The prize recognizes and supports the crucial role of theory and theoretical pluralism in and for International Relations in Europe. It is awarded to theoretically innovative articles that elaborate a novel idea, make a significant contribution to existing debates, provide a rigorous analysis and impetus for new research.

Eligibility

    • all articles published online in EJIR in the previous calendar year

Prize

    • the prize will be announced on the EJIR website
    • a presentation of the award at the annual EISA conference
    • an invitation to the Section Chairs’ Dinner at the EISA conference
    • free conference registration
    • a year’s free membership in EISA

We will announce the award winner Mid-June 2025.

Articles published in the 2024 volume of the journal in 2024.

If you have any queries about this award, please contact EISA Office at info@eisa-net.org.

RECIPIENTS

2025

Alvina Hoffmann: What Makes a SpokespersonDelegation and Symbolic Power in Crimea

2024

Iosif Kovras: “Technologies of Justice: Forensics and the Evolution of Transitional Justice”

2023

Jonathan White: “The De-institutionalisation of Power beyond the State”

2022

Stefan Elbe: “Bioinformational Diplomacy: Global Health Emergencies, Data Sharing and Sequential Life”

2021

Xymena Kurowska and Anatoly Reshetnikov:  “Trickstery: pluralising stigma in international society

2020

Deepak Nair: “Saving face in diplomacy: A political sociology of face-to-face interactions in ASEAN”

Ida Danewid: “The fire this time: Grenfell, racial capitalism and the urbanisation of empire”

2019

Joanne Yao“Conquest from barbarism’: The Danube Commission, international order and the control of nature as a Standard of Civilization”

2018

Ted Hopf“Change in international practices”

2017

Jason Ralph and Jess Gifkins“The purpose of United Nations Security Council practice: Contesting competence claims in the normative context created by the Responsibility to Protect”

2016

Lisel Hintz‘”Take It Outside´ National Identity Contestation in the Foreign Policy Arena”

2015

Rebecca Adler-Nissen and Vincent Pouliot“Power in Practice: Negotiating the international intervention in Libya”

2013

Martin Shaw“From Comparative to International Genocide Studies: The International Production of Genocide in 20th Century Europe”