TABLE OF CONTENTS
The editors of Ethics & International Affairs are pleased to present the Winter 2018 issue of the journal! The centerpiece of this issue is a roundtable organized by Duncan B. Hollis and Tim Maurer on competing normative visions for cyberspace, with contributions from Ronald J. Deibert, Daniel J. Weitzner, Duncan B. Hollis and Jens David Ohlin, and Martha Finnemore. Additionally, the issue contains an essay by Ş. İlgü Özler taking stock of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on the seventieth anniversary of its adoption; a feature by Bolarinwa Adediran assessing proposals to restrain the use of the veto at the UN Security Council; review essays by Anne Peters on international law and Micheline Ishay on human rights; and book reviews by Richard Beardsworth, Rory Cox, Christopher J. Finlay, Avery Kolers, and Michael Skerker.
ESSAY
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights at Seventy: Progress and Challenges [Full text]
Ş. İlgü Özler
ROUNDTABLE: COMPETING VISIONS FOR CYBERSPACE
Introduction [Full text]
Duncan B. Hollis and Tim Maurer
Toward a Human-Centric Approach to Cybersecurity
Ronald J. Deibert
Promoting Economic Prosperity in Cyberspace
Daniel J. Weitzner
What if Cyberspace Were for Fighting?
Duncan B. Hollis and Jens David Ohlin
Ethical Dilemmas in Cyberspace
Martha Finnemore
FEATURE
Reforming the Security Council through a Code of Conduct: A Sisyphean Task?
Bolarinwa Adediran
REVIEW ESSAYS
How Not to Do Things with International Law
Anne Peters
Human Rights Under Attack: What Comes Next?
Micheline Ishay
REVIEWS [All full text]
Just Responsibility: A Human Rights Theory of Global Justice
Brooke A. Ackerly
Review by Richard Beardsworth
Return of the Barbarians: Confronting Non-State Actors from Ancient Rome to the Present
Jakub J. Grygiel
Review by Rory Cox
A Foreign Policy for the Left
Michael Walzer
Review by Christopher J. Finlay
Justice and Natural Resources: An Egalitarian Theory
Chris Armstrong
Review by Avery Kolers
Principled Spying: The Ethics of Secret Intelligence
David Omand and Mark Phythian
Review by Michael Skerker
Briefly Noted: Grave New World: The End of Globalization, the Return of History