ABSTRACT

This Companion examines contemporary challenges in Peace and Conflict Studies (PACS) and offers practical solutions to these problems.

Bringing together chapters from new and established global scholars, the volume explores and critiques the foundations of Peace and Conflict Studies in an effort to advance the discipline in light of contemporary local and global actors.

The book examines the following eight specific components of Peace and Conflict Studies:

  • Peace and conflict studies praxis
  • Structure–agency tension as it relates to social justice, nonviolence, and relationship building
  • Gender, masculinity, and sexuality
  • The role of partnerships and allies in racial, ethnic, and religious peacebuilding
  • Culture and identity
  • Critical and emancipatory peacebuilding
  • International conflict transformation and peacebuilding
  • Global responses to conflict.

It argues that new critical and emancipatory peacebuilding and conflict transformation strategies are needed to address the complex cultural, economic, political, and social conflicts of the 21st century.

This book will be of much interest to students of peace and conflict studies, peace studies, conflict resolution, transitional justice, reconciliation studies, social justice studies, and international relations.

part |21 pages

Introduction

chapter |19 pages

Peace and conflict studies in the 21st century

Theory, substance, and practice

part I|56 pages

Peace and conflict studies praxis (theory and practice)

part II|63 pages

Structure-agency, social justice, nonviolence, and relationship building

chapter 7|17 pages

Peace education and youth

A scholarship of engagement study infusing mentorship and the arts

part III|57 pages

Gender, masculinity, and sexuality

chapter 11|11 pages

Sex trafficking and peace

How patriarchy normalizes direct and structural violence

chapter 13|11 pages

Peace and quiet or not-so-quiet

Gender, rurality, and women’s grassroots peacebuilding

chapter 14|11 pages

Protesting vulnerability and vulnerability as protest

Gender, migration, and strategies of resistance

chapter 15|11 pages

Missing discourses

Recognizing disability and LGBTQ+ communities in conflict transformation

part IV|55 pages

Partnership and allies in racial, ethnic, and religious peacebuilding

chapter 16|11 pages

Nonviolent social movements

Advancing justice on paths to peace

chapter 18|9 pages

Post-traumatic stress disorder and cognitive imperialism

The lost roles of male Indigenous protectors and providers, and their effects on family

chapter 19|10 pages

Religion and peaceful relations

Negotiating the sacred

part V|55 pages

Culture and identity

chapter 22|11 pages

Identity matters

Social identity and social change

chapter 23|11 pages

Making peace profitable

Introducing peaceology as the cultural and identity building blocks of a new peaceful world industry, beginning in Chicago

chapter 24|10 pages

Peacebuilding in response to migration

From securitization to peace in the context of the crisis for migrants in Europe

chapter 25|11 pages

Commissioning educators

The United Nations’ call to advance global peace through teaching intercultural communication

part VI|58 pages

Critical and emancipatory peacebuilding

chapter 27|11 pages

Youth, peace, and security

Global trends and a Colombian case study

chapter 28|12 pages

Joint civil–military interaction

A unity-of-aim method for peacebuilding

chapter 29|10 pages

The paradox of complexity in peace and conflict studies

Indigenous culture, identity, and peacebuilding

chapter 30|12 pages

Innovations

Critical peace education and yogic peace education

part VII|54 pages

International conflict transformation and peacebuilding

chapter 32|10 pages

Engaging the root causes of past violence in Ireland

Ethical education for liberation

chapter 33|10 pages

Buying time in a crisis

The UN Secretary-General and multiplex mediation in a multipolar nuclear world

chapter 34|11 pages

Human security and peacebuilding

Critical tools for operationalizing human rights in the post-Cold War world

chapter 35|11 pages

Transforming ethnic conflict

Building peace and diversity management in divided societies

part VIII|66 pages

Global responses to conflict

chapter 36|11 pages

And what about the African Americans?

Peace and conflict studies neglect of the intractable conflict related to systemic racism in the United States

chapter 38|10 pages

Global responses to armed conflict

The menacing multi-dimensionality of peacebuilding under conditions of state fragility

chapter 40|11 pages

Robust peacekeeping

The most appropriate operational paradigm to address contemporary UN peacekeeping and civilian protection challenges

chapter 41|10 pages

New era in global security

When peace means global complex operations