Publications
Centre for International Politics - Working Paper Series (ISSN Number: 1754-2839)
The CIP Working Paper Series is the official working paper series of the University of Manchester's Centre for International Politics. The working paper series is intended to provide a forum for debate and discussion. All of the papers published in the series have been subjected to a mild refereeing process to maintain quality. As with all working paper series, the papers published here do not necessarily appear in their final form. As such, their appearance as a CIP working paper does not preclude revision for submission to another forum.
CIP Working Papers are only available on-line to visitors to our website. While these papers are free to all, we nevertheless require that when drawn upon for the purposes of research and argumentation they are acknowledged in the appropriate manner.
- Ronnie Lipschutz
War, Discipline, Imperium: Absolutism and Global Class Struggle - Phoebe Moore
Worker Training and Transformism: The Capitalist Revolutions of South Korea - Inderjeet Parmar
Selling Americanism, combating anti-Americanism: The role of the Ford, Carnegie and Rockefeller Foundations - Alejandro Colas
Limits of Imperial Power: the USA in Comparative Perspective - Jonathan Hill
Beyond the ‘other’? A post-colonial critique of the failed state thesis - Jan Hancock
The construction of human rights in contemporary US foreign policy: A reflection of domestic interests and values - Greig Charnock
The limits to second generation neoliberalism: Mexico under Fox - Ian Taylor
Africa and the Emerging New Trade Geography: The India-Brazil-South Africa Dialogue Forum and its Implications for Global Governance - Liam Kennedy & Scott Lucas
Enduring Freedom: Public Diplomacy and US Foreign Policy - George Lawson
The prospects for radical change in world politics - Natalie Bormann, Greig Charnock, Murielle Cozette, Juanita Elias, Sophie Hague, Jan Hancock, Richard Jackson, Jocelyn Mawdsley, Phoebe Moore, Inderjeet Parmar, Rorden Wilkinson and Ralph Young
Normalising Empire, Ignoring Imperialism (2005) - Sophie Hague
Framing the International: Understanding the limits of policy autonomy during crisis - Helen Dexter
New Wars or New Agendas: the Narrative of Novelty as War’s Enabling Condition - Richard Jackson
Explaining Torure in the War on Terrorism (2005) - Rosaleen Duffy
Criminalisation and the Politics of Governance: illicit gem sapphire mining in Madagascar - Ilan Danjoux
Political Cartoons and Conflict: Revealing Shifts in the Israeli Palastinian Conflict - Greig Charnock
Contesting Closure: The Value of a New Materialism - Stuart Shields
Historicizing Transition: The Polish Political Economy in a period of Global Structural Change - Stuart Shields
Transnational Capital, Class Configuration and the Social Implications of Poland's Ongoing Transition to a Market Economy. - Catalina Montoya
Do events matter? Critical review of a proposed research agenda - Richard Jackson
Religion, Politics and Terrorism: A Critical Analysis of Narratives of “Islamic Terrorism” - Stuart Shields
Big Macs and Big Mercs: Neoliberal Social Forces in Poland's Transition to a Market Economy - Helen Dexter and Jonathan Gilmore
Be Careful What You Wish For: Cosmopolitanism and the renaissance of warfighting - N’Deye Salimata Fall
NGO Advocacy and Development - Ilan Danjoux
Revealing the Public: A Media Analysis Approach to Public Opinion Research - Lucy Ferguson
Reinforcing inequality: service sector activities and the new entrepreneurial model of development in Central America - Sophie Harman
Mapping the Way: Understanding how the World Bank has shaped the HIV/AIDS response through a Historical Institutionalist lens - Catia Gregoratti
Partnering for Development? The UN Global Compact’s Growing Sustainable Business Initiative - Shogo Suzuki
China’s Quest for Great Power Status: The Social Mechanisms of Delinquent Gang Formation - Danielle Beswick
Intervention, Ideology and Altruism: Rwandan Involvement in Darfur - Mark Ledwidge
African-Americans and the Formation of the United Nations Organisation - Inderjeet Parmar
Liberal-Imperial Brain Trust: The Political Significance of the Princeton Project on National Security - Norman Geras
Thresholds of Inhumanity - Peter Knight
Conspiracy Theories about 9/11 - Greig Charnock
Why do Institutions Matter? Global Competitiveness and the Politics of Policies in Latin America - Inderjeet Parmar
Not Neo-Conservatism but Conservative Nationalism and Liberal Interventionism: The New Alliance Dominating the US Foreign Policy Establishment - Andreu Solà-Martín
Coming to Terms with Peacebuilding: The Sierra Leonean Experience - Sophie Harman
Bottlenecks and Benevolence: How the World Bank is Helping Communities to 'Cope' with HIV/AIDS - Mark Ledwidge
Du Bois and Garvey: Foreign Affairs and Two Roads to Pan-Africanism - Inderjeet Parmar
The 'Knowledge Politics' of Democratic Peace Theory - Elena Barabantseva
Change vs. Order—Shijie Meets Tianxia in China’s Interactions With The World - Paul Copeland
The European Social Dimension, EU Enlargement, and The Clash of Capitalisms