review of studies review of international · barry buzan, london school of economics and political...

3
British International Studies Association Review of International Studies VOLUME 40 | ISSUE 3 | JULY 2014 Editors Kimberly Hutchings Mathias Albert George Lawson Jennifer Sterling-Folker ISSN 0260-2105 https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210514000035 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 54.39.106.173, on 24 Feb 2020 at 10:07:08, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms.

Upload: others

Post on 15-Feb-2020

4 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Review of Studies Review of International · Barry Buzan, London School of Economics and Political Science Charli Carpenter, University of Massachusetts-Amherst Steve Chan, University

British International Studies Association

Review ofInternationalStudies

VOLUME 40 | ISSUE 3 | JULY 2014

Editors

Kimberly Hutchings

Mathias Albert

George Lawson

Jennifer Sterling-Folker ISSN 0260-2105

ARTICLES

Cosmopolitanism and the world stateWILLIAM E. SCHEUERMAN

The ‘re-turn’ to empire in IR: colonial knowledge communities and theconstruction of the idea of the Afghan polity, 1809–38MARTIN J. BAYLY

A moral economy approach to Africa-EU ties: the case of the European

Investment BankMARK LANGAN

Principled instrumentalism: a theory of transnational NGO behaviour

GEORGE E. MITCHELL and HANS PETER SCHMITZ

Unequal power and the institutional design of global governance: the case ofarms control

CAROLINE FEHL

Emotional (security) communities: the significance of emotion norms in inter-alliedconflict management

SIMON KOSCHUT

Secession and the invisible hand of the international systemRYAN GRIFFITHS

Domestic legitimacy politics and varieties of regionalism in East Asia

IL HYUN CHO and SEO-HYUN PARK

The imperial legacy of international peacebuilding: the case of Francophone AfricaBRUNO CHARBONNEAU

Review ofInternationalStudies

VOLUME 40 | ISSUE 3 | 2014

Re

vie

wo

fIn

tern

atio

na

lS

tud

ies

VO

LU

ME

40

|IS

SU

E3

|JU

LY2

01

4

http

s://

doi.o

rg/1

0.10

17/S

0260

2105

1400

0035

Dow

nloa

ded

from

htt

ps://

ww

w.c

ambr

idge

.org

/cor

e. IP

add

ress

: 54.

39.1

06.1

73, o

n 24

Feb

202

0 at

10:

07:0

8, s

ubje

ct to

the

Cam

brid

ge C

ore

term

s of

use

, ava

ilabl

e at

htt

ps://

ww

w.c

ambr

idge

.org

/cor

e/te

rms.

Page 2: Review of Studies Review of International · Barry Buzan, London School of Economics and Political Science Charli Carpenter, University of Massachusetts-Amherst Steve Chan, University

Notes for contributorsManuscriptsThe Editors welcome submission of articles for consideration. The length required for articles isnormally 9–12,000 words, articles over 12,000 words will only be considered if there is a clearrationale for the extra length. These are also sent to independent referees. The Review is a refereedjournal, and contributors should allow time for the process of refereeing to take place. It is theauthor’s responsibility to provide the editors with an accurate total word count for all articles onsubmission.

Prospective authors should submit their manuscripts online via the website:<http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ris>. Detailed instructions for submitting your manuscript onlinecan be found at the submission website by clicking on the Instructions and Forms link in the topright hand of the screen; and then clicking on the Online Submission Instructions for Authors iconon the following page.

An abstract of 100 words plus a short biographical note (appropriate for Notes on Contributors)should accompany the manuscript. To guarantee anonymity, authors should include a title pagewithout their names, and remove any reference to themselves from the manuscript.

The Editors reserve the right not to accept articles not presented in the house style, details ofwhich are given below.

References and notesThese should be amalgamated and signalled serially within each article by superscript numerals.References and notes should be at the foot of each page. References should give full biographicaldetails, including place of publication and publisher, at first mention. Thereafter the author’ssurname and a short title should be used (not op. cit.). A cross-reference to the original citation, e.g.‘(see n.4 above)’, may also be added if the short title reference is not immediately clear. The title ofan article should appear in single inverted commas; the title of a book or journal should beunderlined. Main words should be ‘first-letter’ capitalised in article and book titles.

References and notes should be typed in the form of the following examples:1. Lawrence Freedman, The Evolution of Nuclear Strategy (London: Macmillan, 1981), pp. 51–3.2. Freedman, Evolution of Nuclear Strategy, p. 152.3. Bruce Cumings, ‘Japan and the Asian Periphery’, in Melvyn P. Leffler and David S. Painter

(eds), Origins of the Cold War (London: Routledge, 1994), pp. 226–9.4. New York Times (13 May 1987).5. Cumings, ‘Japan’, p. 216.6. J. P. Cornford, ‘The Illusion of Decision’, British Journal of Political Science, 4:2 (1974),

pp. 231–43.

SubheadingsContributors are encouraged to include up to two levels of subheading in articles to provide‘signposts’ for readers. They should be typed flush left with only the first word and any proper namescapitalised.

GeneralFirst proofs may be read and corrected by contributors provided that they can give the editors acurrent address and can guarantee to return the corrected proofs, by airmail where appropriate,within three days of receiving them.

Contributors of accepted articles will be asked to assign their copyright, on certain conditions, tothe British International Studies Association so that their interest may be safeguarded.

CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESSThe Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 8RU, United Kingdom32 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10013–2473, USA477 Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, VIC 3207, AustraliaRuiz de Alarcon 13, 28014 Madrid, SpainDock House, The Waterfront, Cape Town 8001, South Africa

Printed in the United Kingdom by Henry Ling Ltd., at the Dorset Press, Dorchester, Dorset, DT1 1HD.

Review of International StudiesEditors

Kimberly Hutchings (Lead Editor), London School ofEconomics and Political ScienceMathias Albert, University of Bielefeld

George Lawson, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceJennifer Sterling-Folker, University of Connecticut

Editorial Board

Tarak Barkawi, London School of Economics and PoliticalScienceJanice Bially Mattern, National University of SingaporeNick Bisley, La Trobe UniversityWilliam Brown, Open UniversityBarry Buzan, London School of Economics and PoliticalScienceCharli Carpenter, University of Massachusetts-AmherstSteve Chan, University of ColoradoRobert A. Denemark, University of DelawareThomas Diez, University of TubingenToni Erskine, Aberystwyth UniversityLene Hansen, University of CopenhagenGunther Hellmann, University of FrankfurtPatrick Thaddeus Jackson, American UniversityOliver Kessler, University of Erfurt

Milja Kurki, Aberystwyth UniversityCatherine Lu, McGill UniversityCraig N. Murphy, Wellesley CollegeLara J. Nettelfield, Royal Holloway, University of LondonIver B. Neumann, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceInderjeet Parmar, City UniversityOliver Richmond, University of ManchesterJustin Rosenberg, University of SussexLeonard Seabrooke, Copenhagen Business SchoolLaura Shepherd, University of New South WalesLaura Sjoberg, University of FloridaStephan Stetter, University of MunichHidemi Suganami, Aberystwyth UniversityJeffrey W. Taliaferro, Tufts UniversityAndrew Walter, University of MelbourneMichael C. Williams, University of Ottawa

6 British International Studies Association 2014

Subscriptions

Review of International Studies (ISSN 0260-2105) is published five times per annum, including one SpecialIssue, for the British International Studies Association by Cambridge University Press.

The subscription price (excluding VAT) of Volume 40, 2014, is £409 which includes print and electronicaccess (USA, Canada and Mexico US$714) for institutions, £57 (USA, Canada and Mexico US$86) forindividuals which includes print only, ordering direct from the publishers and certifying that the journal is fortheir personal use. Single parts cost £88 (USA, Canada and Mexico US$150). The electronic-only priceavailable to institutional subscribers is £342 (USA, Canada and Mexico US$547). EU subscribers (outside theUK) who are not registered for VAT should add VAT at their country’s rate. VAT registered subscribers shouldprovide their VAT registration number. Orders, which must be accompanied by payment, may be sent to anybookseller or subscription agent or to the publisher: Cambridge University Press, The Edinburgh Building,Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK. Orders from the USA, Canada and Mexico should be sent toCambridge University Press, Journals Fulfillment Department, 100 Brook Hill Drive, West Nyack, New York10994–2133, USA. Prices include delivery by air. Japanese prices for institutions are available from KinokuniyaCompany Ltd, P.O. Box 55, Chitose, Tokyo 156, Japan.

Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY, and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send addresschanges in USA, Canada and Mexico to Review of International Studies, Cambridge University Press, 100Brook Hill Drive, West Nyack, New York 10994–2133, USA.

Copying

This journal is registered with the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923,USA. Organisations in the USA who are also registered with the CCC may therefore copy material (beyondthe limits permitted by sections 107 and 108 of US copyright law) subject to payment to CCC of the per-copyfee of $15.00. This consent does not extend to multiple copying for promotional or commercial purposes.Code 0260-2105/2014 $15.00. Organisations authorised by the Copyright Licensing Agency may also copymaterial subject to the usual conditions.

ISI Tear Sheet Service, 3501 Market Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA, is authorised to supplysingle copies of separate articles for private use only.

For all other use, permission should be sought from Cambridge or the American Branch of CambridgeUniversity Press.

This journal is included in the Cambridge Journals Online service which can be found atjournals.cambridge.org/. For further information on other Press titles access cambridge.org/.

http

s://

doi.o

rg/1

0.10

17/S

0260

2105

1400

0035

Dow

nloa

ded

from

htt

ps://

ww

w.c

ambr

idge

.org

/cor

e. IP

add

ress

: 54.

39.1

06.1

73, o

n 24

Feb

202

0 at

10:

07:0

8, s

ubje

ct to

the

Cam

brid

ge C

ore

term

s of

use

, ava

ilabl

e at

htt

ps://

ww

w.c

ambr

idge

.org

/cor

e/te

rms.

Page 3: Review of Studies Review of International · Barry Buzan, London School of Economics and Political Science Charli Carpenter, University of Massachusetts-Amherst Steve Chan, University

Review of International StudiesVOLUME 40 . NUMBER 3 . JULY 2014

Lead Editor: Professor Kimberly Hutchings, London School of Economics and

Political Science

Co-editors: Professor Mathias Albert, University of Bielefeld

Dr George Lawson, London School of Economics and Political Science

Professor Jennifer Sterling-Folker, University of Connecticut

CONTENTS

Cosmopolitanism and the world state 419

william e. scheuerman

The ‘re-turn’ to empire in IR: colonial knowledge communities and the

construction of the idea of the Afghan polity, 1809–38 443martin j. bayly

A moral economy approach to Africa-EU ties: the case of the

European Investment Bank 465mark langan

Principled instrumentalism: a theory of transnational NGO behaviour 487

george e. mitchell and hans peter schmitz

Unequal power and the institutional design of global governance:

the case of arms control 505

caroline fehl

Emotional (security) communities: the significance of emotion norms in

inter-allied conflict management 533

simon koschut

Secession and the invisible hand of the international system 559

ryan griffiths

Domestic legitimacy politics and varieties of regionalism in East Asia 583

il hyun cho and seo-hyun park

The imperial legacy of international peacebuilding: the case of

Francophone Africa 607

bruno charbonneau

http

s://

doi.o

rg/1

0.10

17/S

0260

2105

1400

0035

Dow

nloa

ded

from

htt

ps://

ww

w.c

ambr

idge

.org

/cor

e. IP

add

ress

: 54.

39.1

06.1

73, o

n 24

Feb

202

0 at

10:

07:0

8, s

ubje

ct to

the

Cam

brid

ge C

ore

term

s of

use

, ava

ilabl

e at

htt

ps://

ww

w.c

ambr

idge

.org

/cor

e/te

rms.