ISA Compendium Project

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  • Supplemental Style Guide (doc, March 8, 2008)
  • Write A Review Essay

Section Compendium Projects

  • Active Learning in International Affairs
  • Comparative Interdisciplinary Studies
  • Diplomatic Studies
  • English School
  • Environmental Studies
  • Ethnicity, Nationalism and Migration
  • Feminist Theory and Gender Studies
  • Foreign Policy Analysis
  • Global Development Studies
  • Human Rights
  • Intelligence Studies
  • International Communication
  • International Education
  • International Ethics
  • International Law
  • International Organization
  • International Political Economy
  • International Political Sociology
  • International Security Studies
  • IR Theory
  • Peace Studies
  • Political Geography
  • Post-Communist States in IR
  • Scientific Study of International Processes
  • Women's Caucus

Background and Rationale

When it was suggested that the ISA consider the creation of an encyclopedia project, most people were thinking of a traditional work filled with short descriptions of terms relevant to international studies.  This format was not particularly exciting.  Academics don’t tend to consult such works, and generally frown upon their use by students.  On the other hand, the creation of a series of essays that review the literature in important topic areas might be of real interest.  A repository of information about the development of our thinking on a given issue, the status of the current literature, and possible future directions, would be of significant use to students, professional scholars, and those who might wish to understand international studies in a sophisticated manner.  We are seeking to create the fundamental reference resource in international studies.   

The ISA’s Governing Council placed two constraints upon the project.  First, it must not be divisive.  Its creation must not become the terrain for substantive, methodological or ideological battles. Second, the project must not put the Association in financial jeopardy.  The ISA was not to incur debt at any point.

A number of publishers were interested, but the proposal that best met our needs came from Wiley-Blackwell.  The project would be allotted between 4 and 4.5 million words – roughly 6,200 to 7,200 pages.  With space for hundreds of entries in the range of ten thousand words each, we would be able to solicit manuscripts on ‘mid-range’ issues. (Smaller or perhaps even longer essays will be considered if necessary.) Instead of suffering through the competition that would result from having room for only one entry on ‘the politics of trade’, we can solicit essays on issues that include ‘trade and protection’ and ‘trade and underdevelopment’ and ‘war and trade’.  There is enough space in this project for the full range of issues to be exercised from a variety of perspectives.

The adoption of review essays in the ten thousand word range also allows us to set high standards of scholarship.  The ISA considers this project to be on a par with its journals, and each manuscript will be peer reviewed.  This is important because it will assure quality and will allow those essays accepted to take their legitimate place on the CVs of their authors.  Unlike traditional encyclopedia entries, many of which are paid for, these longer essays will be more sophisticated, have a more serious analytical content, and serve as a scholarly publication.

We believe these essays will be of significant use.  Undergraduates, and especially graduate students, will be able to review the literature far more effectively than is possible by reading the latest text, or the last half-dozen articles on a given topic.  Those of us preparing to teach in new areas will be able to quickly review the range of literature and its most current manifestations.  Scholars looking into new research areas could acquire a sense of the issues that have been covered, and the way in which they’ve been considered, in an efficient manner.  Those outside the academy might also find such essays to be of significant interest as matters considered by scholars become relevant to public policy and debate.

Who would write such review essays?  Most of us already have. Laboriously prepared dissertation literature reviews are the first thing that must be jettisoned when reorganizing manuscripts for publication as monographs or sets of articles.  The work that went into them often goes unappreciated.  The expertise acquired over years of study by hard-working scholars may be translated into syllabi, but the careful consideration of the development and current status of a given literature may never see publication.  Yet even junior authors who publish literature reviews for International Studies Review or in various handbooks, yearbooks and volumes of reconsiderations, are acknowledged as leaders in their areas, setting the agenda for future work.

No single editor or small team can bring together a set of essays that encapsulate all of international studies, but the ISA is uniquely suited to doing so.  With over 20 substantive sections, we have a ready-made structure for the organization of such a project.  Each section has been asked to contribute.  The section-driven lists of topics will be reviewed and augmented, when necessary, with solicitations to those who might provide unique perspectives.  The project is also to be critical in nature.  Each section will be encouraged to offer an essay on the questions that are being ignored or underrepresented.  Along with the on-line version of the project we are going to create an on-line discussion forum so that individuals may respond to the essays.  This project should be the start of a set of valuable conversations about where we have been, where we are, and where we might be headed.

The first goal of the Compendium Project is to have each section generate a list of topics to be considered.  These should be substantially complete, and some authors should have been identified, by our 2007 meeting in Chicago .  One year after that we should have generated the manuscripts for review.  In a total of three years we want to bring the project to market.  Revenues generated by IS On-Line or The International Studies Encyclopedia in excess of the advance Blackwell provided to cover the costs of production will go to the Association for use in the support of professional activities by our members.

Compendium Sections

The Compendium is organized by ISA Sections. With over 20 substantive sections, we have a ready-made structure for the organization of this project.  Each section has been asked to contribute.  The section-driven lists of topics will be reviewed and augmented, when necessary, with solicitations to those who might provide unique perspectives.  Each section will be encouraged to offer an essay on the questions that are being ignored or underrepresented.

ISA sections are putting together committees to help coordinate this task.  Most of the committees are composed of five or six members.  We are especially interested in including representatives from different facets of the discipline, as well as those of different ranks.  The task of coming up with topics is closely associated with identification of possible authors and reviewers.  We hope the committees will play a central role in this process as well.

Many section representatives have asked "how much space" they have been allotted.  We have upwards of seven thousand pages we can fill, and so the question should really be turned around.  How much space do you need?  How many review essays (of about 10k words each) will it take to represent the important strands of the relevant literature?  Can we find qualified authors to write on these topics?  This seems a more coherent way to build a comprehensive project of this magnitude. Should entries far outpace our available space, we will talk about cutting back.  But the initial question should be "what do you need?"and not what might (arbitrarily) be assigned at this early date.

Please click on the links to the left to browse by section area (note, most sections have not yet submitted information, these links are merely placeholders).

All Other Topics:

Compendium Committee Chair
Bob Denemark, University of Delaware
E-Mail: denemark@udel.edu

Editorial Advisory Board

We are in the process of creating a Board of Advisory Editors. All former ISA presidents have been invited to serve on the advisory board. To date, the following individuals have agreed to serve, and the completed list will be made available once everyone has had the chance to respond.

Editors and Advisory Board Members

Robert A. Denemark is General Editor of the Compendium Project. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota and has been on the faculty of the University of Delaware since 1988. He served as Chair of the IPE Section of the ISA from 1986 to 1988, President of the Northeast Region in 1995-96, ISA Program Chair in 1998, was a founding associate editor of International Studies Perspectives, and has served on a number of other ISA committees and editorial boards. He is the editor of 5 books and author of about 40 other publications in the areas of international political economy, diplomacy, terrorism, revolution, migration, and world system history.

Tony Rivera is Managing Editor of the Compendium Project, 2009-2011.

Andrea K. Gerlak is Managing Editor of the Compendium Project, 2006-2009. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Arizona in 1997. Since that time, she has served on the faculty of Guilford College and Columbia University. Presently, she serves as Director of Academic Development with the International Studies Association and as a Visiting Professor with the Department of Political Science at the University of Arizona. She is the author of over a dozen articles and book chapters in the area of environmental and natural resource policy, with particular attention to water management and governance.

The Editorial Advisory Board is chaired by William R. Thompson of Indiana University, and includes current and former ISA Presidents:

  • Thomas G. Weiss, The Graduate Center, City University of New York
  • Nils Petter Gleditsch, PRIO
  • Chadwick F. Alger, Ohio State University
  • Davis Bobrow, University of Pittsburgh
  • Michael Brecher, McGill University
  • Bruce Bueno de Mesquita, Stanford University
  • James A. Caporaso, University of Washington
  • Maurice East, George Washington University
  • Ted Gurr, University of Maryland
  • Helga Haftendorn, Free University of Berlin
  • Charles Hermann, Ohio State University
  • Margaret G. Hermann, Syracuse University
  • Kal J. Holsti, University of British Columbia
  • Ole Holsti, Duke University
  • Charles Kegley, Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs
  • Robert Keohane, Princeton University
  • Jacek Kugler, Claremont Graduate University
  • Jack S. Levy, Rutgers University
  • Craig Murphy, Wellesley College
  • James Roseneau, George Washington University
  • Bruce Russett, Yale University
  • J. David Singer, University of Michigan
  • Steve Smith, University of Exeter
  • Henry Teune, University of Pennsylvania
  • J. Ann Tickner, University of Southern California
  • John Vasquez, University of Illinois, Urbana
  • Tom Volgy, University of Arizona
  • Dina Zinnes, University of Illinois

The ISA Compendium Project notes with sadness the passing of Editorial Advisory Board member Hayward Alker. 

Compendium Contract

Within a few days of being assigned to a review essay within the website you will receive an email asking you to return to a specific area of site to verify that the contact details we have for you are correct, unless you completed a contract prior to the launch of the website. Upon completion, a contract will be sent to your email address.

For each essay, we request that you print two copies, add your details to each contract, sign and return both copies by snail mail to the Publisher. Be sure that the review essay title as well as author's name and signature are legible.  The Publisher will counter-sign both copies and return one copy to you (for each essay). The Publisher will also add the "First Draft Due Date" within the website. Contracts should be sent to:

Nick Bellorini
Blackwell Publishing, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford, OX4 2DQ, UK
Tel: (+44) 1308 867364
Email: nbellorini@wiley.com

Where essays have two or multiple authors, the lead author should arrange for all authors to sign the contract before submitting it. If you have any queries about the contract process, please contact Nick Bellorini.

We request that authors submit a first draft within 6 months of signing the contract. This is important if we are to keep the project moving along.

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