Searching for Peace: The Road to TranscendAnnotation Drawing on the Transcend approach to peace making, Searching for Peace provides a comprehensive guide to conflict resolution. The TRANSCEND method, now used by the UN as a guide to future conflict resolution approaches, applies to all conflict constellations. It has been used in Northern Ireland; Kashmir; Korea; the Gulf conflict; Ecuador and Peru; Kosovo; Guatemala and Honduras; and China and Tibet. Searching for Peace provides a wide ranging survey of past and present approaches to violent conflict prevention, and includes detailed analysis of over forty conflicts as case studies. It critiques the failures of recent peacekeeping and peacemaking efforts while presenting the multi-decade research and arguments that underlie the Transcend approach. Aiming to include all participants in the peace dialogue, TRANSCEND offers hopeful prescriptions for the future. |
Contents
Their Ramifications external domestic racism | 26 |
Some Basic Conflict Formations | 51 |
Partnership | 66 |
Copyright | |
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Other editions - View all
Searching For Peace: The Road to TRANSCEND Johan Galtung,Carl G. Jacobsen,Kai-Frithjof Brand-Jacobsen No preview available - 2002 |
Common terms and phrases
acceptable Accords actors agreement alternative approach arms autonomy basic become border causes cent challenge China Chinese civil concept concern conflict resolution continued cooperation countries creative culture defined demand dialogue direct dominant East economic effectively Europe European example fact federation focus force formation future given global goals groups human ideas important increasing independence individual interests involved islands issue Japan Kurds later leading least less living major means mediation military natural negotiations Northern organizations outcome parties peace perhaps Perspective political positive possible present problem prognosis reason recognized region relations remained responsibility Russian seen Serbs serve sides social society solution South South Korea Soviet space status structures territory Therapy threat traditional TRANSCEND transformation Union United violence Western worker Yugoslavia zone