TABLE OF CONTENTS
The editors of Ethics & International Affairs are pleased to present the Winter 2020 issue of the journal! The highlight of this issue is a roundtable organized by Kai He, T. V. Paul, and Anders Wivel on international institutions and peaceful change. The roundtable contains contributions from David A. Lake; Anders Wivel and T. V. Paul; Kai He and Huiyun Feng; Toni Erskine; Trine Flockhart; and Mark Beeson. Additionally, the issue includes essays by Michael Doyle and Elie Peltz on worker visas as a complementary pathway for refugee resettlement and Ş. İlgü Özler on the United Nations and the COVID-19 pandemic. It also contains a review essay by Cian O’ Driscoll on international political theory and book reviews by Shirley Graham, Aaron McKeil, and Kelly Staples.
ESSAYS
Finding Refuge through Employment: Worker Visas as a Complementary Pathway for Refugee Resettlement
Michael Doyle and Elie Peltz
The United Nations at Seventy-Five: Passing the COVID Test?
Ş. İlgü Özler
ROUNDTABLE: INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND PEACEFUL CHANGE
Introduction: International Institutions and Peaceful Change
Kai He, T. V. Paul, and Anders Wivel
Whither the Liberal International Order? Authority, Hierarchy, and Institutional Change
David A. Lake
Soft Balancing, Institutions, and Peaceful Change
Anders Wivel and T. V. Paul
International Institutions, Institutional Balancing, and Peaceful Order Transition
Kai He and Huiyun Feng
The Liberal International Order and Peaceful Change: Spillover and the Importance of Values, Visions, and Passions
Trine Flockhart
The Regional Path to Peaceful Change: What the Asian and European Experiences Tell Us
Mark Beeson
REVIEW ESSAY
International Political Theory 2020: The Worst of Times, the Best of Times
Cian O’Driscoll
REVIEWS
The First Political Order: How Sex Shapes Governance and National Security Worldwide
Valerie M. Hudson, Donna Lee Bowen, and Perpetua Lynne Nielsen
Review by Shirley Graham
Political Theology of International Order
William Bain
Review by Aaron McKeil
Undocumented Nationals: Between Statelessness and Citizenship
Wendy Hunter
Review by Kelly Staples