Cooperation and Conflict
Published for over 50 years, Cooperation and Conflict is a peer reviewed journal committed to publishing high quality articles that examines a broad set of research questions. It believes in academic pluralism and thus does not represent any specific methodology, approach, tradition or school. The mission of the journal is to publish work that is theoretically informed, empirically rich, and methodologically rigorous, and which advances the state of the art of the discipline through theoretical, conceptual and methodological innovation. Cooperation and Conflict has a tradition to publish on Nordic and European Affairs. The journal strictly adheres to a double-blind review policy.
"Always strong, always distinctive, Cooperation and Conflict is now positioning itself to be 'the' journal of interdisciplinary international relations in Europe." Christine Sylvester, University of Connecticut, USA
"Cooperation and Conflict is one of the leading international relations journals in Europe. The diversity of intellectual approaches included in Cooperation and Conflict is an ideal way for political scientists, critical theorists and sociologists to engage each other, and discuss the most pressing developments in Europe" Christine Ingebritsen University of Washington, USA
"Cooperation and Conflict has most recently been one of the main platforms for a range of debates surrounding what has become know as 'critical peace and conflict studies', part of a broader 'local', 'practice' or 'micro' turn in IR more generally. Over many decades the journal has hosted many such cutting edge debates in the discipline whilst foregrounding its commitment to the exploration of peace, cooperation, and security. It has a long and proud history of innovation and creativity, and its volumes are studded with milestone contributions." Professor Oliver Richmond, University of Manchester, UK
"Cooperation and Conflict has a long and proud history of featuring cutting-edge work. Combining theoretical innovation with empirical sophistication adding a Nordic touch, it fills a unique place on the terrain of IR." Professor Lene Hansen, University, Denmark
"Cooperation and Conflict has become one of the prime outlets for innovative work that explores new avenues of research in international relations. It provides an indispensible forum for dialogue across theoretical and methodogical divides as well as diverse empirical interests." Professor Thomas Diez, Eberhard Karls, University of Tubingen, Germany
This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and supports the JETS (Journal Editors Transparency Statement), (formerly Data Access and Research Transparency (DA-RT) statement).
All issues of Cooperation and Conflict are available to browse online.
Published for over 50 years, Cooperation and Conflict is a peer reviewed International Relations (IR) journal committed to publishing high-quality articles that examine a broad set of research questions. Cooperation and Conflict aims be a platform for IR scholarship that is theoretically innovative, methodologically pluralist, empirically and historically rigorous, critical in outlook yet grounded in and with implications for key mainstream debates. Articles published in Cooperation and Conflict advance the state of the art of the discipline through theoretical, conceptual and methodological innovation. While being global in scope, Cooperation and Conflict also has a long-standing tradition for publishing on Nordic and European Affairs. The journal strictly adheres to a double-blind review policy.
Benjamin de Carvalho | Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI), Norway |
Kristin Haugevik | Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI), Norway |
Paul Beaumont | Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI), Norway |
Øyvind Svendsen | Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI), Norway |
Tora Berge Naterstad | University of Oslo, Norway |
Rebecca Adler-Nissen | Copenhagen University, Denmark |
Mathias Albert | Bielefeld University, Germany |
Audrey Alejandro | London School of Economics, UK |
Morten S. Andersen | Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, Norway |
Jens Bartelson | Lund University, Sweden |
Felix Berenskoetter | SOAS, University of London, UK |
Annika Björkdahl | Lund University, Sweden |
Isabel Bramsen | Lund University, Sweden |
Niklas Bremberg | Stockholm University, Sweden |
Christopher Browning | Warwick University, United Kingdom |
Julia Costa Lopez | University of Groningen, Netherlands |
Mai’a K. Davis Cross | Northeastern University, USA |
Thomas Diez | University of Tuebingen |
Ondrej Ditrych | European Union Institute for Security Studies, Paris, France |
Kristin Eggeling | University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
Tuomas Forsberg | University of Helsinki, Finland |
Ulrik Pram Gad | Danish Institute of International Studies, Denmark |
Katharina Glaab | Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway |
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch | University of Essex, UK |
Nina Græger | University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
Stefano Guzzini | European University Institute, Italy |
Linus Hagström | Swedish Defence University, Stockholm |
Shahar Hameiri | University of Queensland , Australia |
Lene Hansen | University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
Målfrid Braut Hegghammer | University of Oslo, Norway |
Patrick Thaddeus Jackson | American University, USA |
Oliver Kessler | University of Erfurt, Germany |
Catarina Kinnvall | Lund University, Sweden |
Halvard Leira | Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, Norway |
Thomas Long | University of Warwick, UK |
Jan Melissen | Leiden University, the Netherlands and University of Antwerp, Belgium |
Jennifer Mitzen | Ohio State University, USA |
Paul Musgrave | University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA |
Deepak Nair | Australian National University, Australia |
João Pontes Nogueira | Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
Hanna Ojanen | Tampere University, Finland |
Silja Bára R. Ómarsdóttir | University of Iceland, Iceland |
Lucas de Oliveira Paes | Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, Norway |
Pål Røren | University of Oslo, Norway |
Elke Schwarz | Queen Mary University of London, UK |
Leonard Seabrooke | Copenhagen Business School, Denmark |
Brent J. Steele | University of Utah, USA |
Jelena Subotic | Georgia State University, USA |
Shogo Suzuki | Manchester University, UK |
Jonas Tallberg | Stockholm University, Sweden |
Baldur Thorhallsson | University of Iceland, Iceland |
Ann Towns | University of Gothenburg, Sweden |
Torunn L. Tryggestad | Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway |
Srdjan Vucetic | University of Ottawa, Canada |
Juha Vuori | Tampere University, Finland |
Julie Wilhelmsen | Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, Norway |
Anders Wivel | University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
William C. Wohlforth | Dartmouth College, USA |
Ayse Zarakol | University of Cambridge, UK |
Maja Zehfuss | University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.