ABSTRACT

Violence is a prevalent and persistent theme in all aspects of human affairs. A comprehensive understanding of violence therefore requires exposure to the research coming out from all the disciplines in the social sciences: their different methodologies, findings and insights.

This book promotes the merits of an interdisciplinary agenda. By bringing together scholars of violence working in political science, political theory, international relations, economics, philosophy, sociology, psychology and public health, this book explores the complexity of violence and the interface between the empirical and normative dimensions central to this problem. The aim is to investigate the ways in which a correct understanding of this phenomenon must deal with both empirical and normative issues.

There is a tendency for scholars of violence to work predominantly within the narrow parameters of their own discipline: philosophers tend to read fellow philosophers on violence; criminologists tend to rely on the work of fellow criminologists; sociologists tend to trust the writings of fellow sociologists; and so on. This book invites the reader to embrace an interdisciplinary approach towards the universal problem of violence. (178 words)

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

Rethinking violence

chapter |7 pages

Machiavelli and the Gracchi

Prudence, violence and redistribution

chapter |14 pages

Violence for equality

Lessons from Machiavelli

chapter |17 pages

Asymmetric war, symmetrical intentions

Killing civilians in modern armed conflict

chapter |19 pages

Beyond definition

Violence in a global perspective

chapter |12 pages

Economic sanctions and global governance

The case of Iraq

chapter |28 pages

Violence

A public health perspective

chapter |20 pages

Violence, integrity and education

chapter |16 pages

The so-called mindlessness of violence

Violence as a pathological variant of aggression