Profile avatar
profmarkraymond.bsky.social
Wick Cary Associate Professor of International Relations, University of Oklahoma. Associate Editor, International Theory. Associate Director, OADII. Author of Social Practices of Rule-Making in World Politics (OUP 2019), https://academic.oup.com/book/27241
30 posts 295 followers 334 following
Prolific Poster
Conversation Starter
comment in response to post
His dad was a really strange guy. I never spent all that much time with/around them, but looking back he seemed super controlling. Bad temper.
comment in response to post
At one point as a kid I would have called him a friend too, but that was more than 30 years ago now.
comment in response to post
His family were family friends of mine when I was younger. Truly bizarre to see where he wound up, politically.
comment in response to post
I would guess that at least some of this is about subsequent political developments in the US, as well.
comment in response to post
Congratulations! This is fantastic news. Another of the PONI cohort, Ayazhan Muratbek, is also an MAIS grad from OU. She finished a few years after you, so I doubt you met her, but I hope you can connect!
comment in response to post
I’d love to be added, if that’s possible. Thank you for organizing this, in any event!
comment in response to post
👋
comment in response to post
Five months in as Co-editor of International Theory @internatltheory.bsky.social , with @davidawelch.bsky.social , @cearadau.bsky.social , @profmarkraymond.bsky.social , and I am already coming to understand how such journal work can constitute a labour of love. www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
comment in response to post
This looks terrific; congrats!
comment in response to post
3/And we argue that liberal democracies themselves have been undergoing a process of genetic drift, increasingly adopting an understanding of multilateralism that blends it with elements of multistakeholder governance, with heightened participation for nonstate actors.
comment in response to post
2/We argue that authoritarian states like Russia and China are attempting to instantiate authoritarian multilateralism in cyber governance arrangements by editing out the liberal DNA of legacy multilateral forums, and by engaging in parallel order-building.
comment in response to post
Agreed, definitely. But I don’t think I’d be comfortable simply editing a review unilaterally. And if I found out a journal editing a review I submitted, I don’t think personally that I would be especially happy about that. Ultimately not a problem if reviews stay constructive, of course.
comment in response to post
Oops… without.
comment in response to post
Personally, I would be more inclined to decline to use the review rather than editing a review, at least with lout previously discussing that possibility with the reviewer. If a review isn’t usable for whatever reason, asking a board member for an emergency review seems like the best call.
comment in response to post
Is it really a team-based environment, though?