ISA Book Awards

Achievement Awards

  • Karl Deutsch Award
  • Susan Strange Award
  • Quincy Wright Award
  • Deborah Gerner Teaching Award
  • Deborah Gerner Professional Development Grant
  • ENMISA Distinguished Scholar Award

Book Awards

  • Chadwick Alger Prize
  • ISA Annual Best Book Award
  • ISA Book of the Decade Award
  • Harold & Margaret Sprout Award
  • International Security Studies Book Award
  • ENMISA Distinguished Book Award
  • International Ethics Book Award
  • ISA Midwest Book Award
  • Yale H. Ferguson Award

Paper Awards

  • A. LeRoy Bennett Award
  • Alexander George Award
  • Carl Beck Award
  • Dina Zinnes Award
  • Frederick Hartmann Award
  • FTGS Graduate Student Paper Award
  • Human Rights Faculty/Professional Best Paper Award
  • Intelligence Studies Section Student Paper Award
  • International Communication Award
  • International Law Award
  • International Security Studies Paper Award
  • Jim Winkates Graduate Student Paper Award
  • Kenneth Boulding Award
  • Lawrence Finkelstein Award
  • Martin Heisler Award
  • Robert & Jessie Cox Award
  • Steven C. Poe Graduate Student Paper Award

Service Awards

  • Ladd Hollist Service Award
  • SWIPE Mentor Award
  • Susan Northcutt Award

ISA Book Awards

Books

ISA sponsors several book awards for authors in the field of international studies. We welcome nominations and applications from authors, section members, annual convention participants and publishers. We hope to encourage, support and recognize outstanding scholarship. Questions may be addressed to the chair of each award committee or to Angelica Robison, the ISA Award Coordinator at arobison@isanet.org; you may also use the Comments link below to send us a question regarding our book awards.

To navigate this site, please use the Book Awards links menu to the left.

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The Chadwick Alger Prize

Chadwick



The Chadwick F. Alger Prize recognizes the best book published in the previous calendar year on the subject of international organization and multilateralism. The Award Committee is particularly interested in works dealing with how international organizations interact with nongovernmental organizations and other local civil society actors, as reflected in many of the writings of Chadwick F. Alger.




ABOUT THE AWARD:

  • The recipient may be at any stage of his or her career and from any country. The recipient receives a $250.00 (USD) cash prize from the International Organization account and a certificate.
  • The recipient will be announced at the International Organization Section Business Meeting at the ISA Annual Convention and will be recognized at a reception along with the award winners from other co-sponsoring sections.
  • The Committee Chair is responsible for notifying the recipient of the award and encouraging the recipient to attend the Annual Convention at which the award is to be presented so as to receive the award in person.
  • Publishers are asked to limit their submissions to no more than three (3) works, and to send a copy of the nominated work(s) directly to each of the committee members named below.
    Publishers should also notify the Committee Chair of submissions by email: mjtier@wm.edu.
  • Edited volumes are not eligible for this award.
  • The submission deadline is December 15, 2010.


AWARD RECIPIENTS:

  • 2010 Co-Winners: Valerie Sperling, Altered States: The Globalization of Accountability (Cambridge University Press, 2009)
    Alex Thompson, Channels of Power: The UN Security Council and U.S. Statecraft in Iraq (Cornell University Press.  2009)
  • 2009: Co-Winners:
    Benjamin Schiff, Oberlin College, Building the International Criminal Court, (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2008)
    Catherine Weaver, University of Texas at Austin, Hypocrisy Trap: The World Bank and the Poverty of Reform, (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2008)
  • 2008: Ian Hurd, Northwestern University, After Anarchy:
    Legitimacy and Power in the United Nations Security Council
    (Princeton University Press, 2007)
  • 2007: Craig N. Murphy, Wellesley College, The United Nations
    Development Programme: A Better Way?
    (Cambridge University Press, 2006)
  • 2002: Craig Warkentin, St. John's University, Reshaping World
    Politics: NGOs, the Internet and Global Civil Society
    (Romann and
    Littlefield, 2007)


COMMITTEE:

Michael J. Tierney, Chair
Department of Government
College of William and Mary
Williamsburg, VA 23187-8795

Carolyn Stephenson
Political Science Department
2424 Maile Way, Saunders 640,
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Honolulu, HI 96822
USA

Alex Thompson
Department of Political Science
The Ohio State University
2139 Derby Hall
154 N. Oval Mall
Columbus, Ohio 43210

Valerie Sperling
Department of Political Science
Clark University
950 Main Street
Worcester MA 01610

Ian Hurd
Niehaus Center for Globalization and Governance
Woodrow Wilson School
Robertson Hall
Princeton University
Princeton, NJ 08544 1013

ISA Annual Best Book Award

The International Studies Annual Best Book Award is conferred for the best book in the field of international studies with a copyright dated the year before the nomination.

About the Award

  • Eligibility: The Annual International Studies Best Book Award is conferred for the best book in the field of international studies in the previous year.
  • Nominations: Individuals, authors, departments, and publishers may submit a nomination. A brief supporting statement is required of each nomination. The nomination with supporting statement should be addressed to the committee chair. Only email nominations will be considered. Nominators are limited to one submission. It is the nominator's responsibility to contact the publisher and request that copies of the nominated title be sent to each of the committee members at the addresses listed below, along with one copy to ISA headquarters.
  • Prize: The recipient of the Best Book Award will receive $500 along with an award plaque and will be automatically nominated for the ISA Book of the Decade Award.
  • Notification: The Committee Chair is responsible for notifying the recipient of the award and encouraging the recipient to attend the ISA Annual Convention at which the award is to be presented. Recipients will be notified in December.
  • Committee Terms: Book Award Committee members serve a term of one year and are appointed by the incumbent ISA President. Member terms officially begin with the ISA Governing Council meeting of the first year listed and end with the closing of the ISA Governing Council meeting of the final year listed.
  • Deadline: July 1st
  • Note: This award is not presented in years in which the Book of the Decade is presented; there will be no award nominations accepted in 2009. Books published in 2008 & 2009 will be considered for the annual award competition to be nominated in 2010 and presented at the 2011 ISA Annual Convention.

CHAIR

Professor John R. Oneal
FEB 2010 - MAR 2011
Department of Political Science
The University of Alabama
Tuscaloosa, AL  35487-0213
USA
E-Mail: joneal@bama.ua.edu

COMMITTEE MEMBERS

Professor Stephen M. Saideman
FEB 2010 - MAR 2011
Department of Political Science
McGill University
855 Sherbrooke St West
Montreal, QC H3A 2T7
Canada

Professor John Ravenhill
FEB 2010 - MAR 2011
Department of International Relations
School of International, Political and Strategic Studies
College of Asia and the Pacific
Hedley Bull Centre #130
The Australian National University
Canberra ACT 0200
Australia


AWARD RECIPIENTS

2009 Andrew Hurrell, On Global Order: Power, Values, and the Constitution of International Society (Oxford University Press, 2007).

2008 The winners of the 2008 International Studies Best Book Award are: Dominic Johnson and Dominic Tierney for their book entitled, Failing to Win: Perceptions of Victory and Defeat in International Politics, Harvard University Press, 2006.

2007 The Marketing of Rebellion: Insurgents, Media, and International Activism, Clifford Bob,  Cambridge University Press, 2005.

Best Book of the Decade Award

The International Studies Best Book of the Decade Award honors the best book published in international studies over the last decade.In order to be selected, the winning book must be a single book (edited volumes will not be considered) that has already had or shows the greatest promise of having a broad impact on the field of international studies over many years. Only books of this broad scope, originality, and interdisciplinary significance should be nominated.

About the Award:
  • Cash Prize: A $500.00 (USD) cash prize to the recipient is awarded from the ISA General Account, along with a plaque.
  • Nominations: Nominations may be made by any individual member of ISA or by publishers. Nomination process:
    1. A letter of nomination, stating the reasons why the nominator believes the book to be worthy of this award, should be sent to all members of the committee by e-mail at the addresses listed below.
    2. Copies of the nominated book should be forwarded to ISA’s Executive Director, Thomas Volgy, at ISA Headquarters.
    Nominations for the 2000-2009 decade are due August 15, 2009.
  • Chair Responsibilities: The Committee Chair is responsible submitting award information to the ISA Award Coordinator and for notifying the recipient of the award and encouraging the recipient to attend the Annual Convention at which the award is to be presented so as to receive the award in person.
  • Committee Membership: Members serve one-year terms. Member terms officially begin with the ISA Governing Council meeting of the first year listed and end with the closing of the ISA Governing Council meeting of the final year listed.
  • Award Presentation: This award is awarded once a decade, the next award will be announced at the ISA Annual Convention in New Orleans in 2010.


COMMITTEE (2009-2010):

Terry Hopmann
CHAIR, FEB 2009 - FEB 2010
Johns Hopkins University
School of Advanced Intl Studies
pthopmann@jhu.edu

William R. Thompson

MEMBER, FEB 2009 - FEB 2010
Dept of Political Science
Indiana University
wthompso@indiana.edu

Ann Tickner
MEMBER, FEB 2009 - FEB 2010
School of International Relations
University of Southern California
tickner@usc.edu

Craig Murphy
MEMBER, FEB 2009 - FEB 2010
Department of Political Science
Wellesley College
cmurphy@wellesley.edu

Nils Petter Gleditsch
MEMBER, FEB 2009 - FEB 2010
International Peace Research Institute, Oslo
PRIO
nilspg@prio.no

Tom J. Volgy
ISA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
International Studies Association
University of Arizona
isa@isanet.org


Book of the Decade Award Recipients:
  • 2001-2010: Daniel H. Deudney, Bounding Power: Republican Security Theory from the Polis to the Global Village.  Princeton University Press, 2007.

    Joshua S. Goldstein, War and Gender: How Gender Shapes the War System and Vice Versa.  Cambridge University Press, 2001.

    Bruce Russett and John Oneal, Triangulating Peace: Democracy, Interdependence, and International Organization. WW Norton, 2001.

  • 1991-2000: Alexander Wendt, Social Theory of International Politics. Cambridge University Press, 1999.

The Harold and Margaret Sprout Award

The Harold and Margaret Sprout Award was established in 1972 and named in honor of two pioneers in the study of international environmental problems. The award is sponsored by the Environmental Studies Section, and is given annually to the best book in the field - one that makes a contribution to theory and interdisciplinarity, shows rigor and coherence in research and writing, and offers accessibility and practical relevance. Nominated books should address some aspect of one or more environmental, pollution or resource issues from a broadly international or transnational perspective, including works in (for example) global, interstate, transboundary, North-South, foreign policy, comparative or area studies. Environmental subjects of books can include (for example) environmental law, diplomacy, transnational activism, natural resource use, global change, sustainable development, biodiversity, transboundary pollution control, and the like.

ABOUT THE AWARD:
  • A $500.00 (USD) cash prize and plaque is awarded from the ISA General Account
  • The Award Committee consists of five (5) Members plus the Section Chair of Environmental Studies Section (ESS) of ISA (serving ex-officio) serving rolling two-year terms.
  • The Committee Chair is responsible for notifying the Recipient of the Award and encouraging the Recipient to attend the Annual Convention at which the Award is to be presented so as to receive the Award in person.
  • Nominations: Nominated works must be published during the two years prior to the year they are nominated for. Books with a copyright date of the award year are welcome provided that they are released by the previous year’s end. Each publisher may nominate more than one book, and books nominated for the prior year can be re-nominated. When nominating an author, please submit a copy of the book to each member of the Committee listed below. The committee members will begin reading the books as soon as they arrive.
  • List of previous winners posted on the Environmental Studies Section website.
  • The nomination deadline is: August 1, 2010
AWARD RECIPIENTS:
  • 2010: D.G. Webster, Dartmouth College, Adaptive Governance: The Dynamics of Atlantic Fisheries Management  (MIT Press, 2008)
  • 2009: Steve Vanderheiden, University of Colorado, Atmospheric Justice: A Political Theory of Climate Change (Oxford University Press, 2008)
    Runners-up:
    Charlotte Epstein, University of Sydney: The Power of Words in International Relations: Birth of an Anti-Whaling Discourse. MIT Press
    Matthew Paterson, University of Ottawa: Automobile Politics: Ecology and Cultural Political Economy. Cambridge University Press
  • 2008: David Humphreys, The Open University, Logjam: Deforestation and the Crisis of Global Governance, Earthscan
  • 2007:  Thomas Princen,  University of Michigan
  • 2006: Ken Conca, Governing Water: Contentious Transnational Politics and Global Institution Building,  MIT Press
  • 2005: Benjamin Cashore, Graeme Auld, and Deanna Newsom, Governing Through Markets - Forest Certification and the Emergence of Non-State Authority, Yale University Press
    Runners-up:
    Sanjeev Khagram, Dams and Development, Cornell University Press
    Robyn Eckersley, The Green State, MIT Press
  • 2004: Edward A. Parson, Protecting the Ozone Layer, Oxford University Press
    Honorable Mention:
    Miranda A. Schreurs, Environmental Politics in Japan, Germany and the United States, Cambridge University Press
  • 2003: Thomas Princen, Michael Maniates and Ken Conca, eds. Confronting Consumption, The MIT Press
  • 2002: Paul F. Steinberg, Environmental Leadership in Developing Countries: Transnational Relations and Biodiversity Policy in Costa Rica and Bolivia, The MIT Press
    Runner Up: Steven Bernstein, The Compromise of Liberal Environmentalism., Columbia
  • 2001: Roni Garcia-Johnson, Exporting Environmentalism: U.S. Multinational Chemical Corporations in Brazil and Mexico, The MIT Press
    Runner Up: Kate O’Neill, Waste Trading Among Rich Nations, The MIT Press
  • 2000: Yok-shiu F. Lee and Alvin Y. So, Asia’s Environmental Movements: Comparative Perspectives, M.E. Sharp

COMMITTEE:

Jörg Balsiger
CHAIR, FEB 2010 - APR 2012
Institute for Environmental Decisions
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
CHN K78, Universitätsstrasse 22, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
joerg.balsiger@env.ethz.ch

Steinar Andresen
MEMBER, FEB 2009 - MAR 2011
Fridtjof Nansen Institute
P.O. Box 326, 1326 Lysaker, Norway
steinar.andresen@fni.no

Matthias Finger
MEMBER, FEB 2009 - MAR 2011
EPFL-CDM-TPI-MIR
BAC 103, Station 5, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
matthias.finger@epfl.ch

Paul Harris
MEMBER, FEB 2010 - APR 2012
Department of Social Sciences
Hong Kong Institute of Education
10 Lo Ping Road
Tai Po, Hong Kong, China
pharris@ied.edu.hk

Matthew Hoffmann
MEMBER, FEB 2009 - MAR 2011
Department of Political Science
University of Toronto
100 St. George Street
Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G3, Canada
mjhoff@utsc.utoronto.ca

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Updated: 21 April 2010


ISSS Best Book Award

The ISSS Annual Best Book Award recognizes the book on any aspect of security studies that excels in originality, significance, and rigor, published during the 2009 calendar year. Please send a copy of the nominated book to each of the three committee members along with a short (1 page maximum) justification for the nomination.  Deadline: June 30, 2010

COMMITTEE:

Erik J. Dahl
CHAIR, FEB 2010 - MARCH 2011
National Security Affairs Department
Naval Postgraduate School Bldg 302
Monterey, CA 93943
Phone: 831 656-3168
E-Mail: ejdahl@nps.edu

Risa Brooks
FEB 2010 - MARCH 2011
Department of Political Science
Northwestern University
601 University Place
Evanston, Illinois  60208
E-Mail: r-brooks3@northwestern.edu

Timothy Crawford
FEB 2010 - MARCH 2011
Political Science Department
Boston College
140 Commonwealth Avenue
Chestnut Hill, MA 02467
E-Mail: timothy.crawford@bc.edu

Past Award Winners:
  • 2009 ISSS Best Book - C. William Waldorf, Just Politics: Human Rights and the Foreign Policy of Great Powers (Cornell University Press, 2008)
  • 2008 ISSS Best Book - David A. Welch, Painful Choices: A Theory of Foreign Policy Change, (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005)

ENMISA Distinguished Book Award

The ENMISA Book Award recognizes the best book published over the past two years in the study of the international politics of ethnicity, nationalism or migration. The criteria for the award include the originality of the argument presented, quality of the research, ability to draw on the insights of the multiple disciplines, innovative methods or methodological syntheses, readability of the text and the policy or practical implications of the scholarship. The Award Committee is particularly interested in books that engage multiple areas of analytical interest to ENMISA members. Questions may be addressed to the committee chair, Professor Willem Maas: maas@yorku.ca

ABOUT THE AWARD:

  • The award is sponsored by the ENMISA Section of ISA.
  • To be eligible for the award, books must have been published in 2008 or 2009.
  • Entries may have multiple authors.
  • Books may be nominated by academic or trade presses or by any scholar in the field.
  • Publishers should send ONE copy of nominated books to the each member of the awards committee.
  • Deadline for nominations for the 2010 award is: November 1st.


COMMITTEE (FEB 2010 - FEB 2011):

Dr. Neophytos G. Loizides
School of Politics, International Studies and Philosophy
Queen's University Belfast 21 University Square
Belfast BT7 1PA Northern Ireland
United Kingdom

Dr. Willem Maas
Center for Migration Law
Radboud University
Postbus 9049 6500 KK Nijmegen
The Netherlands

Dr. Ana Margheritis
Department of Political Science
University of Florida
P.O. Box 117325
Gainesville, FL 32611
USA

AWARD RECIPIENTS:

  • 2010 Co-Winners: Idean Salehyan, "Rebels Without Borders: Transnational Insurgencies in World Politics," University of North Texas and Marc Morjé Howard, "The Politics of Citizenship in Europe"

International Ethics Annual Book Award

Each year, the International Ethics Section of the International Studies Association will award one prize of $200 for the best book published in the field of international ethics. The award recognizes a book that excels in originality, significance and rigor in the broadly defined field of international ethics. The subject matter of the book can be, but is not limited to, international descriptive ethics, international normative ethics, metaethics, comparative ethics, international religious ethics, international political theory, and international legal theory.

ABOUT THE AWARD
  • Eligibility: Eligible books can be either single or multi-authored. Edited collections will not be eligible.  Textbooks, translations and memoirs are not eligible. Books not clearly falling into one of the above categories may be considered if all three members of the Selection Committee agree that it is worthy of consideration.
  • Nominations: Authors can self nominate if they so wish; To be considered for the award, one copy of each nominated book should be sent to the three members of the selection committee.
  • Submitting Books: Books must be received by 1 September of the year preceding the convention. Books nominated will not be returned. Books to be considered must be published within a two year period preceding the year of the competition:  For instance, to be considered for the 2011 prize, books must be published in either 2009 or 2010. ‘Published’ means that the year listed in the book itself must be one of these two.
  • Deadline: Books must be received by 1 September of the year preceding the ISA convention.
  • Questions: Any questions about the book award can be directed to the Chair of the Selection Committee, Dr Anthony F Lang, Jr., at al51@st-andrews.ac.uk.
BOOK PRIZE REGULATIONS 2011 (PDF file 28K)


COMMITTEE:

Anthony F Lang, Jr.
School of International Relations
University of St Andrews
al51@st-andrews.ac.uk

Cian O'Driscoll
Department of Politics
University of Glasgow
cian.odriscoll@lbss.gla.ac.uk

Michael J. Struett
School of Public and International Affairs
North Carolina State University
mjstruet@ncsu.edu

Past Book Prize Committees
  • 2010


International Ethics Section Book Prize 2010


This prize is awarded for best book published in 2008 or 2009 in the field of international ethics. This year’s competition received 27 eligible book submissions.

Book Prize Winner

Kochi_cover


Tarik Kochi, The Other’s War: Recognition and the Violence of Ethics (Birbeck Law Press, 2009)
Link: http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=book&isbn=978-0-415-48270-7

The book makes an argument for recasting the ethics of war away from the just war tradition toward a Hegelian inspired conception of recognizing the other in violent encounters. He argues that war is an act of ordering the world and positing a particular set of norms (ethical, legal, and political). In light of this, he suggests that an alternative approach is to posit not a supposed peaceful or juridical ordering of war, but a recognition of the justice in the other’s war. This leads him to Hegel, through which he proposes such a process of recognition. One of the book prize committee members noted that this is “one of the most impressive books I have read in several years.”

Dr. Tarik Kochi is Lecturer in Law & International Security at the University of Sussex.


Notable Books

The Book Prize Committee would like to acknowledge in addition the following books for their superior scholarship and contribution to the field of international ethics.

Elisabeth Dauphinee, The Ethics of Researching War: Looking for Bosnia (Manchester University Press, 2009)
Link: http://www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/catalogue/book.asp?id=1203978

The book proposes an ethically sensitive methodology for conducting research on war and violence. The author draws upon her research experience on conflict in Bosnia, focusing on how her interviews and discussions with victims and perpetrators of violence challenged some of her conceptions of ethics. She critically revisits themes such as representation and responsibility in a broadly postmodernist attempt to explore the complexities of researching warfare.


Toni Erskine, Embedded Cosmopolitanism: Duties to Stranger and Enemies in a World of ‘Dislocated Communities’ (Oxford University Press, 2008)
Link: http://www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780197264379

This book explores the normative tension between cosmopolitan and communitarian accounts of justice in the international order. Rather than rest comfortably on this distinction, however, Erskine develops an account of embedded cosmopolitanism that seeks to explore how everyday life has both local and global elements, which results in a theory that does not collapse but constitutes an alternative approach to that tension. With chapters devoted to the political philosophy of Michael Walzer and Feminist Theory, Erskine draws upon a wide range of theoretical influences in developing her account. She concludes with a discussion of enemies and warfare, using a hard case to deepen her theoretical contribution.


Patrick Hayden, Political Evil in a Global Age: Hannah Arendt and International Theory (Routledge, 2009)
Link: http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415451062/

This book uses the thought of Hannah Arendt to critically investigate the concept of evil in the current international order. Rather than rely on some of the more popular tropes about evil that focus primarily on terrorism or religious conflict, Hayden suggests that statelessness, genocide, and poverty manifest a type of political evil that requires renewed attention. Using Arendt’s concept of the political as a tool to critically investigate these practices, Hayden points toward alternative formulations of global politics that are more sensitive to the ways in which standard practices generate truly evil outcomes.


Chukwumerije Okereke, Global Justice and Neoliberal Environmental Governance: Ethics, Sustainable Development, and International Co-operation (Routledge, 2008)
Link: http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415412308/

This book uses debates about justice, particularly intergenerational justice, to challenge neoliberal international political economic structures of world order. Okereke focuses on how such neoliberal projects fail to take account of justice in terms of the global environment. He makes this concrete through an examination of regimes on the law of the sea, global waste management and protecting the atmosphere. The author concludes that neoliberal governance fails to provide a just international order in terms of the distributive nature of environmental harm and productivity.


Ayelet Shachar, The Birthright Lottery: Citizenship and Global Inequality (Harvard University Press, 2009)
Link: http://www.law.utoronto.ca/faculty_content.asp?profile=50&perpage=243&cType=facMembers&itemPath=1/3/4/0/0

The book explores the normative foundations of citizenship through a critical engagement with the question of membership and borders. Shachar draws upon moral and legal theory to critique the ways in which birthright determines membership, raising key questions about an often unquestioned assumption in world politics. In asking about citizenship, she is able to suggest alternative approaches to the political and morally fraught question of immigration. The use of both legal cases and moral theory gives this book a solid foundation in terms of real world politics.


ISA Midwest Book Award

The ISA Midwest Board has established a new Best Book Award for the Midwest region with the following guidelines:

  1. The book must be solo authored (no edited volumes)
  2. The book must have a copyright of 2008, 2009, 2010. (Three years prior to the year the award is being given).
  3. The author must be a member of the ISA Midwest and/or have attended the regional conference once in the previous five years.
  4. The nomination must be made by an ISA Midwest member (self-nominations are welcome).

 The deadline for nominations is:  July 15, 2011

Please send nominations to the Committee Chairperson: Dr. Paul Diehl pdiehl@ad.uiuc.edu. 

Two copies of the nominated books should be mailed to:
Dr. Paul Diehl
Department of Political Science
University of Illinois
240 CAB
605 E. Springfield Avenue
Champaign, IL  61820

The Yale H. Ferguson Award

The Yale H. Ferguson Award, presented by International Studies Association-Northeast, recognizes the book that most advances the vibrancy of international studies as a pluralist discipline. Any book or edited volume published within the field of international studies in the previous calendar year is eligible for consideration. The award winner is selected based on two criteria: (1) that it makes an outstanding contributions to concept-formation, theoretical analysis, or methodological issues in the study of world politics; and (2) that it contributes to the status of international studies as an intellectually pluralist field.

Nominations should be emailed to the committee chair accompanied by a brief letter explaining why a work deserves consideration for the award. Authors may nominate themselves. A copy of each book must be sent to each member of the committee, with the line “Yale H. Ferguson Award, c/o” at the top of each address.

Nominations are due by May 1, 2011 and books must be received by May 15, 2011.

Members of the award committee, as well as the current program chair for ISA-NE, are ineligible for the award.

Award Committee for 2011:

Daniel Green (Chair)
Dept. of Political Science
347 Smith Hall
University of Delaware
Newark, DE  19716
Email: dgreen@UDel.Edu
 
Ayse Zarakol
Assistant Professor of Politics
Washington & Lee University
109 Huntley Hall
Lexington, VA 24450

Brent Steele
University of Kansas
Department of Political Science
1541 Lilac Lane, Room 504
Lawrence, KS 66044-3177
 

About Yale H. Ferguson

Yale H. Ferguson, a Professor at Rutgers-Newark, contributed over many years to the intellectual vibrancy of the International Studies Association-Northeast. During his distinguished career, he mentored a long and diverse list of graduate students and junior faculty from schools around the country.

Although he began his career as a Latin American specialist, his philosophic and historical interests soon transformed him into one of the most visible theorists in international relations. In his long and productive collaboration with Richard Mansbach, Ferguson published seven books and numerous articles and book chapters dealing with the evolution of the discipline and its theoretical foundations and the collaboration continues with two additional books forthcoming.

Beginning in the 1970s and influenced by the pioneering work of Thomas Kuhn and James Rosenau, Ferguson and Mansbach rejected realism and its emphases on power, rationality, and state-centricity, questioned the immutability of the Westphalian state and its role in global politics, and denied the contention that facts and values were separable. Instead, values were regarded empirical facts that determined the questions theorists posed and the selection of other facts in the course of strategically simplifying a complex political universe.

These concerns make it difficult to “label” Ferguson or this body of scholarship. Its criticism of state-centric premises led some to define it as “liberal,” even “utopian.” Its emphasis on history as a means of discerning change and discarding the static claims of realist thinking predicted constructivist thought, while its focus on changing boundaries, interdependence, and transnationalism predictably led to contemporary globalization discourses. Perhaps, the best description of Ferguson is that he is a genuine “pluralist.”

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