |
Peter Niesen | University of Hamburg, Germany |
Vassilios Paipais | University of St Andrews, UK |
Lars Rensmann | University of Passau, Germany |
Fiona Robinson | Carleton University, Canada |
William Scheuerman | University of Indiana, USA |
Kate Schick | Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington |
Robbie Shilliam | Johns Hopkins University, USA |
Gabriella Slomp | University of St Andrews, UK |
Brent J. Steele | University of Utah, USA |
Atsuko Watanabe | Kanazawa University, Japan |
Jennifer Welsh | McGill University, Canada |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.