Produktbild: The Oxford Handbook of Norms Research in International Relations

The Oxford Handbook of Norms Research in International Relations

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Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

13.02.2026

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

752

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,2/4,9 cm

Gewicht

1430 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-891587-4

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

13.02.2026

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

752

Maße (L/B/H)

25/17,2/4,9 cm

Gewicht

1430 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-891587-4

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: The Oxford Handbook of Norms Research in International Relations
    • Front matter

    • Preface

    • Volume Editors

    • Section Editors

    • Contributors

    • 1: Introduction

    • Section 1: A History of Norms Research - Section Editors: Wayne Sandholtz (University of Southern California) and Kelebogile Zvobgo (William and Mary)

    • 2: Wayne Sandholtz (University of Southern California) and Kelebogile Zvobgo (William and Mary): The International Norms Enterprise

    • 3: Ezgi Yildiz (California State University, Long Beach) and Isabel Silagy (Boston University): Norms, Legitimacy, and Compliance: Between International Law and Politics

    • 4: Lucrecia García Iommi (Fairfield University) and Andrea Vilán (American University): International Norms and Domestic Politics

    • 5: Nina Tannenwald (Brown University): The Nuclear Taboo: A Global Prohibitionary Norm

    • 6: Audie Klotz (Syracuse University): Race and Racism in Norms Research

    • 7: Devon Cantwell-Chavez (University of Ottawa): Whose Norms Matter? Challenging Power in Global Climate Governance

    • Section 2: Key Concepts of Norms Research

    • 8: Antje Wiener (University of Hamburg and University of Cambridge): The Norm Typology: Approaches and Models

    • 9: Swati Srivastava (Purdue University): Hybrid Sovereignty, Norm Reification, and Practices

    • 10: Maren Hofius (University of Hamburg): The Constructivist Promise Revisited: On the Practice Dimension of Norms

    • 11: Carmen Wunderlich (University of Freiburg): On the Concept of Norm Clusters

    • 12: Sassan Gholiagha (European-University Viadrina) and Mitja Sienknecht (European-University Viadrina): "It s what you ought to do: Appropriateness as a Central Concept in Norms Research

    • Section 3: The Methodological Tool-Kit of Norms Research

    • 13: 1. Katharina Glaab (Norwegian University of Life Sciences) and Holger Niemann (Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy Hamburg): How to Study International Norms: From Methodologies to Methods in Norms Research

    • 14: Anna Holzscheiter (TUD Dresden University of Technology): Speaking Norms: Discourse Analytical Approaches and Methodologies in Norms Research

    • 15: Dongwook Kim (Australian National University): Quantitative Approaches and Theory Evaluation in Norms Research

    • 16: Diana Panke (Free University Berlin), Ulrich Petersohn (University of Liverpool), and Sercan Pekel (University of Liverpool): Data, Generalization and Causal Inference in Quantitative Norm Research

    • 17: Helen M. Kinsella (University of Minnesota) and Giovanni Mantilla (University of Cambridge): Historical Approaches and Archival Work in Norms Research Helen M. Kinsella (University of Minnesota) and Giovanni Mantilla

    • 18: Xymena Kurowska (Central European University): Ethnographic Approaches to the Study of Norms

    • Section 4: Norm Emergence and Change

    • 19: Anette Stimmer (University of St. Andrews) and Adam Bower (University of St. Andrews): A Rhetorical Approach to Norm Change

    • 20: Susanne Zwingel (Florida International University): Norm Translation: Content-in-Motion and Contextualized Practice

    • 21: Jacqui True (Monash University): Transnational Network Approaches and Norm Agency

    • 22: Kazushige Kobayashi (Ritsumeikan University Kyoto): Agents of Socialization Beyond the West

    • 23: Anette Stimmer (University of St Andrews) and Duncan Snidal (Nuffield College, University of Oxford): How (De)Legalisation Unfolds

    • 24: Zoltán I. Búzás (University of Notre Dame): Failed Norm Emergence and Change

    • Section 5: Norm Robustness: Between Strength and Erosion

    • 25: Lisbeth Zimmermann (Goethe-University of Frankfurt) and Max Lesch (European University Institute and Peace Research Institute Frankfurt): Theories of Norm Strength and Erosion

    • 26: Anton Peez (Goethe-University of Frankfurt): Measuring Norm Strength and Erosion in International Politics

    • 27: Vincent Keating (University of Southern Denmark): What is the Normative Value of Norm Robustness? Comparing Constructivist and English School Perspectives

    • 28: Ingvild Bode (University of Southern Denmark): Norm Robustness and International Practice Theories

    • 29: Srinivas Burra (South Asian University): Norm Strength, Change, and Inequality in International Law

    • 30: Élise Rousseau (University Cambridge): Navigating Norm Strength: Compliance Mechanisms in Global Governance

    • Section 6: Norms and Ethics

    • 31: Anthony F. Lang Jr. (University of St Andrews) and Aarushi Sharma (University of St Andrews): Ethics and Normative Traditions: Peace as a Fundamental Norm

    • 32: Neta C. Crawford (University of Oxford): Persistent Tensions Among Norms: Intention, Norms of Civilian Immunity and Protection versus Norms of Proportionality and the Military Necessity

    • 33: Susan L. Kang (City University of New York) and Jonathan Havercroft (University of Southampton): Constructing Normative Foundations: Stanley Cavell, Social Constructivism, and Public Assembly Rights in Brazil, the U.S., and the U.K.

    • 34: Rita Floyd (University of Birmingham): Regulating Security Policy and Practice via a Norm of Just Securitization

    • 35: Brent Steele (University of Utah) and Eric A. Heinze (University of Oklahoma): Ethically Evaluating and Appraising Norms: Three Cautionary Tales

    • 36: João Nunes (Universidad Pontificia Comillas Madrid): Body Politics, Domination and Vulnerability: A Critique of Global Health Security

    • Section 7: Norm Contestation and Normative Legitimacy

    • 37: Antje Wiener (University of Hamburg and University of Cambridge): Contestation Theory

    • 38: Jason Ralph (University of Leeds): Meanings-in-Use and Useful Meanings: Norm Contestation and the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) from a Pragmatist Perspective

    • 39: Holger Niemann (Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy Hamburg) and Henrik Schillinger (University of Duisburg-Essen): Strategies for Coping with Contestation in Norms Research

    • 40: Chiara de Franco (University of Southern Denmark) and Linnéa Gelot (University of Southern Denmark): A Bourdieusian Perspective on Contestation Theory

    • 41: Nicole Jenne (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile) and Christoph Harig (Royal Danish Defence College): Contested Peacekeeping Norms Across the Global South

    • 42: Lucrecia García Iommi (Fairfield University): Norm Contestation, Global South Agency, and the Anti-Impunity Norm: Actualizing the Emancipatory Potential of International Criminal Law through Contestation

    • 43: Laura von Allwörden (University of Kiel): Legitimating Norms through Contestation: The Global Climate

    • Section 8: Complexity, Interactions and Dynamics

    • 44: Caroline Fehl (Helmut-Schmidt-Universität/Universität der Bundeswehr Hamburg and Peace Research Institute Frankfurt) and Elvira Rosert (Technische Universität Dresden): Norm Complexity and Interactions: Surveying an Emerging Field

    • 45: Laura Gómez Mera (University of Miami): How Positive Norm Interactions Contribute to the Emergence and Diffusion of Norm Clusters

    • 46: Johanne Døhlie Saltnes (ARENA Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo): Norm Conflicts: Distinguishing between Application and Validity

    • 47: Ruji Auethavornpipat (La Trobe University): Norm Conflicts and Synergies in Global Migration Governance

    • 48: Rebecca Sander (University of Cincinnati) and Laura Dudley Jenkins (University of Cincinnati) (Yale University): Normative Frameworks and Norm Hierarchies

    • 49: Carla Winston (University of Melbourne): Norm Interactions, World Order, and Systemic Change

    • Section 9: Reverberations of Norms Research Across International Relations

    • 50: Thomas Risse (Free University of Berlin): Deep Contestations and the Resilience of the Liberal International Order

    • 51: Qiaochu Zhang (University of Manchester): Rising Powers as Norm Entrepreneurs and the Future of Liberal International Order

    • 52: Liam Moore (University of Wollongong) and Phil Orchard (University of Wollongong): Reverberations Through Clusters and Regimes: Norms and Forced Displacement Policy

    • 53: Jan Wilkens (University of Hamburg): Narratives of Change in the Climate Crisis: The Return of the Tipping Point and Critical Norms Research

    • 54: Sara E. Davies (Griffith University): Global Health and Norms

    • 55: Elisabeth Johansson-Nogués (Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals): Norms Research and Foreign Policy