Third World Quarterly
1998 - 2025
Current editor(s): Shahid Qadir From Taylor & Francis Journals Bibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 32, issue 10, 2011
- Editorial Board pp. 1-1

- The Editors
- State Building, Security and Development: state building as a new development paradigm? pp. 1703-1714

- Heather Marquette and Danielle Beswick
- State Building for Peace: a new paradigm for international engagement in post-conflict fragile states? pp. 1715-1736

- Alina Rocha Menocal
- A Human Security Peace-Building Agenda pp. 1737-1756

- Edward Newman
- Globalisation and Power in Weak States pp. 1757-1776

- Mick Moore
- Post-Conflict State Building: the debate on institutional choice pp. 1777-1802

- Stefan Wolff
- Security Sector Reform and State Building pp. 1803-1822

- Paul Jackson
- The Bifurcation of the Two Worlds: assessing the gap between internationals and locals in state-building processes pp. 1823-1841

- Nicolas Lemay-Hébert
- Inclusive Elite Bargains and the Dilemma of Unproductive Peace: a Zambian case study pp. 1843-1869

- Stefan Lindemann
- Donors, State Building and Corruption: lessons from Afghanistan and the implications for aid policy pp. 1871-1890

- Heather Marquette
- Divisive ‘Commonality’: state and insecurity in the Democratic Republic of Congo pp. 1891-1910

- Zoe Marriage
- Aiding State Building and Sacrificing Peace Building? The Rwanda–UK relationship 1994–2011 pp. 1911-1930

- Danielle Beswick
Volume 32, issue 9, 2011
- Development's Paradox: is Washington DC a Third World city? pp. 1541-1556

- Eve Bratman
- (An)other Way of Being Human: ‘indigenous’ alternative(s) to postcolonial humanism pp. 1557-1572

- Malreddy Kumar
- Human Rights and Democracy Promotion: reflections on the contestation in, and the politico-economic dynamics of, rights promotion pp. 1573-1587

- Milja Kurki
- Conservative Christianity, the Global South and the Battle over Sexual Orientation pp. 1589-1605

- John Anderson
- Is India a Responsible Great Power? pp. 1607-1621

- Amrita Narlikar
- Arab–Kurdish Relations and the Future of Iraq pp. 1623-1635

- Michael Gunter
- Violent Narco-Cartels or US Hegemony? The political economy of the ‘war on drugs’ in Mexico pp. 1637-1653

- Julien Mercille
- Curbing ‘Anti-Systemic’ Tendencies in Peru: democracy promotion and the US contribution to producing neoliberal hegemony pp. 1655-1672

- Neil Burron
- Intellectuals, International Relations and the Constant Emergency pp. 1673-1690

- Mark Lacy
- Academia and the Legitimising of International Politics: studies of democratisation and world politics pp. 1691-1702

- Ali Usul
Volume 32, issue 8, 2011
- Southern Bodies and Disability: re-thinking concepts pp. 1369-1381

- Raewyn Connell
- Human Rights and the Global South: the case of disability pp. 1383-1397

- Helen Meekosha and Karen Soldatic
- Embodiment and Emotion in Sierra Leone pp. 1399-1417

- Maria Berghs
- Fostering Deaf People's Empowerment: the Cameroonian deaf community and epistemological equity pp. 1419-1435

- Goedele De Clerck
- Care, Disability and HIV in Africa: diverging or interconnected concepts and practices? pp. 1437-1454

- Ruth Evans and Agnes Atim
- Geodisability Knowledge Production and International Norms: a Sri Lankan case study pp. 1455-1474

- Fiona Campbell
- The Lived Experience of Families Living with Spinal Cord Disability inNortheast Thailand pp. 1475-1491

- Julie King and Mark King
- Disability and Poverty: the need for a more nuanced understanding of implications for development policy and practice pp. 1493-1513

- Nora Groce, Maria Kett, Raymond Lang and Jean-Francois Trani
- Including Deaf Children in Primary Schools in Bushenyi, Uganda: a community-based initiative pp. 1515-1525

- Susie Miles, Lorraine Wapling and Julia Beart
- Disability and Humanitarianism in Refugee Camps: the case for a travelling supranational disability praxis pp. 1527-1536

- Mansha Mirza
- Poverty and Disability in the Global South pp. 1537-1540

- Janaka Biyanwila
Volume 32, issue 7, 2011
- Post-Development, Developmental State and Genealogy: condemned to develop? pp. 1183-1198

- Samer Frangie
- Cracks in the Firmament of Burma's Military Government: from unity through coercion to buying support pp. 1199-1215

- David Williams
- Liberia: security challenges, development fundamentals pp. 1217-1232

- Andreu Solà-Martín
- South African ‘Imperialism’ in a Region Lacking Regionalism: a critique pp. 1233-1253

- Ian Taylor
- Constituting Liberty, Healing the Nation: revolutionary identity creation in the Arab world's delayed 1989 pp. 1255-1271

- Abdelwahab El-Affendi
- Co-Producing with FBOs: lessons from state–madrasa engagement in the Middle East and South Asia pp. 1273-1289

- Masooda Bano
- Instrumental, Narrow, Normative? Reviewing recent work on religion and development pp. 1291-1306

- Ben Jones and Marie Petersen
- How Neopatrimonialism Affects Tax Administration: a comparative study of three world regions pp. 1307-1329

- Christian von Soest, Karsten Bechle and Nina Korte
- Marketing Development: celebrity politics and the ‘new’ development advocacy pp. 1331-1346

- April Biccum
- A Tale of Two Egypts: contrasting state-reported macro-trends with micro-voices of the poor pp. 1347-1368

- Solava Ibrahim
Volume 32, issue 6, 2011
- Cloud Computing in the Global South: drivers, effects and policy measures pp. 997-1014

- Nir Kshetri
- Click to Donate: visual images, constructing victims and imagining the female refugee pp. 1015-1037

- Heather Johnson
- The New Biopower: Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers and the obfuscation of international collective responsibility pp. 1039-1056

- Celine Tan
- Legitimacy, Identity and Climate Change: moving from international to world society? pp. 1057-1072

- Thomas Weiss and Martin Burke
- Hyper-reality and Statebuilding: Baudrillard and the unwillingness of international administrations to cede control pp. 1073-1087

- Aidan Hehir
- Islamism and Democracy in the Modern Maghreb pp. 1089-1105

- Jnc Hill
- Fighting Tax Evasion in Latin America: the contrasting strategies of Chile and Argentina pp. 1107-1125

- Omar Sanchez
- Reframing Development in the Age of Vulnerability: from case studies of the Philippines and Trinidad to new measures of rootedness pp. 1127-1145

- Robin Broad and John Cavanagh
- Washington's Growth and Opportunity Act or Beijing's ‘Overarching Brilliance’: will African governments choose neither? pp. 1147-1163

- Joanne Davies
- Africa's prospects and South Africa's leadership potential in the emerging markets century pp. 1165-1181

- Stefan Andreasson
Volume 32, issue 5, 2011
- Invoking Political Civility in the Middle East pp. 801-806

- Frédéric Volpi
- Civility: Between Disciplined Interaction and Local/Translocal Connectedness pp. 807-825

- Armando Salvatore
- Framing Civility in the Middle East: alternative perspectives on the state and civil society pp. 827-843

- Frédéric Volpi
- Authoritarian Government, Neoliberalism and Everyday Civilities in Egypt pp. 845-862

- Salwa Ismail
- An Uncivil Partnership: Egypt's Jama'a Islamiyya and the state after the pp. 863-881

- Ewan Stein
- Transitional African Spaces in Comparative Analysis: inclusion, exclusion and informality in Morocco and Cape Verde pp. 883-904

- Pedro Marcelino and Hermon Farahi
- Fascism, Civility and the Crisis of the Turkish State pp. 905-924

- Tim Jacoby
- Hizbullah in the Civilising Process: anarchy, self-restraint and violence pp. 925-942

- Adham Saouli
- Official Islam and the Limits of Communicative Action: the paradox of the Amman Message pp. 943-958

- Michaelle Browers
- The Arab State and (Absent) Civility in New Communicative Spaces pp. 959-980

- Emma Murphy
- Dis-Orienting Clusters of Civility pp. 981-987

- S Sayyid
- Civilities, Subjectivities and Collective Action: preliminary reflections in light of the Egyptian Revolution pp. 989-995

- Salwa Ismail
Volume 32, issue 4, 2011
- The Poverty of the Doha Round and the Least Developed Countries pp. 611-627

- James Scott and Rorden Wilkinson
- Globalisation with Growth and Equity: can we really have it all? pp. 629-652

- Lloyd Gruber
- Postcolonialism: interdisciplinary or interdiscursive? pp. 653-672

- Malreddy Kumar
- Budget Support and Democracy: a twist in the conditionality tale pp. 673-688

- Rachel Hayman
- Radical Democracy in Global Perspective: notes from the pluriverse pp. 689-706

- Janet Conway and Jakeet Singh
- Power, Interests and Coalitions: the political economy of mass privatisation in Turkey pp. 707-724

- Ziya Önis
- Horror and Hope: (re)presenting militarised children in global North–South relations pp. 725-742

- Katrina Lee-Koo
- Reintegrating Young Combatants: do child-centred approaches leave children—and adults—behind? pp. 743-764

- Jaremey McMullin
- Dominant Discourses, Debates and Silences on Child Labour in Africa and Asia pp. 765-786

- Tatek Abebe and Sharon Bessell
- Development and the Limits of Amartya Sen's pp. 787-797

- Séverine Deneulin
Volume 32, issue 3, 2011
- Mainstreaming Sport into International Development Studies pp. 367-378

- Simon Darnell and David Black
- Sport, the Military and Peacemaking: history and possibilities pp. 379-394

- Richard Giulianotti and Gary Armstrong
- Football and Post-War Reintegration: exploring the role of sport in DDR processes in Sierra Leone pp. 395-415

- Christopher Dyck
- Punching above its Weight: Cuba's use of sport for South–South co-operation pp. 417-433

- Robert Huish
- Preventive HIV/AIDS Education through Physical Education: reflections from Zambia pp. 435-452

- Donald Njelesani
- A Political Ecology of Development in the Boteti River Region of Botswana: locating a place for sport pp. 453-475

- Larry Swatuk, Moseki Motsholapheko and Dominic Mazvimavi
- A Secret Instinct of Social Preservation’: legitimacy and the dynamic (re)constitution of Olympic conceptions of the ‘good pp. 477-502

- Byron Peacock
- More than a Sporting Chance? Appraising the sport for development legacy of the 2010 FIFA World Cup pp. 503-529

- Scarlett Cornelissen
- Corporatising Sport, Gender and Development: postcolonial IR feminisms, transnational private governance and global corporate social engagement pp. 531-549

- Lyndsay Hayhurst
- The Paucity of, and Dilemma in, Evaluating Corporate Social Responsibility for Development through Sport pp. 551-569

- Roger Levermore
- Global Subjects or Objects of Globalisation? The promotion of global citizenship in organisations offering sport for development and/or peace programmes pp. 571-587

- Rebecca Tiessen
- Sport for Development and Peace: a public sociology perspective pp. 589-601

- Peter Donnelly, Michael Atkinson, Sarah Boyle and Courtney Szto
- Cautions, Questions and Opportunities in Sport for Development and Peace pp. 603-609

- Bruce Kidd
Volume 32, issue 2, 2011
- Transcending the Great Foreign Aid Debate: managerialism, radicalism and the search for aid effectiveness pp. 199-216

- Nilima Gulrajani
- Cosmopolitan or Colonial? The World Social Forum as ‘contact zone’ pp. 217-236

- Janet Conway
- War Minus the Shooting? The politics of sport in Lebanon as a unique case in comparative politics pp. 261-277

- Danyel Reiche
- The World Cup, Vuvuzelas, Flag-Waving Patriots and the Burden of Building South Africa pp. 279-293

- Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni
- Africa's Fear of Itself: the ideology of in South Africa pp. 295-313

- David Mario Matsinhe
- ‘Race’, Gender and Neoliberalism: changing visual representations in development pp. 315-331

- Kalpana Wilson
- The Mixed Metaphor of ‘Third World Woman’: gendered representations by international development s pp. 333-348

- Nandita Dogra
- The White Woman's Burden: from colonial to Third World pp. 349-365

- Jawad Syed and Faiza Ali
Volume 32, issue 1, 2011
- Foreword pp. 1-2

- Ban Ki-Moon
- The Millennium Development Goals: challenges, prospects and opportunities pp. 3-8

- Nana Poku and Jim Whitman
- If not the Millennium Development Goals, then what? pp. 9-25

- Jan Vandemoortele
- The Millennium Development Goals: back to the future? pp. 27-43

- Aram Ziai
- Achieving the s and Ensuring Debt Sustainability pp. 45-63

- Bernhard Gunter
- Millennium Development Goal 1: poverty, hunger and decent work in Southeast Asia pp. 65-89

- Neil Renwick
- The ‘Other Diseases’ of the Millennium Development Goals: rhetoric and reality of free drug distribution to cure the poor's parasites pp. 91-117

- Tim Allen and Melissa Parker
- Food Security Politics and the Millennium Development Goals pp. 119-139

- Philip McMichael and Mindi Schneider
- The ‘ and s’ Approach: what is it, why does it matter, and how do we take it forward? pp. 141-163

- Julia Kim, Brian Lutz, Mandeep Dhaliwal and Jeffrey O'Malley
- The Idea of Partnership within the Millennium Development Goals: context, instrumentality and the normative demands of partnership pp. 165-180

- Amy Barnes and Garrett Brown
- The Millennium Development Goals and Development after 2015 pp. 181-198

- Nana Poku and Jim Whitman
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