Security Dialogue
Peace Studies/Conflict Resolution
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Security Dialogue is a fully peer-reviewed and highly ranked international bi-monthly journal that seeks to combine contemporary theoretical analysis with challenges to public policy across a wide ranging field of security studies. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
Security Dialogue seeks to revisit and recast the concept of security through new approaches and methodologies. It encourages ground-breaking reflection on new and traditional security issues such as globalization, nationalism, ethnic conflict and civil war, information technology, biological and chemical warfare, resource conflicts, pandemics, global terrorism, non-state actors and environmental and human security.
Security Dialogue promotes analysis of the normative dimensions of security, theoretical and practical aspects of identity and identity-based conflict, gender aspects of security and critical security studies.
Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/security-dialogue.
Security Dialogue aims to combine cutting-edge advances in theory with new empirical findings across a range of fields relevant to the study of security. Security Dialogue provides an outlet for new approaches and methodologies from disciplines such as international studies, gender studies, political sociology, political economy, geography, cultural studies, political theory, anthropology, development studies, postcolonial studies, and peace and conflict studies.
Security Dialogue encourages innovative analyses that challenge traditional readings of, inter alia, subjectivity, gender, identity, the individual, the social, the international, the economical, citizenship, health and biopolitics, risk, information technology, globalisation, migration and transnationalism, terrorism, crime, and media.
Security Dialogue represents a unique forum across the arts, humanities and social sciences for scholarship that seeks to revisit, critique, and revise the concept of security against the backdrop of contemporary and historical developments.
Mark B. Salter | University of Ottawa, Canada |
Philippe M. Frowd | University of Ottawa, Canada |
Toni Haastrup | University of Manchester, UK |
Marsha Henry | London School of Economics & Political Science, UK |
Katharine M. Millar | London School of Economics & Political Science, UK |
João Nunes | Universidad Pontificia Comillas, Spain |
Doerthe Rosenow | King's College London, UK |
Marit Moe-Pryce | Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway |
Samer Abboud | Villanova University, USA |
Paul Amar | University of California, Santa Barbara, USA |
Louise Amoore | Durham University, UK |
Claudia Aradau | King's College London, UK |
Banu Bargu | University of California - Santa Cruz, USA |
J Peter Burgess | Ecole Normale Superior, France |
Carol Cohn | Tufts University, USA |
Bina D'Costa | The Australian National University, Australia |
Marieke de Goede | University of Amsterdam, Netherlands |
James Der Derian | University of Sydney, Australia |
Jenny Edkins | University of Aberystwyth, UK |
Stefan Elbe | University of Sussex, UK |
Cynthia Enloe | Clark University, USA |
Emily Gilbert | University of Toronto, Canada |
Will Greaves | University of Victoria, Canada |
Jairus Grove | University of Hawaii, Manoa, United States |
Hugh Gusterson | University of British Columbia, Canada |
Lene Hansen | University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
Jana Hönke | University of Bayreuth, Germany |
Alison Howell | Rutgers University, USA |
Vivienne Jabri | King's College London, UK |
Anna Leander | Graduate Institute of Geneva, Switzerland |
Kristoffer Lidén | Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway |
Sheryl Lightfoot | University of British Columbia, Canada |
Luis Lobo-Guerrero | University of Groningen, Netherlands |
Nivi Manchanda | Queen Mary, University of London, UK |
Caroline Moulin | Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil |
Andrew Neal | University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom |
Amy Niang | Mohammed VI Polytechnic University, Morocco |
Patricia Owens | University of Oxford, UK |
Polly Pallister-Wilkins | University of Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Swati Parashar | University of Gothenburg, Sweden |
Lisa Parks | University of California - Santa Barbara, USA |
Angelika Rettberg | Los Andes University, Colombia |
Meera Sabaratnam | Queen Mary, University of London, UK |
Kristin B. Sandvik | Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway |
Michael Shapiro | Cornell University, USA |
Anna Stavrianakis | University of Sussex, UK |
Maria Stern | University of Gothenburg, Sweden |
Annick T.R. Wibben | University of San Francisco, USA |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.