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Ethnopolitical Warfare: Causes, Consequences, and Possible Solutions [Kõva köide]

Edited by , Edited by
  • Formaat: Hardback, 400 pages, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2001
  • Kirjastus: American Psychological Association
  • ISBN-10: 1557987378
  • ISBN-13: 9781557987372
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 400 pages, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2001
  • Kirjastus: American Psychological Association
  • ISBN-10: 1557987378
  • ISBN-13: 9781557987372
Teised raamatud teemal:
Why does ethnopolitical conflict sometimes lead to genocide and other times to peace? In this volume, political scientists, psychologists, sociologists, and historians examine over a dozen international cases to try to understand what causes a society's ethnic conflicts to escalate or deescalate. This unique book contains cogent critiques of the political and historical antecedents to conflict around the world, combining them with psychological analyses of group identity and intergroup conflict. In examining the escalation of ethnic conflict, the authors highlight the critical role of group identification. How group identification becomes enmeshed with threatened economic resources, violent political subcultures, and media manipulation of collective fear is stressed.

The lessons from the histories of specific countries are given cogent review: Why is Tanzania a rare model of ethnic peace in Africa while its neighbor Rwanda houses the worst case of ethnic warfare on the continent? How can South Africa's history provide a positive example of the resolution of ethnopolitical tensions? This book illustrates the promise that an interdisciplinary approach has to offer in preventing further genocide and ethnic warfare in the 21st century.
Contributors xi Preface xiii Acknowledgments xvii I. Theories of Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict 1(48) Introduction 3(24) Daniel Chirot Ethnicity: Nice, Nasty, and Nihilistic 27(10) Ken Jowitt Nationalism and Ethnicity: Research Agendas on Theories of Their Sources and Their Regulation 37(12) Brendan OLeary II. Genocides 49(68) Theories of the Holocaust: Trying to Explain the Unimaginable 51(20) Peter Suedfeld Armenian Deportations and Massacres in 1915 71(12) Fikret Adanir The Ethnic Element in the Cambodian Genocide 83(10) Ben Kiernan Approaches to Measuring Genocide: Excess Mortality During the Khmer Rouge Period 93(16) Patrick Heuveline Genocide in Rwanda 109(8) Gerard Prunier III. Major Ethnopolitical Warfare That Stopped Short of Genocide 117(86) From Ethnic Cooperation to Violence and War in Yugoslavia 119(32) Anthony Oberschall The Yugoslav Catastrophe 151(12) Misha Glenny Kurds in Turkey: A Nationalist Movement in the Making 163(16) Resat Kasaba Explaining the Long Peace: War in Latin America 179(24) Miguel Angel Centeno IV. Limited, Contained, and Partly Resolved Ethnopolitical Warfare 203(84) The Northern Ireland Conflict: Prospects and Possibilities 205(10) Tony Gallagher Control and the Stability of Jewish-Arab Relations in Israel 215(20) Ian S. Lustick Who Pays for Peace? Implications of the Negotiated Settlement in a Post-Apartheid South Africa 235(24) Brandon Hamber The Accommodation of Cultural Diversity in Tanzania 259(16) Aili Mari Tripp Crawford Young Why Has There Been No Race War in the American South? 275(12) John Shelton Reed V. The Social Psychology of Ethnopolitical Warfare and Psychologys Contributions to the Solutions 287(76) Ethnopolitical and Other Group Violence: Origins and Prevention 289(16) Ervin Staub Psychosocial Assistance During Ethnopolitical Warfare in the Former Yugoslavia 305(14) Inger Agger Social Psychology and Intergroup Conflict 319(24) Miles Hewstone Ed Cairns The Psychology of Group Identification and the Power of Ethnic Nationalism 343(20) Clark McCauley Author Index 363(8) Subject Index 371(8) About the Editors 379