Jean-Philippe Thérien and Vincent Pouliot (2020), " Global Governance as Patchwork: The Making of the Sustainable Development Goals," Review of International Political Economy 27(3): 612-636.Ģ7. Vincent Pouliot (2020), " The Gray Area of Institutional Change: How the Security Council Transforms Its Practices on the Fly," Journal of Global Security Studies 6(3), lead article.Ģ9. Vincent Pouliot (2020), " Historical Institutionalism Meets Practice Theory: Renewing the Selection Process of the United Nations Secretary-General," International Organization 74(4): 742-772.Ģ8. Vincent Pouliot (2021), " Global Governance in the Age of Epistemic Authority," International Theory 13(1): 144-156.ģ0. (2021), " Thinking with Diplomacy: Within and Beyond Practice Theory," International Political Sociology, first view.ģ1. Vincent Pouliot (2021), " Beyond the Profession, Into the Everyday? Grasping the Politics of Diplomatic Practice," International Political Sociology, first view.ģ2. (2008), Metaphors of Globalization: Mirrors, Magicians and Mutinies. Markus Kornprobst, Vincent Pouliot, Nisha Shah and Ruben Zaiotti, eds. Winner of the 2011 Prize in International Relations awarded by the Canadian Political Science Association for “the best book published in 2009 or 2010” and recipient of a Honorable Mention for the 2011 Lepgold Prize awarded by Georgetown University for “exceptional contributions to the study of international relations.”ġ. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. Vincent Pouliot (2010), International Security in Practice: The Politics of NATO-Russia Diplomacy. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.Ģ. (2015), Diplomacy and the Making of World Politics. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.ģ. Ole Jacob Sending, Vincent Pouliot and Iver B. Winner of the inaugural Hedley Bull Prize in International Relations (2017) awarded by the ECPR second place, Chadwick Alger Award (2017) for the best book on international organizations (ISA) finalist (2017), International Theory Book Prize (ISA) finalist (2017), CPSA Prize in International Relations shortlisted, Susan Strange Book Prize (BISA)Ĥ. Vincent Pouliot (2016), International Pecking Orders: The Politics and Practice of Multilateral Diplomacy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Ħ. Vincent Pouliot (2017), L’ordre hiérarchique international. Les luttes de rang dans la diplomatie multilatérale. (2021), Theorizing World Orders: Cognitive Evolution and Beyond.
![best international relations books 2017 best international relations books 2017](https://fivebooks.com/app/uploads/2017/06/0231131836.01.LZ_-200x300.jpg)
With Piki Ish-Shalom and Markus Kornprobst, eds. School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland (2015) "Best Course in International Relations" (2014), Political Science Students Associationīerlin Social Science Center (WZB) (2017) “Best Course in International Relations” (2016), Political Science Students Associationįaculty of Arts Award for Distinction in Research (2015) Prize in International Relations (CPSA), 2011
![best international relations books 2017 best international relations books 2017](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51dPClgpNFL.jpg)
Second Place, Chadwick Alger Award (ISA), 2017īest Article Award (ISA Diplomatic Studies), 2017īest Article Award (EJIR), 2015 (with Rebecca Adler-Nissen) Hedley Bull Prize in International Relations (ECPR), 2017 Provocative and always willing to take on the conventional wisdom, Nyabola emerges with this book as an important observer of contemporary Africa and its position in the world.Member, Royal Society of Canada's College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists, 2018. The passion, erudition, and fluidity of Nyabola’s writing is attractive, even when the arguments occasionally fail to convince. The book also features a lovely essay about the life and legacy of the South African author Bessie Head, who lived much of her life in exile in Botswana and died in relative poverty. Other essays explore her outrage at European immigration policy and its human cost and the question of whether mobility should be a human right and not just the purview of a small, usually Western and white elite. She visits Haiti as a volunteer for a human rights group and ruminates on the fact that locals call her “white” because she is foreign and educated.
![best international relations books 2017 best international relations books 2017](https://fivebooks.com/app/uploads/2017/06/047206701X.01.LZ_.jpg)
As Nicolas van de Walle describes in his Foreign Affairs review, Nanjala notes that “it is by leaving home that people find their identity. FPI Fellow Nanjala is always on the go, as a speaker and thinker, from her home base in Nairobi.