Contributors

Published date01 March 2006
DOI10.1177/0047117806060942
Date01 March 2006
Subject MatterArticles
International Relations Copyright © 2006 SAGE Publications
(London, Thousand Oaks, CA and New Delhi), Vol 20(1): 125–126
[DOI: 10.1177/0047117806060942]
Contributors
Samuel Azubuike is at the Department of Politics, University of Bristol, where he
obtained his Ph.D. Current research interests include Anglo-American relations,
international negotiation, and foreign policy analysis. His most recent publication
evaluating the Blair government’s support for Washington on Iraq is ‘The “Poodle
Theory” and the Anglo-American Special Relationship’, International Studies,
42(2), 2005.
[e-mail: samuel@azubuike.fslife.co.uk]
Yee-Kuang Heng completed his Ph.D. in International Relations at the London
School of Economics, and is currently lecturing at Trinity College Dublin. He is
interested in the reconfiguration of war as ‘risk management’ in response to the
security implications of globalisation, and has recently published in journals such
as Security Dialogue.
[e-mail: hengy@tcd.ie]
John J. Mearsheimer is the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of
Political Science and the co-director of the Program on International Security
Policy at the University of Chicago, where he has taught since 1982. He has
published three books: Conventional Deterrence (1983), which won the Edgar S.
Furniss, Jr., Book Award; Liddell Hart and the Weight of History (1988); and The
Tragedy of Great Power Politics (2001), which won the Joseph Lepgold Book
Prize. He has also written many articles for academic journals such as International
Security and popular magazines such as The Atlantic Monthly, as well as Op-Eds
for the New York Times.
[e-mail: j-mearsheimer@uchicago.edu]
Linda Melvern is a British journalist who worked for the London Sunday Times,
including their investigative Insight Team, for several years. She has written six
books of non-fiction and is widely published in the British press and academic
journals. An Honorary Professor of the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, in the
Department of International Politics, she is a world expert on the United Nations.
For the past 11 years she has concentrated on the circumstances of the 1994
genocide in Rwanda. She is second Vice-President of the International Association
of Genocide Scholars.
[e-mail: linda@melvern.co.uk]
John Peterson is Professor of International Politics at the University of Edinburgh.
He has led multiple studies into US–European relations for the European
Commission (the latest in 2005 and available at http://europa.eu.int/comm/
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