Difference between revisions of "Critical Studies on Terrorism"
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==People== | ==People== | ||
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===Editor-in-Chief=== | ===Editor-in-Chief=== | ||
*[[Richard Jackson]] - [[University of Otago]], New Zealand | *[[Richard Jackson]] - [[University of Otago]], New Zealand |
Revision as of 11:50, 30 December 2014
Critical Studies on Terrorism is an academic journal. Critical terrorism studies is 'understood as a research orientation that is willing to challenge dominant knowledge and understandings of terrorism, is sensitive to the politics of labelling in the terrorism field, is transparent about its own values and political standpoints, adheres to a set of responsible research ethics, and is committed to a broadly defined notion of emancipation'. [1]
The journal was set up in 2008. It is published three times a year and hopes to encourage research on terrorism-related topics. It aims to engage in and encourage debate on disciplinary issues such as the politics of defining the terrorism subject and the ethics of responsibility towards the ‘terrorist other’.
Contents
About
Critical Studies on Terrorism is an international, peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal. The journal seeks to publish quality research on all aspects of terrorism, counter-terrorism and state terror. It aims to create space for robust, innovative research on terrorism and political violence, and encourages fruitful intellectual engagement between critical and orthodox accounts of terrorism, discussing a wide variety of topics such as political science, security studies, international relations, conflict resolution and development studies. [2]
People
Circa 2014
Editor-in-Chief
- Richard Jackson - University of Otago, New Zealand
Editors
- Ruth Blakeley - University of Kent at Canterbury, UK
- Marie Breen Smyth - Universiy of Surrey, UK
- George Kassimeris - University of Wolverhampton, UK
Reviews Editor
Editorial Assistant
- Rosemary McBryde - University of Otago, New Zealand
Editorial Board
- Cristina Archetti - University of Salford, UK
- Roland Bleiker - University of Queensland, Australia
- Ken Booth - Aberystwyth University, UK
- Robert Brecher - Brighton University, UK
- Anthony Burke - University of New South Wales, Australia
- Erica Chenoweth - University of Denver, USA
- Noam Chomsky - MIT, USA
- Stuart Croft - University of Warwick, UK
- David Domke - Unversity of Washington, USA
- Ayla Gol - Aberystwyth University, UK
- Adrian Guelke - Queens University Belfast, UK
- Jeroen Gunning - University of Durham, UK
- Charlotte Heath-Kelly - University of Warwick, UK
- Eric Herring - Bristol University, UK
- Jack Holland - University of Surrey, UK
- Andrew Hoskins - University of Glasgow, UK
- Andrew James - Manchester University, UK
- Lina Khatib - Stanford University, USA
- Charles T.Lee - Arizona State University, USA
- Gus Martin - California State University, USA
- Jude McCulloch - Monash University, Australia
- Matt McDonald - University of Queensland, Australia
- David Miller - Strathclyde University, UK
- John Mueller - Ohio State University, USA
- Hania A.M. Nashef - American University of Sharjah, UAE
- Ben O'Loughlin - Royal Holloway, University of London, UK
- Christina Pantazis - Bristol University, UK
- Louise Richardson - University of St Andrews, UK
- Piers Robinson - The University of Manchester, UK
- Laura E. Sjoberg - University of Florida, USA
- Jeffrey Sluka - Massey University, New Zealand
- Michael Stohl - University of California, Santa Barbara USA
- Doug Stokes - University of Kent at Canterbury, UK
- Christine Sylvester - Lancaster University, UK
- Joseba Zulaika - University of Nevada, USA
Notes
- ↑ Critical Terrorism Studies–an introduction Taylor & Francis Online, accessed 21 November 2014
- ↑ Critical Studies on Terrorism Taylor & Francis Online, accessed 24 November 2014