Modelling Conflict-Resolution Dialogues
In: Computational Conflicts, S. 41-62
72 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Computational Conflicts, S. 41-62
In: Computational Conflicts, S. 182-201
In: Water Resources Systems Analysis, S. 21-66
In: Managing and Settling Ethnic Conflicts, S. 115-138
In: Mobilizing for Peace, S. 151-170
In: Transforming Ethnopolitical Conflict, S. 295-319
In: Power, Process and Participation, S. 68-81
A study of ethnic conflict's impact on women's traditionally gender-bound subjugation uses specific examples from the Sinhala & Tamil districts of Sri Lanka. Ceylonese patriarchal underpinnings, recent changes in women's duties, & the political coopting of women's activism are cited. A review of Sri Lankan colonization, ethnic & religious composition, independence, & armed conflict is given, along with current ethnic & political problems. A review of attempts at conflict resolution includes the activities of the Women's Action Committee, Women for Peace, the Mothers & Daughters of Sri Lanka, & the Southern Mothers' Front. The impact of the two last organizations on protests, elections, & peace movements is elucidated. Female participation in the militant Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), along with the LTTE's exploitation & subsequent abandonment of the Mothers' Front is described. A recapping of post-1994 tensions includes information on populist involvement, women's potential impact on conflict resolution, & female survivors' reactions to the need for assistance, organization, & restructuring. M. C. Leary
In: Transforming ethnopolitical conflict: the Berghof handbook, S. 295-319
"Wibke Manson, Oliver Ramsbotham and Tom Woodhouse highlight the importance of peacekeeping both for violence control and for enhancing capacities for peacebuilding. The authors argue that peacekeeping can serve as an important instrument as long as its practice is sufficiently reformed. New thinking about peacekeeping has evolved in response to changing environments of conflict, and places emphasise primarily on the strengthening of enforcement powers while at the same time reinforcing peacebuilding capacities. The new doctrine sets for itself the dual goal of controlling violence while simultaneously maintaining consent and rebuilding co-operative relationships. According to the authors this dual goal can only be achieved if current approaches developed in the academic field are thoroughly integrated with the practice of peacekeeping. Moreover the article points out where knowledge developed in conflict resolution theory can be of relevance for peacekeepers, as well as commenting on perspectives for application and addressing the question of the future needs for peacekeeping." (author's abstract)
In: Power, Process and Participation, S. 82-94
Tuft considers the impact of increasingly prevalent armed conflicts within states from a gender perspective. The multiple dimensions of such wars, as well as their effects on women, are considered in the context of modern Colombian events. The history of political systems & conflict in Colombia is traced from the 1850s, with attention given to violence, elite agreements, & the shifting loci of conflict. The National Front pact, with changes in liberal, conservative, & alternative representation, is reviewed. Effects on civilians, including opposition parties & rural inhabitants caught between conflicting zones, are included. There is delineation of conflict's socioeconomic, sociopolitical, & sociopsychological alterations on individual & social life, with a focus on the challenges by which female Colombians continue to be faced. The efforts of various women's political organizations are described. M. C. Leary
There is questioning of the notion that feminine input on national security systems would necessarily translate into idealized changes. The linking of security with peace is challenged. It is asserted that "the politics of feminization" is more accurately associated with democratization & empowerment. Twentieth-century events affecting the relationship between elitist forces & the populace are cited. Women's effect on security relations between India & Pakistan is detailed & compared with those of Bangladesh & Sri Lanka. Political, nationalistic, & ideological systems are considered. A shift from expectations of national or policy change to one effected on a "people-to-people level" is imagined. The relation of internal security to social unity recounts various South Asian incidents regarding language, religion, sharing of resources, separatism, & class. Women's political actions, from populist protests through policy influence, are reviewed. Figures on South Asian government representation are given & analyzed for "masculine" components. A look at women & communalism takes India's Hindu-Muslim clashes into account. M. C. Leary
In: Mobilizing for Peace, S. 175-198
In: Management Of Shared Groundwater Resources: The Israeli-Palestinian Case With An International Perspective, S. 329-345
In: Contributions of Technology to International Conflict Resolution, S. v-v