Contributors

DOI10.1177/0047117809359041
Date01 March 2010
Published date01 March 2010
Subject MatterArticles
104 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 23(4)
Contributors
Hans E. Andersson is a Senior Lecturer in Political Science at Södertörn University,
Sweden. His research interests include identities in international politics and asylum
policies (with an emphasis on cooperation within the EU). His publications include
‘Asylum Seekers and Undocumented Migrants’ Increased Social Rights in Sweden’
in International Migration (forthcoming), and the monograph Supranational Refuge
Policy: States’ Cooperation on Sovereign-Sensitive Issues (2008, Umeå: Boréa
Bokförlag, in Swedish).
Gideon Baker is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations in the Depart-
ment of Politics and Public Policy, Griff‌i th University, Australia. His publications
in international political theory include Civil Society and Democratic Theory
(Routledge, 2002); Global Civil Society: Contested Futures (co-edited with David
Chandler, Routledge, 2005); and The Future of Political Community (co-edited with
Jens Bartelson, Routledge, 2009). His publications on hospitality include an article
in Alternatives, 34(2), 2009, and Cosmopolitanism as Hospitality: Rethinking Ethics
in International Relations (Routledge, forthcoming 2010).
Emma Hutchison is Associate Lecturer and e-learning Coordinator in the School
of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland.
During 2010 she will be a Postdoctoral Fellow at the European University Institute
in Florence. Her research focuses on the politics of trauma and emotion, as well as
on the role of images in shaping responses to humanitarian crises. Her research on
this topic has appeared in edited books, as well as scholarly journals such as the
Review of International Studies and the European Journal of Social Theory, and she
is presently completing a book-length study.
Øystein Tunjsø is a Senior Research Fellow at the Norwegian Institute for Defence
Studies in Oslo and a visiting Fulbright Scholar at the John King Fairbank Center at
Harvard University. He recently published a monograph entitled US Taiwan Policy:
Constructing the Triangle, in Routledge’s ‘Asian Security Studies’ series (2008) and
is co-editor of China–EU Relations: Managing a New World Order, forthcoming
with Routledge.
Ayşe Zarakol is Assistant Professor of Politics at Washington and Lee University,
Lexington, VA. Her research focuses on the evolution of the international system, the
integration of regions outside the West into the international order, and international
terrorism. Her most recent articles deal with North–South relations and Turkish
politics. She has also completed a book manuscript on how Turkey, Japan and Russia,
once competitors of the West, have adapted to Western norms following their defeat
at the hands of the West. Entitled After Defeat: How the East Learned to Live with
the West, this book will be published by Cambridge University Press in late 2010.
© The Author(s), 2010. Reprints and permissions:
http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav Vol 24(1): 104
[DOI: 10.1177/0047117809359041]

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