Theories of International Politics and Zombies
Page 9
9. Harper 2002; Lauro and Embry 2008; Webb and Byrnard 2008.
10. Axelrod 1984; Fudenberg and Maskin 1986.
11. Raustiala and Victor 2004.
12. Drezner 2007.
13. Brooks 2006, 264–69.
14. Ikenberry 2000, 2010.
15. Chayes and Chayes 1993; Downs, Rocke, and Barsoom 1994.
16. Haftendorn, Keohane, and Wallander 1999; Lake 2001.
17. Hoyt and Brooks 2003–4.
18. Brooks 2006, Grant 2010.
19. Marlin-Bennett, Wilson, and Walton 2010.
20. Barrett 2007b; Nadelmann 1990.
21. Barrett 2007a.
22. Flores and Smith 2010; Kahn 2005.
23. Kahn 2005; Ó Gráda 2009; Sen 1983.
24. Fidler 2004.
25. Brooks 2006, 47.
26. Drezner 2007; Keck and Sikkink 1998; Sell 2003.
27. Their manifesto—which calls for equal rights and a raising of the mandatory retirement age to be higher than “dead,” can be found at http://www.votecure.com/vote/?p=i3 (accessed July 15, 2010).
28. Fidler 2009.
29. Carpenter 2007.
Neoconservatism and the Axis of Evil Dead
1. See Caverley 2010; Fukuyama 2006; Rapport 2008; and Williams 2005 for scholarly assessments of neoconser-vatism as a theoretical paradigm.
2. Fukuyama 1992.
3. Bolton 2007; Krauthammer 2004.
4. Bolton 2007; Kagan 2008.
5. Caverley 2010, 602–7; Kagan and Kagan 2000; Kristol and Kagan 1996. On classical realist skepticism about the ability of democracies to practice foreign policy, see Kennan 1984.
6. Bolton 2007; Frum and Perle 2004; Kagan 2008; Kristol and Kagan 2000; Podhoretz 2007.
7. Kagan 2003.
8. Boot 2006; Fukuyama 2006; Kagan 2003.
9. On the neoconservative faith in the ability of the United States to create its own reality, see Suskind 2004.
10. Kagan and Kagan 2000; Kristol 1983; Kristol and Brooks 1997; Kristol and Kagan 1996.
11. Smith? et al. 2009.
12. Frum and Perle 2004.
13. Podhoretz 2007.
14. Brooks 2006, 104.
The Social Construction of Zombies
1. For a state-centric approach, see Wendt 1999; for a more non-state-centric take, see Holzscheiter 2005. Der Derian and Shapiro 1989 provide a more interpretivist approach.
2. Tannenwald 1999, 2005.
3. Johnston 2001.
4. Mercer 1995.
5. Mitzen 2006.
6. Cooke 2009, chap. 7; Russell 2005.
7. Webb and Byrnard 2008, 86.
8. Wendt and Duvall 2008.
9. Wendt 1992.
10. Price-Smith 2003; Strong 1990.
11. Adler and Barnett 1998.
12. Durodie and Wessely 2002; Furedi 2007; Glass and Schoch-Spana 2001; Quarantelli 2004; Tierney 2004.
13. Solnit 2009, 2.
14. Snyder 2002. Even under circumstances of famine, however, Ó Gráda (2009) finds minimal evidence of cannibalism, for example.
15. Mercer 1995.
16. Wendt 2003.
17. Furedi 2007, 487.
18. Clarke 2002; Grayson, Davies, and Philpott 2008; Mitchell et al. 2000; Tierney, Bevc, and Kuligowski 2006.
19. Webb and Byrnard 2008, 84.
20. Finnemore and Sikkink 1998.
21. Brooks 2006, 157–58.
22. Nye 2004.
Domestic Politics: Are All Zombie Politics Local?
1. See Bueno de Mesquita et al. 2003; Milner 1997; Putnam 1988; Weeks 2008.
2. Risse-Kappen 1991.
3. Krasner 1978.
4. Kaufmann 2004; Ornstein and Mann 2006.
5. Howell and Pevehouse 2007.
6. Baum 2002.
7. Eichenberg 2005; Feaver and Gelpi 2004.
8. Voters reward politicians more for post-disaster performance more than preventive measures. See Healy and Malhorta 2009.
9. Burbach 1994; Kohut and Stokes 2006.
10. Pew Research Center 2009.
11. Przeworski and Wallerstein 1988.
12. Stanger 2009.
13. This result is consistent with Milner 1997.
Bureaucratic Politics: The “Pulling and Hauling” of Zombies
1. Barnett and Finnemore 2004.
2. Wilson 1989.
3. Allison 1971; Halperin 1974.
4. Cohen, March, and Olsen 1972.
5. On legislative constraints, see Weingast and Moran 1983; for executive branch constraints, see Moe 1990; for an integrative approach, see Hammond and Knott 1996.
6. Simon 1976.
7. Zegart 2007.
8. Cordesman 200i.
9. Keene 2005, 123.
10. Solnit 2009, 125.
11. Brooks 2006, 94–100.
12. Brooks 2003, 155.
13. The Air Force loses most of its combat capabilities in favor of transport and logistics.
14. Brooks 2006, 145.
15. Hafner-Burton, Kahler, and Montgomery 2009; Slaughter 2004.
We're Only Human: Psychological Responses to the Undead
1. Stern 2002–3.
2. Mori 1970.
3. Price-Smith 2002; Strong 1990, 252–54.
4. Bynam and Pollack 2001; Waltz 1959.
5. Jervis 1976.
6. Houghton 1996; Khong 1992; Neustadt and May 1986.
7. Maberry 2008, 39.
8. Brooks 2003, 154.
9. Mercer 1996.
10. Kahneman and Tversky 1979; Levy 1997.
11. Jervis 1992.
12. Kahneman and Renshon 2007.
13. Weinstein 1980.
14. Glass and Schoch-Spana 2001.
15. Thaler and Sunstein 2008.
16. Brooks 2003.
17. Janis 1972.
18. Sunstein and Vermeule 2008.
Conclusion…or So You Think
1. Paris 2001.
2. Most and Starr 1984.
3. Berlin 1996; Katzenstein and Okawara 2001–2; Sil and Katzenstein 2010.
4. Hirschman 1970, 341.
REFERENCES
Adams, John Joseph, ed. 2008. The Living Dead. San Francisco: Night Shade Books.
Adler, Emanuel, and Michael Barnett, eds. 1998. Security Communities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Allison, Graham. 1971. Essence of Decision: Explaining the Cuban Missile Crisis. Boston: Little Brown.
Aquilina, Carmelo, and Julian Hughes. 2006. “The Return of the Living Dead: Agency Lost and Found?” In Dementia: Mind, Meaning and the Person, ed. Julian Hughes, Stephen Louw, and Steven Sabat, 143–62. New York: Oxford University Press.
Austen, Jane, and Seth Grahame-Smith. 2009. Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Philadelphia: Quirk Books.
Axelrod, Robert. 1984. The Evolution of Cooperation. New York: Basic Books.
Axelrod, Robert, and Robert Keohane. 1985. “Achieving Cooperation under Anarchy: Strategies and Institutions.” World Politics 38 (October): 226–54.
Barnett, Michael, and Martha Finnemore. 2004. Rules for the World: International Organizations in Global Politics. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Barrett, Scott. 2007a. “The Smallpox Eradication Game.” Public Choice 130 (January): 179–207.
———. 2007b. Why Cooperate? The Incentive to Supply Global Public Goods. New York: Oxford University Press.
Baum, L. Frank, and Ryan Thomas. 2009. The Undead World of Oz. Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada: Coscom.
Baum, Matthew. 2002. “The Constituent Foundations of the Rally-round-the-Flag Phenomenon.” International Studies Quarterly 46 (June): 263–98.
Berlin, Isaiah. 1996, October 3. “On Political Judgment.” New York Review of Books, 26–30.
Berlinski, Mischa. 2009, September. “Into the Zombie Underworld.” Men's Journal, http://www.mensjournal.com/into-the-zombie-underworld. Accessed July 15, 2010.
Bishop, Kyle. 2008. “The Sub-Subaltern Monster: Imperialist Hegemony and t
he Cinematic Voodoo Zombie.” Journal of American Culture 31 (June): 141–52.
———. 2009. “Dead Man Still Walking: Explaining the Zombie Renaissance.” Journal of Popular Film and Television 37 (Spring): 16–25.
Bolger, Kevin. 2010. Zombiekins. New York: Razorbill.
Bolton, John. 2007. Surrender Is Not an Option. New York: Threshold.
Boot, Max. 2006. War Made New: Technology, Warfare, and the Course of History, 1500 to Today. New York: Gotham.
Brancati, Dawn. 2007. “Political Aftershocks: The Impact of Earthquakes on Intrastate Conflict.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 51 (October): 715–43.
Brooks, Max. 2003. The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead. New York: Three Rivers.
———. 2006. World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War. New York: Three Rivers.
Brooks, Stephen. 1997. “Dueling Realisms.” International Organization 51 (July): 445–77.
Bueno de Mesquita, Bruce, James Morrow, Randolph Siverson, and Alistair Smith. 2003. The Logic of Political Survival. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Burbach, David. 1994. “Presidential Approval and the Use of Force.” Working Paper, Defense and Arms Control Studies Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Buus, Stephanie. 2009. “Hell on Earth: Threats, Citizens and the State from Buffy to Beck.” Cooperation and Conflict 44 (December): 400–419.
Bynam, Daniel, and Kenneth Pollack. 2001. “Let Us Now Praise Great Men: Bringing the Statesman Back In.” International Security 25 (Spring): 107–46.
Carlson, Robert. 2003. “The Pace and Proliferation of Biological Technologies.” Biosecurity and Bioterrorism 1 (September): 203–14.
Carpenter, Charli. 2007. “Setting the Advocacy Agenda: Issues and Non-Issues around Children and Armed Conflict.” International Studies Quarterly 51 (March): 99–120.
Carroll, Lewis, and Nickolas Cook. 2009. Alice in Zombieland. Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada: Coscom.
Cassi, Davide. 2009. “Target Annihilation by Diffusing Particles in Inhomogenous Geometries.” Physical Review E 80 (September): 1–3.
Caverley, Jonathan. 2010. “Power and Democratic Weakness: Neoconservatism and Neoclassical Realism.” Millennium 38 (May): 593–614.
Cederman, Lars-Erik. 2003. “Modeling the Size of Wars: From Billiard Balls to Sandpiles.” American Political Science Review 97 (February): 135–50.
Chalmers, David. 1996. The Conscious Mind: In Search of a Fundamental Theory. New York: Oxford University Press.
Chayes, Abram, and Antonia Handler Chayes. 1993. “On Compliance.” International Organization 47 (Spring): 175–206.
Christensen, Thomas, and Jack Snyder. 1990. “Chain Gangs and Passed Bucks: Predicting Alliance Patterns under Multipolarity.” International Organization 44 (March): 137–68.
Chyba, Christopher, and Alex Greniger. 2004. “Biotechnology and Bioterrorism: An Unprecedented World.” Survival 46 (January): 143–62.
Clarke, Lee. 1999. Mission Improbable: Using Fantasy Documents to Tame Disaster. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
———. 2002. “Panic: Myth or Reality?” Contexts 1 (Fall): 21–26.
Cohen, Charles, and Eric Werker. 2008. “The Political Economy of ‘Natural' Disasters.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 52 (December): 795–819.
Cohen, Michael, James March, and Johan Olsen. 1972. “A Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice.” Administrative Science Quarterly 17 (March): 1–25.
Comaroff, Jean, and John Comaroff. 2002. “Alien-Nation: Zombies, Immigrants, and Millenial Capitalism.” South Atlantic Quarterly 101 (Fall): 779–805.
Cooke, Evan, Farnam Jahanian, and Danny McPherson. 2005. “The Zombie Roundup: Understanding, Detecting, and Disturbing Botnets.” In Proceedings of the First Workshop on Steps to Reducing Unwanted Traffic on the Internet (STRUTI), 39–44. Cambridge, MA: STRUTI.
Cooke, Jennifer. 2009. Legacies of Plague in Literature, Theory and Film. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Cordesman, Anthony. 2001, September 29. “Biological Warfare and the ‘Buffy Paradigm.'” Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Crawford, Neta. 2000. “The Passion of World Politics: Propositions on Emotion and Emotional Relationships.” International Security 24 (Spring): 116–56.
Cronin, Justin. 2010. The Passage. New York: Ballantine.
Davies, Matt. 2010. “'You Can't Charge Innocent People for Saving Their Lives!' Work in Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” International Political Sociology 4 (June): 178–95.
Davis, Wade. 1985. The Serpent and the Rainbow. New York: Simon and Schuster.
———. 1988. Passage of Darkness: The Ethnobiology of the Haitian Zombie. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
Dendle, Peter. 2001. The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia. Los Angeles: McFarland.
———. 2007. “The Zombie as Barometer of Cultural Anxiety.” In Monsters and the Monstrous: Myths and Metaphors of Enduring Evil, ed. Niall Scott, 45–57. New York: Rodopi.
Dennett, Daniel. 1995. “The Unimagined Preposterousness of Zombies.” Journal of Consciousness Studies 2 (April): 322–25.
Der Derian, James. 2002. “9.11: Before, After and In Between.” In Understanding September 11, ed. Craig Calhoun, Paul Price and Ashley Timmer, 146–59. New York: New Press.
Der Derian, James, and Michael Shapiro, eds. 1989. International-Intertextual Relations: Postmodern Readings of World Politics. Lexington, MA: Lexington.
Diamond, Jared. 1999. Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies. New York: W. W. Norton.
Downs, George, David Rocke, and Peter Barsoom. 1994. “Is the Good News about Compliance Good News about Cooperation?” International Organization 50 (Summer): 379–406.
Doyle, Michael. 1983. “Kant, Liberal Legacies, and Foreign Affairs.” Philosophy and Public Affairs 12 (Summer): 205–35.
———. 1986. “Liberalism and World Politics.” American Political Science Review 80 (December): 1151–69.
Drezner, Daniel W. 2000. “Bargaining, Enforcement, and Multilateral Economic Sanctions: When Is Cooperation Counterproductive?” International Organization 54 (Winter): 73–102.
———. 2007. All Politics Is Global: Explaining International Regulatory Regimes. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
———. 2008. “The Realist Tradition in American Public Opinion.” Perspectives on Politics 6 (March): 51–70.
———, ed. 2009. Avoiding Trivia: The Role of Strategic Planning in American Foreign Policy. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press.
Durodié, Bill, and Simon Wessely. 2002. “Resilience or Panic? The Public and Terrorist Attack.” Lancet 360 (December 14): 1901–2.
Efthimiou, Costas, and Sohang Gandhi. 2007. “Cinema Fiction vs. Physics Reality: Ghosts, Vampires, and Zombies.” Skeptical Inquirer 31 (July-August): 27–38.
Eichenberg, Richard. 2005. “Victory Has Many Friends: U.S. Public Opinion and the Use of Force, 1981–2005,” International Security 30 (Summer): 140–77.
Fay, Jennifer. 2008. “Dead Subjectivity: White Zombie, Black Baghdad.” CR: The New Centennial Review 8 (Spring): 81–101.
Feaver, Peter, and Chrisopher Gelpi. 2004. Choosing Your Battles. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Ferguson, Niall. 2004. “A World without Power,” Foreign Policy (July-August): 32–39.
Fidler, David. 2004. SARS: Governance and the Globalization of Disease. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
———. 2009. “H1N1 after Action Review: Learning from the Unexpected, the Success and the Fear.” Future Microbiology 4 (September): 767–69.
Finnemore, Martha, and Kathryn Sikkink. 1998. “International Norm Dynamics and Political Change.” International Organization 52 (October): 887–917.
Flores, Alejandro Quiroz, and Alistair Smith. 2010. “Surviving Disasters.” Paper presented at the International Political Economy Society, Cambridge, MA.
Foster, Kevin, Francis Ratnieks, and A
lan Raybould. 2000. “Do Hornets Have Zombie Workers?” Molecular Ecology 9 (June): 735–42.
Frum, David, and Richard Perle. 2004. An End to Evil: How to Win the War on Terror. New York: Random House.
Fudenberg, Drew, and Eric Maskin. 1986. “The Folk Theorem in Repeated Games with Discounting or with Incomplete Information.” Econometrica 54 (May): 533–54.
Fukuyama, Francis. 1992. The End of History and the Last Man. New York: Free Press.
———. 2006. America at the Crossroads. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Furedi, Frank. 2007. “The Changing Meaning of Disaster.” Area 39 (December): 482–89.
Gaddis, John Lewis. 1982. Strategies of Containment. New York: Oxford University Press.
Gelman, Andrew. 2010. “'How Many Zombies Do You Know?' Using Indirect Survey Methods to Measure Alien Attacks and Outbreaks of the Undead.” Working paper, Department of Statistics, Columbia University.
Gilpin, Robert. 1981. War and Change in World Politics. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Glaser, Charles, and Chaim Kaufmann. 1998. “What is the Offense-Defense Balance and How Can We Measure It?” International Security 22 (Spring): 44–82.