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In the shadow of settlement : multiple rebel groups and precarious peace /Nilsson, Desirée, January 2006 (has links)
Diss. Uppsala : Uppsala universitet, 2006.
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Towards Peaceful Adaptation? Reflections on the purpose, scope, and practice of peace studies in the 21st CenturyKelly, Rhys H.S., Kelly, Ute 07 1900 (has links)
No / Our aim in this article is to articulate and consider a number of questions concerning the future purpose, scope, and practice of peace studies. Our premise, set out in the first section, is that the current era of growth and globalisation will necessarily give way to some degree of social and economic contraction, as the limits to growth implied by the interacting forces of ecological change and resource dependency are encountered. Against this background, we suggest that ‘peaceful adaptation’ could be an appropriate concept to guide consideration of and responses to future challenges associated with building more sustainable forms of society in a context of ‘less’. The remainder of the paper works through a series of questions regarding the meaning of ‘peaceful adaptation', and the potential roles of peace researchers and educators, taking into account the need for peace studies not only to study and contribute to adaptation processes, but to also to respond to the prospect that current systems for knowledge production, dissemination and maintenance may themselves be vulnerable. In each section, we point to examples of existing work that provide promising starting points for engagement, but also highlight some issues and questions that need further attention, especially from the more normative standpoint(s) of ‘peace’.
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Avoiding the Anthropocene: An Assessment of the Extent and Nature of Engagement with Environmental Issues in Peace ResearchKelly, Rhys H.S. 17 June 2020 (has links)
Yes / What is the nature and extent of engagement within peace research with the unfolding
global environmental crisis, as captured in discourses about the ‘Anthropocene’(Bonneuil &
Fressoz, 2017; Dalby, 2015)? Is the peace research scholarly community connecting with
significant debates taking place in the earth sciences or among social and political
movements? If it is, in what ways? Are concepts of violence and peace evolving in line with
the major trends driving change this century, including climate change? This article seeks
answers to these questions through a systematic survey and thematic analysis of publications
in key peace-related journals and book series.What is the nature and extent of engagement within peace research with the unfolding
global environmental crisis, as captured in discourses about the ‘Anthropocene’(Bonneuil &
Fressoz, 2017; Dalby, 2015)? Is the peace research scholarly community connecting with
significant debates taking place in the earth sciences or among social and political
movements? If it is, in what ways? Are concepts of violence and peace evolving in line with
the major trends driving change this century, including climate change? This article seeks
answers to these questions through a systematic survey and thematic analysis of publications
in key peace-related journals and book series.
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(Re)Presentation and (Re)Production of Ideology: The Case of Grand Theft Auto IV, a Framework for the Analysis of Culture and Violence, and the Role of Critical Media Literacy in an Education for Democratic CitizenshipWarnke, Jeffery H. 09 July 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Promoting peace and conflict-sensitive Higher Education in Sub-Saharan AfricaOmeje, Kenneth C. January 2015 (has links)
Yes / It is an increasingly acknowledged fact that one of the most effective ways universities in war-affected countries can be functionally relevant to the everyday needs and challenges of their immediate environment is by promoting peacebuilding through peace education. This paper explores the role of universities in fostering peace education in diverse post-conflict and conflict-prone countries of sub-Saharan Africa. Specifically, the research investigates the contending models and strategies (notably the Bradford Model and the Centralized Unitary Model) of conflict-sensitive peace education in the context of universities in post-conflict and volatile societies in Africa. The study also analyses the problems and challenges associated with promoting peace education in Sub-Saharan Africa and recommends policy-relevant intervention measures designed to strengthen the process. Data for the study have been generated from secondary sources, as well as a raft of conflict intervention, regional security and peacebuilding projects the researcher has taken part in across a number of conflict-prone and war-affected African countries (notably, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Rwanda, Burundi, DRC, Kenya, Uganda, Nigeria and South Sudan).
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Crafting Stories, Making Peace?: Creative Methods in Peace ResearchAndrä, Christine 02 February 2024 (has links)
This article examines the analytical and political potentials of creative methods for peace research. Specifically, the article argues that creative methods can textile, i.e. render material and irregularly textured, (research on) post-conflict politics. Grounded in a collaborative research project with former combatants in Colombia, the article takes this project’s methods – narrative practice, textile-making, and a travelling exhibition – as examples to demonstrate how creative methods’ element of making contributes to the development of post-conflict subjectivities and relationships. Casting the data generated by creative methods as crafted stories, the article also shows how in these stories, semantic meaning becomes entangled with material traces of emotional, affective, and embodied experiences of violence and its aftermath, effecting a shift in the post-conflict distribution of the sensible. By exploring creative methods’ capacity for textiling peace (research), the article contributes to research on creativity, the arts, and peace and on the post-conflict trajectories of former combatants.
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Making Peace in Peace Studies: A Foucauldian Revisioning of a Contested FieldClemens, Julie Lynn 10 December 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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