BrunstetterD (2012) Rousseau and the tensions of France’s Contrat d’Accueil et d’Intégration. Journal of Political Ideologies17(1): 107–126.
2.
BrunstetterD (2021) Just and Unjust Uses of Limited Force: A Moral Argument With Contemporary Illustrations. Oxford University Press.
3.
BrunstetterDO’DriscollC (2018) Conclusion. In: BrunstetterDO’DriscollC (eds) Just War Thinkers: From Cicero to the 21st Century. Routledge, pp.250–256.
4.
BurkeA (2004) Just war or ethical peace? Moral discourses of strategic violence after 9/11. International Affairs80(2): 329–353.
5.
EnemarkC (2014) Drones, risk, and perpetual force. Ethics & International Affairs28(3): 365–381.
6.
FloydR (2024) The Duty to Secure: From Just to Mandatory Securitization. Cambridge University Press.
7.
HirschauerS (2025) ‘For nothing is fixed’: race and racism in simultaneous (de)securitization encounters. Critical Studies on Security. Epub ahead of print 2025. 1–22. DOI: 10.1080/21624887.2025.2529617.
8.
HutchingsK (2019) Cosmopolitan just war and coloniality. In: BellD (ed.) Empire, Race, and Global Justice. Cambridge University Press, pp.211–227.
9.
MillsC (1997) The Racial Contract. Cornell University Press.
10.
RousseauJJ (2003) On the Social Contract. (Tr. G. D. H. Cole). Dover Publications, Inc.
11.
WolfendaleJ (2025) Charles W. Mills (1951–2021). In: BrunstetterDO'DriscollC (eds) Just War Thinkers Revisited: Heretics, Humanists and Radicals. Routledge, pp.280–295.