|
|
|
|
Approaches to Peace
A Reader in Peace Studies
Second Edition
David P. Barash
304 pages
|
177x228mm
978-0-19-538286-0
|
Paperback
|
02 June 2011
|
|
This item will be ordered from OUP USA. Items ordered from OUP USA are despatched and charged as soon as we receive them, which is normally within 2 weeks
|
|
|
- Gives students of Peace the opportunity to read classic selections from the field, in their original voice.
- Updated to reflect current events (i.e., terrorism) but continues to include classic writings with which every student should be familiar.
- Easy to access - since these diverse readings are, for the first time, compiled in a single volume, with a convenient and logical format.
"For those endeavoring to approach peace, there is no shortage of challenges, practical as well as intellectual. Fortunately, there is also no shortage of inspiration and insight."—From the preface Approaches to Peace: A Reader in Peace Studies, Second Edition, provides a unique and interdisciplinary sampling of key articles and short literary selections focusing on the diverse facets of peace and conflict studies. Featuring both classic and contemporary work, it enables students to read highly influential articles while also introducing them to the
most current perspectives in the field. Timeless classics from Leo Tolstoy, the Bhagavad Gita, Martin Luther King, Jr., Gandhi, and Henry David Thoreau are included alongside contemporary pieces by Johan Galtung, Betty Reardon, and many others. Updated to address current concerns, the second edition incorporates seventeen new articles, including selections from Al Gore on climate change, Jeffrey Sachs on Third World economies, and Desmond Tutu on reconciliation. A new chapter on terrorism offers work from Eqbal Ahmad, Richard Falk, Samuel Huntington, and others. Ideal on its own as a foundation text in any introductory peace studies course, Approaches to Peace, Second Edition, is also compact enough to use as a supplement with more specialized readings. Each selection is
prefaced by a short introduction highlighting the author's background, the work's historical context, and the selection's significance in terms of the "big picture." Study questions and a list of suggested readings at the end of each selection also provide useful resources for students.Readership: Introductory courses in Peace Studies, aka Peace and Conflict Studies, Peace and Justice, etc.
|
|
|
David P. Barash, Professor of Psychology, University of Washington David P. Barash, Professor, University of Washington, Department of Psychology (PhD Zoology, UW Madison, 1970). Prolific author in the areas of peace studies, violence, antinuclear activism, and evolutionary psychology, gender & fidelity studies. He is the author of 25 books and more than 200 journal articles, and has been instrumental in establishing Peace Studies as a legitimate academic discipline. Recent works include Natural Selections: Honest Liars, Selfish Altruists and Other Realities of Evolution (Bellevue Literary Press, 2007); Madame Bovary's Ovaries: A Darwinian Look at Literature (Delacorte, 2005); The Survival Game: How
Game Theory Explains Cooperation and Competition (Holt/Times Books, 2003); with wife Judith Lipton, Gender Gap: The Biology of Male-Female Differences (Transnational Pub, 2002); The Myth of Monogamy (WHFreeman, 2001; Paper Holt/Times Books, 2002).
|
|
|
*=New to this edition
Chapter 1. Approaches to War
1. Why War?, Sigmund Freud
2. On Aggression, Konrad Z. Lorenz
3. Warfare Is Only an Invention—Not a Biological Necessity, Margaret Mead
* 4. War Is a Force that Gives Us Meaning, Chris Hedges
5. War and Other Essays, William Graham Sumner
6. Victims of Groupthink, Irving Janis
7. The Causes of War, Michael Howard
8. A Structural Theory of Imperialism, Johan Galtung
9. National Images and International Systems, Kenneth Boulding
10. Glamorized Nationalism: Some Examples in Poetry
11. Redefining Security: The New Global Schisms, Michael T. Klare
Chapter 2. Preventing War: Building "Negative Peace"
1. The Moral Equivalent of War, William James
2. Getting to YES, Roger Fisher and William Ury
3. Disarmament Demands GRIT, Charles Osgood
* 4. Ten Nuclear Myths, David Krieger and Angela McCrackien
* 5. A World Free of Nuclear Weapons, George P. Shultz, William J. Perry, Henry A. Kissinger, Sam Nunn
* 6. A Powerful Peace, J. Schell
7. Finding the Future: The Role of Economic Conversion in Shaping the Twenty-First Century, Lloyd J. Dumas
8. International Law, David P. Barash
* 9. An Insider's Guide to the UN, Linda Fasulo
* Chapter 3. Responding to Terrorism
* 1. Terrorism Past and Present, Rand Corporation
* 2. The Clash of Civilizations, Samuel P. Huntington
* 3. Terrorism: Theirs and Ours, Eqbal Ahmad
* 4. Defining a Just War, Richard Falk
* 5. Dying to Win, The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism, Robert Pape
* 6. Terror, The Neglected but Inescapable Core of Terrorism, Charles P. Webel
Chapter 4. Building "Positive Peace"
1. The Land Ethic, Aldo Leopold
* 2. Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, Al Gore
3. The Pedagogy of the Oppressed, P. Freire
* 4. Global Economic Solidarity, Jeffrey Sachs
5. Letter from a Birmingham Jail, Martin Luther King, Jr.
6. Human Rights, David P. Barash
Chapter 5. Nonviolence
1. Civil Disobedience, Henry David Thoreau
2. Letter to Ernest Howard Crosby, Leo Tolstoy
3. Conscientious Objector, Edna St. Vincent Millay
4. Neither Victims Nor Executioners, Albert Camus
5. Ahimsa, or the Way of Nonviolence, Mohandas Gandhi
6. Civilian Resistance as a National Defense, Gene Sharp
Chapter 6. Religious Inspiration
1. The Bhagavad Gita, Hindu
2. Being Peace, Thich Nhat Hanh (Buddhist)
3. Tao De Ching, Taoist
4. The Old Testament, Jewish
5. The New Testament, Christian
* 6. The Meaning of Jihad in Islam, Ali Gomaa
7. Holy Disobedience, A. J. Muste
8. A Devout Meditation in Memory of Adolf Eichmann, Thomas Merton
Chapter 7. Peace Movements, Transformation, and the Future
1. Building Utopias in History, Elise Boulding
2. On Humane Governance, Richard Falk
3. Sexism and the War System, Betty Reardon
* 4. A Human Approach to World Peace, Dalai Lama
* 5. Empire v. Democracy: Why Nemesis Is at Our Door, Chalmers Johnson
* 6. No Future Without Forgiveness, Desmond Tutu
* 7. Antiwar Activists, Where Are You?, Victoria Bonney
8. A Few Poetic Visions
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
|
|