Global Ethics

Eligibilizing Certain Populations: Hindutva Politics Of UP Population Bill 2021

Dipanita Malik • Mar 4 2022 • Essays

The 2021 UP Population Bill enables the UP state to consolidate focus on Hindutva politics that deploys aggressive policing of women and their reproductive capacities.

Gramscian Notions: Helpful for Research into Digital and Tech Corporations?

Giuliano Catalano • Feb 26 2022 • Essays

Analysing Big Tech as a transnational capitalist class, Gramscian thought provides an outlook on possible avenues of governance of the digital sphere.

To Reform the World or to Close the System? International Law and World-making

Emil Sondaj Hansen • Feb 20 2022 • Essays

A comparative investigation of two scholarly works on the development of international law in its context of the international system.

No Peace Without Justice: The Denial of Transitional Justice in Post-2001 Afghanistan

Ariane Luessen • Feb 7 2022 • Essays

The denial of transitional justice in post-9/11 Afghanistan ignored Afghan demands for meaningful truth, justice and reconciliation.

Practice Theory: How The Consumer’s Limited Agency Hampers Climate Action

Annabel Davies • Feb 2 2022 • Essays

The limited agency of consumers hampers green choices. A force upon the practice instead of the consumer can strengthen climate action.

The European Quality of Government Index: A Critical Analysis

Luc Aboubadra • Jan 10 2022 • Essays

The original approach taken by the Quality of Governance Index in measuring public corruption has allowed for strong advances in the framing and understanding of such.

The Non-Politics of the Responsibility to Protect Through a Securitisation Lens

Thomas Pritchard • Dec 17 2021 • Essays

For Libya, a revised securitisation framework categorises R2P as a pragmatic securitisation act-type, where non-political language justifies military action.

Humanitarianism and Securitisation: Contradictions in State Responses to Migration

Juliette Howard • Nov 10 2021 • Essays

When co-opted and deployed by state actors, humanitarianism is far from benign or apolitical: it has very real and dangerous effects on the lives and rights of migrants.

Kant, Doyle, and the Democratic Peace Thesis: A Postcolonial Critique

Luca Poletti • Oct 20 2021 • Essays

The Democratic Peace Thesis fails to incorporate a Kantian philosophy, underscoring its imperialistic underpinnings and perpetuation of international conflict.

Human Rights and Security in Public Emergencies

Julian Izzo • Oct 15 2021 • Essays

In states of exception, security objectives often negate human rights, but a human-rights compliant security approach can lead to better outcomes for public safety.

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