Edited by: Andrew Hom, Christopher McIntosh, Alasdair McKay, and Liam Stockdale

Contributors: Shahzad Bashir, Kevin K. Birth, Valerie Bryson, Kathryn Marie Fisher, Robert Hassan, Caroline Holmqvist, Kimberly Hutchings, Tim Luecke, Tom Lundborg, Tim Stevens and Ty Solomon.

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION

– Alasdair McKay

TIMING, IDENTITY, AND EMOTION IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

– Andrew R. Hom & Ty Solomon

TIME CREATORS AND TIME CREATURES IN THE ETHICS OF WORLD POLITICS

– Kimberly Hutchings

THE EPISTEMOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES OF TAKING TIME SERIOUSLY AND THE VALUE OF GENERATIONAL ANALYSIS IN IR

– Tim Luecke

GOVERNING THE TIME OF THE WORLD

– Tim Stevens

CALENDAR TIME, CULTURAL SENSIBILITIES, AND STRATEGIES OF PERSUASION

– Kevin K. Birth

ANALOGUE TIME, ANALOGUE PEOPLE AND THE DIGITAL ECLIPSING OF MODERN POLITICAL TIME

– Robert Hassan

TIME, POWER AND INEQUALITIES

– Valerie Bryson

WAR THROUGH A TEMPORAL LENS: FOREGROUNDING TEMPORALITY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS’ CONCEPTIONS OF WAR

– Christopher McIntosh

ISLAM AND THE POLITICS OF TEMPORALITY: THE CASE OF ISIS

– Shahzad Bashir

DISRUPTING THE ‘CONDITIONAL SELFHOOD’ OF THREAT CONSTRUCTION

– Kathryn Marie Fisher

CATASTROPHIC FUTURES, PRECARIOUS PRESENTS, AND THE TEMPORAL POLITICS OF (IN)SECURITY

– Liam P.D. Stockdale

CONCLUSION – HOW TIME SHAPES OUR UNDERSTANDING OF GLOBAL POLITICS

– Caroline Holmqvist & Tom Lundborg