Contributors

Date01 December 2003
DOI10.1177/0047117803174008
Published date01 December 2003
Subject MatterAbout the Author
International Relations Copyright © 2003 SAGE Publications
(London, Thousand Oaks, CA and New Delhi), Vol 17(4): 509–510
[0047–1178 (200312) 17:4; 509–510; 038939]
Contributors
Dennis Altman is Professor of Politics at LaTrobe University, Australia, and
author of 10 books, most recently Global Sex (2001). He has held visiting fellow-
ships at the University of Chicago and New York University. He has written
widely on AIDS, sexuality, and social movements, and is currently President of
the AIDS Society of Asia and the Pacific.
[email: d.altman@latrobe.edu.au]
Emad El-Din Aysha is a freelance researcher living in the Middle East and an
employee of the Egyptian Gazette (www.eltahrir.net). Formerly he was an adjunct
Assistant Professor with the American University in Cairo. His publications
include ‘The US Boom, Clintonomics and the New Economy Doctrine’, New
Political Economy 6: 359–74, and ‘Samuel Huntington and the Geopolitics of
American Identity’, International Studies Perspectives 4: 113–32.
[email: eaysha@hotmail.com]
Ken Booth is Editor of International Relations. He is also E.H. Carr Professor and
Head of Department, Department of International Politics, University of Wales,
Aberystwyth. Among his recent publications is Worlds in Collision: Terror and
the Future of Global Order (2002), edited with Tim Dunne.
[email: kob@aber.ac.uk]
Mervyn Frost is Professor at the London Centre of International Relations within
the War Studies Department at King’s College, University of London. His major
publications are: Towards a Normative Theory of International Relations (1986),
Ethics in International Relations (1996), and Constituting Human Rights: Global
Civil Society and the Society of Democratic States (2002).
[email: mlf@frost.u-net.com]
John Glenn is currently a Lecturer in the Department of Politics and International
Relations at Southampton University. His publications include The Soviet Legacy
in Central Asia (1999) and an edited volume with Darryl Howlett and Stuart
Poore entitled Neo-Realism Versus Strategic Culture: A Debate (2003).
[email: jgg2@socsci.soton.ac.uk]
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