PEACE PARADIGMS - SIS 607.02
FALL 2000
WEDNESDAY 8:10 -10:40 PM
Never
doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed
citizens can
change the world.
Indeed, it
is the only thing that ever has.
Margaret Mead
Dr Michael Salla
Office: SIS Building, Room 310
Phone: (202) 885 1497
Email: msalla@american.edu
http://www.american.edu/salla/
Course Description
Peace is a concept that is universally esteemed but understood
and established in spectacularly different ways. Defining the peace concept
is enormously tricky given the wide range of meanings it has been given
by prominent diplomats, scholars, activists and educators. This leads to
definitions which are either too narrow, or so broad as to render the peace
concept rather nebulous. This definitional problem makes global consensus
on how peace can be established almost impossible. Indeed, a past president
of the International Studies Association and a noted peace scholar,Chadwick
Alger has pointed out: " [peace] activists, educators, and researchers
have difficulty in collaborating with each other."
Developing a comprehensive peace concept is difficult due to any definition
explicitly or implicitly adopting a set of assumptions that have contested
validity. A means of charting through these heady definitional waters and
making sense of the differing ways in which peace is understood and the
assumptions that undergird these conceptions is to discuss peace in terms
of five 'paradigms'.
For those who
have not read Thomas Kuhn's seminal work, The Structure of Scientific
Revolutions, a paradigm is a way of understanding scientific reality
that becomes dominant for a distinct period of time. A paradigm has its
own dominant assumptions about the nature of reality which makes possible
different theories for understanding the world. Using the notion of a paradigm
allows me to place contending concepts of peace within distinct sets of
theoretical and epistemological assumptions. Quite a mouthful but what
I essentially mean is that the different ways of understanding peace can
be broken up into five different families and in each family there are
several members. The five families or peace paradigms are peace
through coercion; peace through global order; peace through nonviolence
and peace activism; peace through conflict resolution; and peace through
global transformation.
Special emphasis will be on exploring the implicit assumptions
that undergird the different ways in which peace is conceptualized, and
how these assumptions impact on the effectiveness of various strategies
developed for realizing peace. Some of the key assumptions to be examined
include the use of military force, the evolution of global order values,
effectiveness of activism, the role of improved communication, and the
transformative potential of moral behavior.
You will be expected to perform a collaborative group
project whereby you observe and report on an organization, either governmental
or non-governmental, working towards one of the peace paradigms covered
in the course. During the course, you will design a class activity that
illustrates the organization's work through a class activity.
At the end of the course, you should have a firm understanding
of the implicit assumptions that undergird the way peace is conceptualized
and practiced, and more effectively contribute to the realization of you
own preferred paradigms. The aim is to cast light into a rather murky field
so that you can make an informed choice about how you can better promote
and establish global peace.
You will also have developed an awareness of some of the
organizations in the Washington DC area working in peace related areas.
Course Requirements
and Evaluation
1. Class Participation 20%
Your participation will be graded on the basis of three
criteria: clarity; content; and context. Clarity refers to whether your
comments are clear, coherent and comprehensible. Are you making yourself
understood? Content refers to the substance of your remarks. Are your comments
thoughtful, well-informed and to the point? Context refers to how well
you integrate your comments with issues pertinent to the course or to ongoing
class discussion. Do you build upon what others have said either by agreeing
or disagreeing with them?
Class discussion comes more easily for some people than
for others. By temperament or habit, some are 'talkers' while others are
'listeners'. Learn to be both. An old Ghanian proverb says that 'we have
two ears and one mouth, learn to use them in proportion!' If you are a
'talker', learn to give enough space for others to speak. If a 'listener',
try to participate more in discussions especially in small group discussions.
2. Reflective Papers 30%
You are to complete five reflective papers of between
750 - 1000 words (3 - 4 typed double space pages) that examines the readings
for each paradigm. The reflective papers should not be a detailed
summary of the readings but should instead be a personal response in terms
of how the readings have (or have not!) contributed to your own understanding
of the peace paradigm under discussion. Your paper needs to show some evidence
that you have read most if not all of the set readings. In writing your
reflective paper, you need to explicity consider the following questions.
-
How did the readings assist my understanding of peace?
-
What was my favorite article(s) from that week's reading.
Why? What issues did it discuss that had particular resonance with me.
-
In what way did my favorite article relate to the other readings?
-
What was the least informative article(s). Why?
-
What personal experience or topical events relate to the
peace concept advanced in the readings?
Note that reflective papers will be graded. Papers scoring
less than a B+ can be resubmitted for a maximum of B+. You need to complete
all reflective papers.
Due dates for the reflective papers are: Sept 13; Oct
4, Oct 25, Nov 15, Dec 6.
3. Group Project - 20%
You will be required to collaborate in groups of two
in exploring the peacemaking efforts of an organization, governmental or
non-governmental, based in your local area. Your group needs to hand in
a three-four page report - double spaced and typed - of the work of the
mandate of the organization, the activities it carries out to fulfill this
mandate, and your analysis of the viability of the organization in its
peacemaking efforts. Your group needs to design a class activity which
is both informative and illustrative of the organization's mandate and
activities. A list of peace and conflict resolution organizations in the
Washington DC area can be found on my homepage under the category of Organizations
and Resources in the Washington Area.
Groups will lead the class activity - total no longer
than 15 mins in length - in the week dealing with substantive issues closest
to those dealt with by the organization. Group led class activities will
begin on Sept 20. Your group will be assigned a collective mark
for the class activity and report.
4. Research Paper - 30%
A list of questions will be given to you from which you
choose one to write a research paper. Each paper should critically question
the literature in terms of diverging approaches and perspectives taken
by the respective authors for each approach to peace and conflict resolution.
This means you must do more than just describe key institutions, organizations
or processes relevant to the question. There must be some attempt to develop
an analytical framework and overall argument in your essay. More detailed
recommendations for essay writing appear at the end of this syllabus -
make sure you read this since it outlines my expectations of a good essay.
Papers must be between 12-15 double spaced pages, fully referenced
& including a bibliography, must by submitted by November 29.
Note: You are expected to submit a two page outline of
your planned paper on Nov 8. The outline should explicitly state
your main argument in response to the question. The outline should
be broken down into section headings with a brief description of what you
expect each section to cover. You need to use prose to explain the framework
you use rather than just provide a series of numbered headings which give
me little idea of whether your essay is descriptive, analytical or indeed
even answers the question. You should also include a bibliography of at
least eight books/articles that you will use for the essay. Remember, the
outline is intended to get you thinking in advance of the issues that you
will be investigating, and of developing an argument and framework that
will give your essay coherence. The more work you put into it, the easier
it will be for more to identify any potential problem areas and to give
you constructive suggestions.
Required
Texts
-
Chester A. Crocker, et al., Managing Global Chaos: Sources
of and Responses to International Conflict (Washington, DC: US Institute
for Peace, 1996)
-
Johan Galtung, Peace by Peaceful Means (London: Sage
Publications, 1996)
-
Robert Elias & Jennifer Turpin, Rethinking Peace
(Boulder, CO.: Lynne Riener, 1994)
-
Abdul Aziz Said, Charles O. Lerche, Jr & Charles O. Lerche
III, Concepts of International Politics in Global Perspective, 4th
ed. (Prentice Hall, 1995)
-
Marshall Rosenberg, Nonviolent Communication (Puddle
Dancer Press, 1999)
-
I. William Zartman & J. Lewis Rasmussen, Peacemaking
in International Conflict: Methods & Techniques (US Institute of
Peace, 1997)
-
Roger Fisher and William Ury, Getting to Yes: Negotiating
Agreement Without Giving In, 2nd ed. (New York: Penguin Books,
1991)
-
John Vasquez, James Turner, James Johnson, Sanford Jaffe,
Linda Stamato, Beyond Confrontation, Learning Conflict Resolution in
the Post-Cold War Era (University of Michigan Press, 1998.
-
Larry Fisk & John Schellenberg, Patterns of Conflict:
Paths to Peace (Broadview Press, 2000)
-
Note: Course
Reserve Material is available on the American University Electronic Resrve
System or go directly to http://eresau.wrlc.org
The password is SALLA607 (the system is case sensitive).
ONLINE JOURNALS
COVERING PEACE STUDIES
Further Note: There is an ever growing number of
Worldwide Web links with reports, statements, articles, etc., concerning
peace research. You can access many of these links by clicking the Peace
Research Link on my homepage. Further Research Links provides links to
think tanks and research organizations with relevant material.
Class
Schedule
Aug 30 Understanding Peace Studies in the C21st Century
-
Michael Salla, "Integral Peace: A Foucauldian Perspective,
" Peace and Change 23:3 (1998): 312-32 (www.american.edu/salla/home-art.htm)
-
Robert Elias & Jennifer Turpin, Introduction, Thinking
About Peace, 1-12
-
Galtung, Peace by Peaceful Means, 24-39;196-210
-
Conrad Brunk, "Shaping a Vision: The Nature of Peace Studies,"
in Patterns of Conflict, 11-34.
-
J. Lewis Rasmussen, Peacemaking in the Twenty-First Century,
New Rules, New Roles, New Actors in Peacemaking in International Conflict,
23-50
Further Reading
-
Johan Galtung, "Peace and Conflict Research in the Age of
the Cholera: Ten Pointers to the Future of Peace Studies," Peace and Conflict
Studies 2:1 (June 1995) http://www.TCNJ.EDU/~psm/pcs/manuscripts/pcs0007m.html
-
Louis Kriesberg, "The Development of the Conflict Resolution
Field," in Peacemaking in International Conflict, 51-80
-
William Zartman, "Toward the Resolution of International
Conflicts, in Peacemaking in International Conflict, 3-22
-
Said, et al., Concepts of International Politics, 119-34
I. Peace
through Coercion
Sept 6 Benign Hegemony/Imperialism
-
Robert Kagan, "The Benevolent Empire," Foreign Policy
(Summer 1998) 24-35
http://eresau.wrlc.org
(password is SALLA607)
-
Charles Maynes, "The Perils of (And for) an Imperial America,"
Foreign Policy (Summer 1998) 36-49 http://eresau.wrlc.org
(password is SALLA607)
-
Michael Salla, introduction and conclusion from America's
Seventh Hero's Journey & the Second American Century (unpublished manuscript)
(www.american.edu/salla/home-art.htm)
Further Reading
-
Joseph Gerson, "The Gulf War and the New World Order," Rethinking
Peace, eds., Elias & Turpin, 17-25
-
Eliot Cohen, "Military Power and International Order: Is
Force Finished," Managing Global Chaos, 223-36
-
Frank Crigler, "Policing A Disorderly World," American
Diplomacy 2:1 (1997).
http://www.unc.edu/depts/diplomat/archives/arcframe.html
-
James M.
Lindsay, Looking for Leadership Domestic Politics and Foreign Policy,"
Brookings Review 18:1 (2000): 40-43. http://www.brook.edu/press/REVIEW/winter2000/lindsay.htm
-
Alexander George, "The Role of Force in Diplomacy: A Continuing
Dilemma For U.S. Foreign Policy," Managing Global Chaos 209-22
-
Robert H.
Dorff, "Democratization, Failed States, and Peace Operations: THE CHALLENGE
OF UNGOVERNABILITY, American Diplomacy 1:2 (1996).
http://www.unc.edu/depts/diplomat/archives/arcframe.html
Sept 13 First Reflective Paper Due
Sept 13. Collective Security
-
James Goodby, "Can Collective Sercurity Work: Reflections
on the European Case?" Managing Global Chaos, eds., Chester A. Crocker,
et al., 237-54.
-
Adam Roberts, "The Crisis in UN Peacekeeping,"Managing
Global Chaos, eds., Chester A. Crocker, et al., 297-320
-
Denis McLean, "Peace Operations and Common Sense," Managing
Global Chaos, eds., Chester A. Crocker, et al., 321-33
-
Michael Renner, "Peacekeeping and the United Nations,"
Foreign Policy in Focus 1: 28 (December 1996) http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/briefs/vol1/unpeace.html
Further
Reading
-
Ruth Wedgwood, "Regional and Subregional Organizations
in International Conflict Management," Managing Global Chaos, eds., Chester
A. Crocker, et al., 275-286
-
Boutros Boutros-Ghali, An Agenda for Peace, New York:
United Nations Department of Public Information, 1992. http://www.un.org/docs/sg/agpeace.html
-
Noëlle Quénivet, "Humanitarian assistance:
a right or a policy? Case study: the Security Council and the armed conflict
in the former Yugoslavia," Journal of Humanitarian Assistance (January
1999). http://131.111.106.147/b\b527.pdf
-
Cedric Thornberry, "Peacekeeping, Peacemaking and Human
Rights," Occassional Paper,
INCORE, http://www.incore.ulst.ac.uk/publications/occasional/cedric.html
-
Mohammed Ayoob, "Squaring the Circle: Collective Security
in a System of States,"
Collective Security in a Changing World: A World
Peace Foundation Study, ed. Thomas Weiss (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers,
1993) 45-62
-
Raimo Vayrynen, "The United Nations and the Resolution
of International Conflicts," The United Nations and a Just World Order
, eds. Richard Falk, et al. (Westview Press, 1991) 222-239
-
Leon Gordenker & Thomas G.Weiss, "The Collective
Security Idea and Changing World Politics," Collective Security in a Changing
World: A World Peace Foundation Study, ed. Thomas Weiss (Boulder, CO: Lynne
Rienner Publishers, 1993) 3-18
-
Gareth Evans, Cooperating for Peace, (Sydney: Allen &
Unwin, 1993)
II.
Peace through Global Order
Sept 20 International Law
-
James Turner Johnston, "International Law & the Peaceful
Resolution of Interstate Conflict," Beyond Confrontation, eds. Vasques,
et al., 155-78
-
Neil J. Kritz, "The Rule of Law in the Postconflict Phase:
Building a Stable Peace,"
Managing Global Chaos, eds., Crocker, et al.,
587-606.
-
Said, et al., Concepts of International Politics, 140-46
Further
Reading
-
Oscar Schachter, "The Role of International Law in Maintaining
Peace," Approaches to Peace, eds. Thompson, et al., 65-127
-
Jost Delbruck, "Peace Through Emerging International Law,"
The Quest for Peace, ed. Raimo Vayrynen (Sage Publications, 1987) 127-43
-
Myres S. McDougal, "Law and Peace," Approaches to Peace,
eds. Thompson, et al., 129-170
-
Samuel S. Kim, "The United Nations, Lawmaking, and World
Order," The United Nations and a Just World Order , eds. Richard Falk,
et al. (Westview Press, 1991) 109-24
Sept 27 Human Rights
Human Rights Web, "A Short History of the Human
Rights Movement,"
http://www.hrweb.org/history.html
-
Said, et al., Concepts of International Politics, 261-77
-
Katarina Tomasevski, "The Right to Peace after the Cold War,"
Rethinking Peace, Elias & Turpin 234-45
-
Joseph Wronka, "Creating a Human Rights Culture: Implications
for Peace," Peace and Conflict Studies 2:1 (June 1995)
http://www.TCNJ.EDU/~psm/pcs/manuscripts/pcs0010m.html
-
United Nations Fact Sheet, "The International Bill ofHuman
Rights,"
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu6/2/fs2.htm
Further
Reading
-
Human Rights Web, "An Introduction to Human Rights", http://www.hrweb.org/intro.html
-
Seyom Brown, International Human Rights (Addison Wesley Longman,
2000
-
Miller, Global Order, 187-226
-
Samuel S. Kim, "Global Human Rights and World Order," in
The United Nations and a Just World Order, eds., Falk, et al., 356-76
Oct 4 Second Reflective Paper Due
Oct 4 Development, Global Economy & the Environment
-
Said, et al., Concepts of International Politics, 209-43
-
Jeanne Vickers, "Development with a Human Face," Rethinking
Peace, eds., Elias & Turpin, 246-53
-
Kofi Annan, An Agenda for Development, (New York: United
Nations Department of Public Information, 1997). http://www.un.org/Docs/SG/ag_index.htm
-
Carol Welch "Structural Adjustment Programs & Poverty
Reduction Strategy," Foreign Policy in Focus 5:14 (April 2000)
http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/briefs/vol5/v5n14sap.html
-
Jeremy Brecher and Brendan Smith, "The Global Sustainable
Development Resolution,"
Foreign Policy in Focus 4: 12 (April 1999)
http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/briefs/vol4/v4n12gsdr.html
-
Lane Kenworthy, "What Do We Do Now?" Rethinking Peace, eds.
Elias & Turpin, 254-61
-
Foreign Policy Interview, "Lori's War," Foreign Policy (Spring
2000) 28-55
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/Spring2000/wallach/lori1.html
Further
Reading
-
Aileen Kwa, "WTO and Developing Countries," Foreign Policy
in Focus 3:37 (November 1998) http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/briefs/vol3/v3n37wto.html
-
David Vogel, "Environmental Regulation and Economic Integration,"
http://www.wtowatch.org/wtowatch/library/admin/uploadedfiles/World_Trade_and_the_Environment_A_Review_of_th.htm
-
United Nations Fact Sheet, "The Committee on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights,"
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu6/2/fs16.htm
-
Arthur J Hanson and Nevin Shaw, "NAFTA and the Environment:
Progress in Sustainable Development," http://www.wtowatch.org/wtowatch/library/admin/uploadedfiles/NAFTA_and_the_Environment_Progress_in_Sustaina.htm
-
United Nations Development Program, "Integrating human rights
with sustainable human development," http://magnet.undp.org/Docs/policy5.html
-
NGO Consortium, "NEW INTERNATIONAL NGO STATEMENT ON WTO:
WTO -- SHRINK OR SINK", http://www.wtowatch.org/wtowatch/library/admin/uploadedfiles/New_International_NGO_Statement_on_the_WTO_Shr.htm
-
•Jeffrey Sachs, "International Economics: Unlocking the Mysteries
of Globalization,"
Foreign Policy (Spring 1998): 97-111
-
Joseph Stiglitz & Lyn Squire, "International Development:
Is it Possible?" Foreign Policy (Spring 1998): 138-51
-
Nancy Birdsall, "Life is Unfair: Inequality in the World,"
Foreign Policy (Summer 1998): 76-94
-
Michael Renner, "Who Are the Enemies," Rethinking Peace,
eds., Turpin & Elias, 104-10.
-
Galtung, Peace by Peaceful Means, 127-38; 185-95
-
Terry Collingsworth, "An Enforceable Social Clause," Foreign
Policy in Focus 3: 28 (October 1998) http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/briefs/vol3/v3n28soc.html
-
Johan Galtung, "The New International Economic Order and
the Basic Needs Approach,"
The United Nations and a Just World Order, eds.,
Falk, et al., 292-306
-
Kauppi & Viotti, International Relations Theory, 455-71
-
Immanuel Wallerstein, "The World-System After the Cold War,"
Journal of Peace Research 30:1 (1993): 1-6
III.
Peace through Nonviolence & Peace Activism
Oct 11 Nonviolent Action
-
Martin Luther King, "Letter From Birmingham Jail," Why We
Can't Wait! (New York: Mentor Books, 1964) 76-95 http://www.stanford.edu/group/King/frequentdocs/birmingham.html
-
Martin Luther King, "Address delivered in Acceptance of Nobel
Peace Prize," Oslo, Norway (10 December 1964)
http://www.stanford.edu/group/King/speeches/acceptance_speech_at_nobel_peace.htm
-
Mahatma Gandhi, The Mind of Mahatma Gandhi, [read passages
9, 21-29, 33-34]
http://www.nagpuronline.com/momgbook/
-
Michael Salla, "Satyagraha in Mahatma Gandhi's Political
Philosophy," Peace Research 25:1 (1993): 39-62
-
Said, et al., Concepts of International Politics, 256-60
-
Jo Vellacott, "Nonviolence: A Road Less Travelled," Patterns
of Conflict, 103-142
-
Michael N. Nagler, "Peacemaking Through Nonviolence," Peace
and Conflict Studies, 4:2 (December 1997) http://www.gmu.edu/academic/pcs/nagler.html
Further Reading
-
Alberto L'Abate, "Nonviolent Interposition in Armed Conflicts,"
Peace and Conflict Studies, 4: 1 (July 1997) http://www.gmu.edu/academic/pcs/labate.htm
-
Martin Luther King, "I've Been to the Mountaintop" [King's
Last Speech]
http://www.stanford.edu/group/King/speeches/I%27ve_been_to_the_mountaintop.html
-
Stephen Murphy, "A Brief outline of Gandhi's Philosophy,"
http://www.gandhiserve.com/information/writings_online/brief_philosophy/brief_philosophy.htm
-
Galtung, Peace by Peaceful Means, 114-26
-
Christian Mellon, et al., "Civil Deterrence," Rethinking
Peace, eds., Elias & Turpin, 269-78
-
Michael Salla, "The efficacy of nonviolence in international
relations: a critique," Australian Journal of Political Science 28:3 (1993):
458-80 (www.american.edu/salla/home-art.htm)
-
Robert Burrowes, The Strategy of Nonviolent Defence (Ithaca,
NY: Syracuse University Press, 1996) 153-75.
-
Ralph Summy, "Nonviolence and the Case of the Extremely Ruthless
Opponent," Essays on Peace, eds. Salla, et al., 159-84
-
Michael Salla, "'Abrahamic Minorities' & 'Committed Groups':
Nonviolent Intervention in International Conflict," Essays on Peace, eds.,
Salla, et al., 147-58
-
Peter Ackerman & Christopher Kruegler, Strategic Nonviolent
Conflict: The Dynamics of People Power in the Twentieth Century (Westport,
Conn.: Praeger, 1994) 1-54
-
Joan Bondurant, Conquest of Violence: The Gandhian Philosophy
of Conflict, New Revised Edition (Princeton University Press, 1988) 15-45
Oct 18 Peace and Justice through Activism
-
Chadwick Alger, "A Grass Roots Approach to Life in Peace,"
Rethinking Peace, eds., Elias & Turpin, 282-89
-
Will Swaim & Michael Shuman, "Municipal Diplomacy," Rethinking
Peace, eds., Elias & Turpin, 305-12
-
Patricia Chilton & Jiri Dienstbeir, "The European Citizens'
Assembly," Rethinking Peace, eds., Elias & Turpin, 290-96
-
David Krieger, "Ending the Scourge of War," Rethinking Peace,
eds., Elias & Turpin, 318-25
-
Jackie Smith, "Frame or Be Framed,"Rethinking Peace, ed.
Elias & Turpin 312-17
-
Who Are the Enemies, Rethinking Peace, ed. Elias & Turpin
104-110
-
Nigel Young, "From Protest to Cultural Creativity: Peace
Movements Identified and Revisited," Patterns of Conflict, 143-158
-
William Eldrige, "Community and World Harmony: New Citizen
Peacemaking Roles for a Changing Global Culture," Peace and Conflict Studies
1:1 (December 1994)
http://www.TCNJ.EDU/~psm/pcs/manuscripts/pcs0001m.html
-
Peter Wirth, "Influencing Public Opinion - A Challenge for
Activists," The Online Journal of Peace and Conflict Resolution (Nov 1999),
http://trinstitute.org/ojpcr/2_4wirth.htm
Further Reading
-
P.J. Simmons, "Learning to Live With NGO's," Foreign Policy
(Fall 1998): 82-96
-
Keith Suter, "Towards a Federal World State?" Essays on Peace,
eds. Salla, et al., 196-212
-
Pamela Aall, "Nongovernmental Organisations and Peacemaking,"
Managing Global Chaos, eds., Chester A. Crocker, et al., 433-44.
-
Majid Tehranian, "Creating Spaces for Peace: A Comparative
Overview of Zones of Peace,"
Essays on Peace, eds. Salla, et al., 247-54
-
Salla, et al., "Towards a Global Educative Authority," Essays
on Peace, eds. Salla, et al., 255-63
-
R.B.J. Walker, One World, Many Worlds (Lynne Rienner, 1988)
145-70
Oct 5 Third Reflective Paper is Due
Oct 25 Gender and Dismantling Patriarchy
-
Mary Burguieres, "Feminist Approaches to Peace: Another Step
for Peace Studies,"
Millenium 19:1 (1990): 1-18. http://eresau.wrlc.org
(password is SALLA607)
-
J. Ann Tickner, "Feminist Perspectives on Peace and World
Security in the Post-Cold War Era," Peace and World Security Studies: A
Curriculum Guide, ed. Michael Klare (Boulder, CO.: Lynne Rienner, 1994)
43-54. http://eresau.wrlc.org (password
is SALLA607)
-
Galtung, Peace by Peaceful Means, 40-48
-
Birgit Brock-Utne, "Listen to Women, for a Change," Rethinking
Peace, eds., Elias & Turpin, 205-209
-
Francis Fuyuyama, "Women and the Evolution of World Politics,"
Foreign Affairs (Sept/Oct 1998): http://eresau.wrlc.org
(password is SALLA607)
-
Barbara Ehrenreich, et al., "Fukuyama's Follies," Foreign
Affairs (Jan-Feb 1999): 118-29.
-
Johan Galtung, Peace by Peaceful Means, 40-48 http://eresau.wrlc.org
(password is SALLA607)
-
Myriam Miedzian, "Real Men, Wimps and National Security,"
in Rethinking Peace, 17-25
-
Tom Digby, "One More Lesson from the Vietnam War," Injustice
Studies 1:1 (November 1997) http://wolf.its.ilstu.edu/injustice/
Further Reading
-
Betty Reardon, Women and Peace: Feminist Visions of Global
Security (Albany, NY: SUNY, 1993) 141-70
-
Mary S. Perpinan, "Peace a Breakaway from Patriarchy," Essays
on Peace, eds. Salla, et al., 78-80
-
B. Roberts, "The Death of Machothink: Feminist Research and
the Transformation of Peace Studies," Women's Studies International Forum
7:4 (1984): 195-200
-
•Partha Banerjee, "Extreme Cruelty: Bride Burning and Dowry
Deaths in India," Injustice Studies 1:1 (November 1997) http://wolf.its.ilstu.edu/injustice/
-
Eileen Shewan, "Women and Development," Essays on Peace,
eds. Salla, et al., 81-91
-
Jan Pettman, Worlding Women: A Feminist International Politics
(London: Allen & Unwin, 1996) 87-125
IV Peace
through Conflict Resolution
Nov 1 Conflict Resolution Through Problem Solving
-
Roger Fisher and William Ury, Getting to Yes: Negotiating
Agreement Without Giving In, 2nd ed. (New York: Penguin Books, 1991)
-
Robert Bush, "Dispute Resolution" in Beyond Confrontation,
eds. Vasques, et al., 9-38
-
Deborah Kolb & Eileen Babbit, "Mediation Practice on
the Home Front," Beyond Confrontation, eds. Vasques, et al., 63-86
-
John W. Burton, "Conflict Resolution: Towards Problem Solving,"
Peace and Conflict Studies, 4:2 (December 1997) http://www.gmu.edu/academic/pcs/burton.htm
Loraleigh Keashly and William Warters, "Working It
Out: Conflict in Interpersonal Contexts," Patterns of Conflict, 35-66
Further Reading
-
Louis Kriesberg, "Applications and Misapplications of Conflict
Resolution Ideas to International Conflicts, Beyond Confrontation, eds.
Vasques, et al., 87-102
-
John Burton, "Conflict Provention as a Political Philosophy,"
in Beyond Confrontation, 115-30
-
• John Vasquez, "Why Global Conflict Resolution is Possible,"
Beyond Confrontation, eds. Vasques, et al., 131-54
-
Galtung, Peace by Peaceful Means 70-80, 89-113
Nov 8 Outline for Research Paper Due
Nov 8 Conflict Resolution Through Relational Change
-
Dean Pruitt, The Psychology of Social Conflict and Its Relevance
to International Conflict,
Beyond Confrontation, eds. Vasques, et al.,
103-14
-
Herbert Kelman, "The Interactive Problem-Solving Approach,"
Managing Global Chaos, eds., Crocker, et al., 501-519
-
I. William Zartman & Saadia Touval, "International Mediation
in the Post-Cold War Era,"
Managing Global Chaos, eds., Crocker, et al.,
445-62
-
Herbert Kelman, Social-Psychological Dimensions of International
Conflict, in Peacemaking in International Conflict, 191-238
-
Ronald Fisher, "Interactive Conflict Resolution," Peacemaking
in International Conflict,
239-272
-
Janice Gross Stein, "Image,
Identity, and Conflict Resolution," Managing Global Chaos, eds., Crocker,
et al., 93-112.
Further Reading
-
Robert Bush & Joseph Folger, The Promise of Mediation
(Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1994)
Nov
15 Fourth Reflective Paper Due
Nov
15 Conflict Resolution through Improved Communication
-
Marshall Rosenberg, Nonviolent Communication, 1-150
-
Raymond Cohen, "Negotiating Across Cultures," Managing Global
Chaos, eds., Crocker, et al 487-500
Video: Nonviolent Communication
V.
Peace through Personal, Social & Global Transformation
Nov 29 Research Paper Due
Nov 29 Peace Education, Peace Building & Democratization
-
Paul Smoker and Linda Groff, "Creating Global-Local Cultures
of Peace," Peace and Conflict Studies, 3: 1 (June 1996) http://www.gmu.edu/academic/pcs/smoker.htm
-
Lana L. Hostetler, "Preparing Children for Peace," Rethinking
Peace, Elias & Turpin 200-05
-
Larry Fisk, "Shaping Visionaries: Nurturing Peace Through
Education," Patterns of Conflict,
159-194.
-
Arnold Goldstein, "Aggression Reduction Strategies," Rethinking
Peace, Elias & Turpin 262-68
-
Joshua Muravchik, "Promoting Peace Through Democracy," Managing
Global Chaos, eds., Crocker, et al., 573-85
-
Fareed Zakaria, "The Rise of Illiberal Democracy," Foreign
Affairs, 76:6 (1997) 22-43 http://eresau.wrlc.org
(password is SALLA607)
-
Johan Galtung, Peace by Peaceful Means, 49-59; 253-64
-
Kevin Clements, "Peace Building and Conflict Transformation,"
Peace and Conflict Studies, 4: 1 (June 1997) http://www.gmu.edu/academic/pcs/clements.htm
-
Elizabeth Cohn, "U.S. Democratization Assistance," Foreign
Policy in Focus 4: 20 (July 1999) http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/briefs/vol4/v4n20demo.html
Further Reading
-
Riitta Wahlstrom, "The Challenge of Peace Education: Replacing
Cultures of Militarism,"
New Agendas for Peace Research, ed. Boulding,
171-84
-
Francisco
Parajon, et al., "The UNESCO Culture of Peace Program in El Salvador,"
International
Journal of Peace Studies 1:2 (1996): 1-20
-
R.J. Romell, "Political Systems, Violence and War," Approaches
to Peace, 347-70
-
Elise Boulding, "Learning Peace," The Quest for Peace, ed.
Vayrynen 317-29
-
John Vasques, "The Learning of Peace: Lessons from a Multidisciplinary
Approach," Beyond Confrontation, eds. Vasques, et al., 211-18
-
Vicence Fisas Armengol, "Ten Bases for a Culture of Peace,"
Peace Culture & Society, eds., Elise Boulding, et al. (Boulder, CO:
Westview 1991)
Dec 6 Fifth Reflective Paper Due
Dec 6 Peace through Spirituality & Global Transformation:
Michael Salla, "Conflict
Resolution, Genetics and Alchemy - The Evolution of Conflict Transmutation,"
unpublished paper (www.american.edu/salla/home-art.htm)
Joshua Stone, "Transcending Armageddon Within Self and Society,"
http://www.spiritweb.org/Spirit/armageddon-stone.html
Craig Donaldson, "The Violet Flame: The Alchemists
Dream,"
http://www.spiritweb.org/Spirit/violet-flame-donaldson.html
Galtung, Peace by Peaceful Means, 211-40
-
Said,
et al., Concepts of International Politics, 278-89
-
John P. Walsh, "Integrating Buddhist Philosophy and Peacemaking
Theory: Further Thought for Development" Online Journal of Peace and Conflict
Resolution 2:2 (May 1999)
http://www.trinstitute.org/ojpcr/2_2walsh.htm
-
Linda Groff & Paul Smoker, Spirituality, Religion, Culture,
And Peace," International Journal of Peace Studies 1:1 (1996): 57-89 http://eresau.wrlc.org
(password is SALLA607)
Further Reading
-
Joseph Campbell, The Hero With a Thousand Faces (Princeton
University Press, 1968) 3-48, 381-91
-
Carl Jung, "The Structure of the Psyche;" "The Concept of
the Collective Unconscious;" "Aion: Phenomenology;" The Portable Jung,
NY: Viking Press, 1971) 23-46; 59-69; 139-48; 59-69
-
Ronna Herman, "You are Shape-Shifting into a New Reality,"
http://www.spiritweb.org/Spirit/michael-herman-mesg-09.html
Fifth Reflective Paper is Due
Take Home Exam is Due
SUGGESTIONS
FOR ESSAY WRITING
The essence of good essay writing is to be found in the
quality of your argument and the level of analysis. The essay must go beyond
description and narrative. It is not enough just to tell a story, nor is
it enough just to produce a large number of facts related to the topic
of your essay, nor is it enough to merely recount what the authors of the
textbooks have to say about the topic. The essay should represent your
considered perspective and your informed thoughts on the problem you have
been asked to write about. Of course, you cannot begin to construct a considered
perspective or develop informed thoughts unless you first have a firm understanding
of the subject matter. So the first step is reading intensively and acquiring
a grasp of both the factual material and the arguments, debates, and differences
between those scholars who have contributed to the literature on the subject.
Having done that, you are then in a position to analyse the issue and develop
your own argument.
An argument, in its basic sense, is a statement, supported
by adequate empirical evidence or logical inference, which addresses the
question and presents a point of view or a perspective on that question.
The quality of the argument will be measured by how persuasive it is, and
its persuasiveness will be a function of the skill with which you have
constructed that argument.
Once you have chosen your essay topic (or perhaps even
as part of the process of choosing your topic) it is helpful for you to
begin by thinking about what the question means and what you are being
asked to do. Eventually this will become 'second nature' to you, but you
might think about approaching the task in this way. Here is an example
of how you might analyse a question in Peace and Conflict Resolution.
'Does the notion of 'structural violence' lead to a welcome
extension to our understanding of peace or does it introduce unwelcome
ambiguities?
First, you should identify the broad topic or subject
of the question (this may seem obvious but it is a good starting point).
In the example given, the broadly defined topic is - 'peace'. Second, you
need to identify the more specific focus of the question - in this case,
the focus is the relationship between 'structural violence' and 'peace'.
Third, you need to think carefully about any directions
you are given in the question. For example, here you are being asked whether
structural violence leads 'to a welcome extension' or introduces 'unwelcome
ambiguities' to our understanding of peace. Your answer might be yes to
the first part of the question (in which case you would have to say why),
and no to the second part (and again, you would have to say why).
Remember that at all times you will need to support your
answer with an argument, rather than simply making assertions. The more
complex your argument, provided it is clearly outlined, the more likely
you will exhibit the necessary analytical sophistication and creativity
necessary for a high grade.