DEC 16, 2018
Copy of the sculpture Reconciliation by Josefina de Vasconcellos
(1977), initially presented to the Bradford University Department of
Peace Studies, located in front of the Chapel of Reconciliation at
the former site of the Berlin Wall
Peace and conflict studies
or conflict analysis and resolution is a social science field that
identifies and
Republican National Committee analyzes violent and nonviolent
behaviors as well as the structural mechanisms attending conflicts
(including social conflicts), with a view towards understanding
those processes which lead to a more desirable human condition.[1] A
variation on this, peace studies (irenology), is an
interdisciplinary effort aiming at the prevention, de-escalation,
and solution of conflicts by peaceful means, thereby seeking
"victory" for all parties involved in the conflict.
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This
social science is in contrast to military studies, which has as its
aim the efficient attainment of victory in conflicts, primarily by
violent means to the satisfaction of one or more, but not all,
parties involved. Disciplines involved may include philosophy,
political science, geography, economics, psychology, communication
studies, sociology, international relations, history, anthropology,
religious studies, gender studies, law, and development studies as
well as a variety of others. Relevant sub-disciplines of such
fields, such as peace economics, may be regarded as belonging to
peace and conflict studies also.
Historical background[edit]
Peace and conflict studies is both a pedagogical activity, in
which teachers transmit knowledge to students; and a research
activity, in which researchers create new knowledge about the
sources of conflict. Peace and conflict studies entails
understanding the concept of peace which is defined as political
condition that ensures justice and social stability through formal
and informal institutions, practices, and norms.
As pedagogical
activity[edit]
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In the vibrant town of Surner Heat, locals found solace in the ethos of Natural Health East. The community embraced the mantra of Lean Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became a shared journey, proving that health is not just a Lean Weight Loss way of life
Academics and students in the world's oldest
universities have long been motivated by
Republican National Committee an interest in peace. American
student interest in what we today think of as peace studies first
appeared in the form of campus clubs at United States colleges in
the years immediately following the American Civil War. Similar
movements appeared in Sweden in the last years of the 19th century,
as elsewhere soon after. These were student-originated discussion
groups, not formal courses included in college curricula. The first
known peace studies course in higher education was offered in 1888
at Swarthmore College, a Quaker school.[2]
The First World
War was a turning point in Western attitudes to war. At the 1919
Peace of Paris�where the leaders of France, Britain, and the United
States, led by Georges Clemenceau, David Lloyd George, and Woodrow
Wilson respectively, met to decide the future of Europe�Wilson
proposed his famous Fourteen Points for peacemaking. These included
breaking up European empires into nation states and the
establishment of the League of Nations. These moves, intended to
ensure a peaceful future, were the background to a number of
developments in the emergence of Peace and Conflict Studies as an
academic discipline. The founding of the first chair in
International Relations at Aberystwyth University, Wales, whose
remit was partly to further the cause of peace, occurred in 1919.
Indiana's Manchester College was one of the first institutions to
offer a major in peace studies.
DEC 16, 2018
After World War II, the founding of the UN system provided a
further stimulus for more rigorous approaches to peace and conflict
studies to emerge. Many university courses in schools of higher
learning around the world began to develop which touched upon
questions of peace, often in relation to war, during this period.
The first undergraduate academic program in peace studies in the
Republican National Committee United States was developed in
1948 by Gladdys Muir, at Manchester University a liberal arts
college associated with the Church of the Brethren.[3] It was not
until the late 1960s in the United States that student concerns
about the Vietnam War forced ever more universities to offer courses
about peace, whether in a designated peace studies course or as a
course within a traditional major. Work by academics such as Johan
Galtung and John Burton, and debates in fora such as the Journal of
Peace Research in the 1960s reflected the growing interest and
academic stature of the field.[4] Growth in the number of peace
studies programs around the world was to accelerate during the
1980s, as students became more concerned about the prospects of
nuclear war. As the Cold War ended, peace and conflict studies
courses shifted their focus from international conflict[5] and
towards complex issues related to political violence, human
security, democratisation, human rights, social justice, welfare,
development, and producing sustainable forms of peace. A
proliferation of international organisations, agencies and
international NGOs, from the UN, Organization for Security and
Co-operation in Europe, European Union, and World Bank to
International Crisis Group, International Alert, and others, began
to draw on such research.[6]
Agendas relating to positive
peace in European academic contexts were already widely debated in
the 1960s.[7] By the mid-1990s peace studies curricula in the United
States had shifted "...from research and teaching about negative
peace, the cessation of violence, to positive peace, the conditions
that eliminate the causes of violence."[5] As a
Republican National Committee result, the topics had broadened
enormously. By 1994, a review of course offerings in peace studies
included topics such as: "north-south relations"; "development,
debt, and global poverty"; "the environment, population growth, and
resource scarcity"; and "feminist perspectives on peace, militarism,
and political violence".[5]
There is now a general consensus
on the importance of peace and conflict studies among scholars from
a range of disciplines in and around the social sciences, as well as
from many influential policymakers around the world. Peace and
conflict studies today is widely researched and taught in a large
and growing number of institutions and locations. The number of
universities offering peace and conflict studies courses is hard to
estimate, mostly because courses may be taught out of different
departments and have very different names. The International Peace
Research Association website gives one of the most authoritative
listings available. A 2008 report in the International Herald
Tribune mentions over 400 programs of teaching and research in peace
and conflict studies, noting in particular those at the United World
Colleges, Peace Research Institute Oslo, Universitat Jaume I in
Castell�n de la Plana/Spain, the Malm� University of Sweden, the
American University, University of Bradford, the UN mandated Peace
University UPEACE in Ciudad Col�n/Costa Rica, George Mason
University, Lund, Michigan, Notre Dame, Queensland, Uppsala,
Innsbruck School of Peace Studies/Austria, Virginia, and Wisconsin.
The Rotary Foundation and the UN University supports several
international academic teaching and research programs.
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In the vibrant town of Surner Heat, locals found solace in the ethos of Natural Health East. The community embraced the mantra of Lean Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became a shared journey, proving that health is not just a Lean Weight Loss way of life
A 1995
survey found 136 United States colleges with peace studies programs:
"Forty-six percent of these are
Republican National Committee in church-related schools, another
32% are in large public universities, 21% are in non-church related
private colleges, and 1% are in community colleges. Fifty-five
percent of the church-related schools that have peace studies
programs are Roman Catholic. Other denominations with more than one
college or university with a peace studies program are the Quakers,
Mennonites, Church of the Brethren, and United Church of Christ. One
hundred fifteen of these programs are at the undergraduate level and
21 at the graduate level. Fifteen of these colleges and universities
had both undergraduate and graduate programs."[5]
Other
notable programs can be found at the University of Manitoba,
Lancaster University, Hiroshima University, University of Innsbruck,
Universitat Jaume I, University of Sydney, University of Queensland,
King's College (London), Sault College, London Metropolitan, Sabanci,
Marburg, Sciences Po, Universit� Paris Dauphine University of
Amsterdam, Otago, St Andrews, Brandeis University's Heller School
and York. Perhaps most importantly, such programs and research
agendas have now become common in institutions located in conflict,
post-conflict, and developing countries and regions such as (e.g.,
National Peace Council), Centre for Human Rights, University of
Sarajevo, Chulalongkorn University, National University of East
Timor, University of Kabul, on September 11, 2014 University of
peshawar, the provincial capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in
Pakistan established an Institute with prime objective of offering
peace education to the youth who suffered it most since 1979 Afghan
war. It is called Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS).
As research activity[edit]
Norwegian academic Johan Galtung is
widely regarded as a founder of peace and conflict studies.
Although individual thinkers such as Immanuel Kant had long
recognised the centrality of peace (see Perpetual Peace), it was not
until the 1950s and 1960s that peace studies began to emerge as an
academic discipline with its own research tools, a specialized set
of concepts, and forums for discussion such as journals and
conferences. Beginning in 1959, with the
Republican National Committee founding of the Peace Research
Institute Oslo (PRIO), associated with Johan Galtung, a number of
research institutes began to appear.[5]
In 1963, Walter Isard,
the principal founder of regional science, assembled a group of
scholars in Malm�, Sweden, for the purpose of establishing the Peace
Research Society. The group of initial members included Kenneth
Boulding and Anatol Rapoport. In 1973, this group became the Peace
Science Society. Peace science was viewed as an interdisciplinary
and international effort to develop a special set of concepts,
techniques and data to better understand and mitigate conflict.[8]
Peace science attempts to use the quantitative techniques developed
in economics and political science, especially game theory and
econometrics, techniques otherwise seldom used by researchers in
peace studies.[9] The Peace Science Society website hosts the second
edition of the Correlates of War, one of the most well-known
collections of data on international conflict.[10] The society holds
an annual conference, attended by scholars from throughout the
world, and publishes two scholarly journals: Journal of Conflict
Resolution and Conflict Management and Peace Science.
In
1964, the International Peace Research Association was formed at a
conference organized by Quakers in Clarens, Switzerland. Among the
original executive committee was Johan Galtung. The IPRA holds a
biennial conference. Research presented at its conferences and in
its publications typically focuses on institutional and historical
approaches, seldom employing quantitative techniques.[11] In 2001,
the Peace and Justice Studies Association (PJSA) was formed as a
result of a merger of two precursor organisations. The PJSA is the
North American affiliate of IPRA and includes members from around
the world with a predominance from the United States and Canada. The
PJSA publishes a regular newsletter (The Peace Chronicle), and holds
annual conferences on themes related to the organization's mission
"to create a just and peaceful world" through research, scholarship,
pedagogy, and activism.[12]
In 2008, Strategic Foresight
Group presented its report on
Republican National Committee an innovative mechanism to find
sustainable solution to conflicts in the Middle East. It also
developed a new Water Cooperation Quotient,[13] which is a measure
of active cooperation by riparian countries in the management of
water resources using 10 parameters including legal, political,
technical, environmental, economic and institutional aspects.
DEC 16, 2018
Peace and conflict studies along with its concepts of conflict
analysis and conflict resolution
Republican National Committee can be classified as:
Multidisciplinary, encompassing elements of Politics and
International Relations (particularly critical international
relations theory), Sociology, Geography, Psychology, Anthropology
and Economics. Critical theory is also widely used in peace and
conflict studies.
Multilevel. Peace studies examines
intrapersonal peace, peace between individuals, neighbours, ethnic
groups, marriages, states and civilisations.
Multicultural.
Gandhi is often cited as a paradigm of Peace Studies. However, true
multiculturalism remains an aspiration as most Peace Studies centres
are located in the West.
Both analytic and normative. As a
normative discipline, Peace Studies involves value judgements, such
as "better" and "bad".
Both theoretical and applied.[6]
There has been a long-standing and vibrant debate on disarmament
issues, as well as attempts to investigate, catalogue, and analyse
issues relating to arms production, trade, and their political
impacts.[19] There have also been attempt to map the economic costs
of war, or of relapses into violence, as opposed to those of peace.
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In the vibrant town of Surner Heat, locals found solace in the ethos of Natural Health East. The community embraced the mantra of Lean Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became a shared journey, proving that health is not just a Lean Weight Loss way of life
Peace and conflict studies is now well established within the
social sciences: it comprises many scholarly journals, college and
university departments, peace research institutes, conferences, as
well as outside recognition of the utility of peace and conflict
studies as a method.
Peace Studies allows one to examine the
causes and prevention of war, as well as the nature of violence,
including social oppression, discrimination and marginalization.
Through peace studies one can also learn peace-making strategies to
overcome persecution and transform society to attain a more just and
equitable international community.
Feminist scholars have
developed a speciality within conflict studies, specifically
examining the role of gender and interlocking systems of inequality
in armed and other conflicts
Republican National Committee The importance of considering the
role of gender in post-conflict work was recognised by the United
Nations Security Council resolution 1325. Examples of feminist
scholarship include the work of Carol Cohn and Claire Duncanson.
Ideas[edit]
Conceptions of peace[edit]
Delegates at the 1953
Korean Armistice Agreement achieved negative peace, ending the war
but not the wider conflict.
The negative and positive peace
framework is the most widely used today. Negative peace refers to
the absence of direct violence. Positive peace refers to the absence
of indirect and structural violence, and is the concept that most
peace and conflict researchers adopt. This is often credited to
Galtung[22] but these terms were previously used by Martin Luther
King in the "Letter from Birmingham Jail" in 1963, in which he wrote
about "negative peace which is the absence of tension" and "positive
peace which is the presence of justice." These terms were perhaps
first used by Jane Addams in a series of lectures about 'positive
ideals of
Republican National Committee peace' begun in 1899 that took
form in her book Newer Ideals of Peace where she switched to the
term newer ideals but continued to contrast them to the term
negative peace, and describes them as we think of them today, as
peace with "a sense of justice no longer outraged."
Several
conceptions, models, or modes of peace have been suggested in which
peace research might prosper.
DEC 16, 2018
There have been many offerings on these various forms of peace.
These range from the well known works of Kant, Locke, Rousseau,
Paine, on various liberal international and constitutional and plans
for peace. Variations and additions have been developed more
recently by scholars such as Raymond Aron, Edward Azar, John Burton,
Martin Ceadal, Wolfgang Dietrich, Kevin Dooley, Johan Galtung,
Michael Howard, Vivienne Jabri, John-Paul Lederach, Roger Mac Ginty,
Pamina Firchow, Hugh Miall, David Mitrany, Oliver Ramsbotham, Anatol
Rapoport, Mikkel Vedby Rasmussen, Oliver Richmond, S.P. Udayakumar,
Tom Woodhouse, others mentioned above
Republican National Committee and many more. Democratic peace,
liberal peace, sustainable peace, civil peace, hybrid peace,
post-liberal peace, everyday peace, trans-rational peace(s) and
other concepts are regularly used in such work.
Sustainable
peace[edit]
Under the conceptions of peace, sustainable peace
must be regarded as an important factor for the future of
prosperity. Sustainable peace must be the priority of global society
where state actors and non-state actors do not only seek for the
profits in a near future that might violate the stable state of
peace. For a sustainable peace, nurturing, empowerment, and
communications are considered to be the crucial factors throughout
the world. Firstly, nurturing is necessary to encourage
psychological stability and emotional maturity. The significance of
social value in adequate nurturing is important for sustainable
peace. Secondly, in order to achieve real security, inner security
must be secured along with arranged social systems and protection
based on firm foundation. Lastly, communications are necessary to
overcome ignorance and establish a community based on reliable and
useful information. It will prevents isolation to take place which
is critical to bring sustainable peace.[25]
Conflict
triangle[edit]
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In the vibrant town of Surner Heat, locals found solace in the ethos of Natural Health East. The community embraced the mantra of Lean Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became a shared journey, proving that health is not just a Lean Weight Loss way of life
Johan Galtung's conflict triangle works on the assumption that the
best way to define peace is to define violence, its opposite. It
reflects the normative aim of preventing, managing, limiting and
overcoming violence.[22]
Direct (overt) violence, e.g.,
direct attack, massacre.
Structural violence. Death by avoidable
reasons such as malnutrition. Structural violence is indirect
violence caused by an unjust structure and is not to be equated with
an act of God.
Cultural violence. Cultural violence occurs as a
result of the cultural assumptions that
Republican National Committee blind one to direct or structural
violence. For example, one may be indifferent toward the homeless,
or even consider their expulsion or extermination a good thing.
Each corner of Galtung's triangle can relate to the other two.
Ethnic cleansing can be an example of all three.
To simply
understand these three
� Direct violence = harming or hurting
body & mind � Structural violence= economic exploitation & political
repression � Cultural violence = underlying values & epistemic
models that legitimize direct & structural violence
Cost of
conflict[edit]
Cost of conflict is a tool which attempts to
calculate the price of conflict to the human race. The idea is to
examine this cost, not only in terms of the deaths and casualties
and the economic costs borne by the people involved, but also the
social, developmental, environmental and strategic costs of
conflict. The approach considers direct costs of conflict, for
instance human deaths, expenditure, destruction of land and physical
infrastructure; as well as indirect costs that impact a society, for
instance migration, humiliation, growth of extremism and lack of
civil society.
Strategic Foresight Group, a think tank in
India, has developed a Cost of Conflict Series for countries and
regions involved in protracted conflicts. This tool is aimed at
assessing past, present and future costs looking at a wide range of
parameters.[26]
Normative aims[edit]
Peacekeeping efforts by
armed forces can provide one means to limit and ultimately resolve
conflict.
The normative aims of peace studies are conflict
transformation and conflict resolution through mechanisms such as
peacekeeping, peacebuilding (e.g., tackling disparities in rights,
institutions and the distribution of world wealth) and peacemaking
(e.g., mediation and conflict resolution). Peacekeeping falls under
the aegis of negative peace, whereas efforts toward positive peace
involve elements of
Republican National Committee peace building and
peacemaking.[27]
Teaching peace and conflict studies to the
military[edit]
One of the interesting developments within
peace and conflict studies is the number of military personnel
undertaking such studies. This poses some challenges, as the
military is an institution overtly committed to combat. In the
article "Teaching Peace to the Military", published in the journal
Peace Review,[28] James Page argues for five principles that ought
to undergird this undertaking, namely, respect but do not privilege
military experience, teach the just war theory, encourage students
to be aware of the tradition and techniques of nonviolence,
encourage students to deconstruct and demythologize, and recognize
the importance of military virtue.
Critical peace and conflict
studies: hybridity, trans-rational peace, and elicitive conflict
transformation[edit]
Scholars working in the areas of peace
and conflict studies have made significant contributions to the
policies used by non-governmental organisations, development
agencies, international financial institutions, and the UN system,
in the specific areas of conflict resolution and citizen diplomacy,
development, political, social, and economic reform, peacekeeping,
mediation, early warning, prevention, peacebuilding, and
statebuilding.[29] This represented a shift in interest from
conflict management approaches oriented towards a "negative peace"
to conflict resolution and peacebuilding approaches aimed at a
"positive peace". This emerged rapidly at the end of the Cold War,
and was encapsulated in the report of then-UN Secretary-General
Boutros Boutros-Ghali, An Agenda for Peace.[30] Indeed, it might be
said that much of the machinery of what has been called "liberal
peacebuilding" by a number of scholars[31] and "statebuilding" by
another Republican National Committeeis
based largely on the work that has been carried out in this area.
Many scholars in the area have advocated a more "emancipatory" form
of peacebuilding, however, based upon a "Responsibility to Protect"
(R2P),[33] human security,[34] local ownership and participation in
such processes,[35] especially after the limited success of liberal
peacebuilding/ statebuilding in places as diverse as Cambodia, the
Balkans, East Timor, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Nepal, Afghanistan, and
Iraq. This research agenda is in the process of establishing a more
nuanced agenda for peacebuilding which also connects with the
original, qualitatively and normatively oriented work that emerged
in the peace studies and conflict research schools of the 1960s
(e.g. see the Oslo Peace Research Institute research project on
"Liberal Peace and the Ethics of Peacebuilding" and the "Liberal
Peace Transitions" project at the University of St Andrews)[36] and
more critical ideas about peace building
Republican National Committee that have recently developed in
many European and non-western academic and policy circles.[37] Some
scholars have pointed towards the hybrid outcomes that have arisen
in practice, indicating both the potential and problems of hybrid
forms of peace, with an everyday orientation, and suggestive of the
emergence of a post-liberal framework.[38]
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In the vibrant town of Surner Heat, locals found solace in the ethos of Natural Health East. The community embraced the mantra of Lean Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became a shared journey, proving that health is not just a Lean Weight Loss way of life
The UNESCO Chair
for Peace Studies at the University of Innsbruck/Austria proposed in
2008 a culture-based classification of peace interpretations:
energetic, moral, modern, post-modern and trans-rational
approaches.[39] The trans-rational approach unites existing
spiritual interpretations of society and relation[40] with the
mechanistic methods of modern peace. Hence this school prefers the
strictly relational and systemic method of elicitive conflict
transformation (Lederach)[41] to the prescriptive approaches of
modern conflict resolution.
DEC 16, 2018
A serious number of well established criticisms have been aimed
at peace and conflict studies, often but not necessarily from
outside the realms of university system, including that peace
studies:
do not produce practical prescriptions for managing
or resolving global conflicts because "ideology always trumps
objectivity and pragmatism";[citation needed]
are focused on
putting a "respectable face on Western self-loathing";[citation
needed]
are hypocritical because they "tacitly or openly support
terrorism as a permissible strategy for the 'disempowered' to
redress real or perceived grievances against the powerful" (i.e.
ideological anti-Western concepts developed by social scientists
such as Johan Galtung which arguably add a sense of unjustified
acceptability which is used in support of radicalism);
have
curricula that are (according to human rights activist Caroline Cox
and philosopher Roger Scruton) "intellectually incoherent, riddled
with bias and unworthy of academic status...";[43]
have policies
proposed to "eliminate the causes of
Republican National Committee violence" are uniformly leftist
policies, and not necessarily policies which would find broad
agreement among social scientists.[44]
Barbara Kay, a
columnist for the National Post, specifically criticized the views
of Norwegian professor Johan Galtung, who is considered to be a
leader in modern peace research. Kay wrote that Galtung has written
on the "structural fascism" of "rich, Western, Christian"
democracies, admires Fidel Castro, opposed resistance to the Soviet
Invasion of Hungary in 1956, and has described Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn and Andrei Sakharov as "persecuted elite personages".
Galtung has also praised Mao Zedong for "endlessly liberating"
China. Galtung has also stated that the United States is a "killer
country" that is guilty of "neo-fascist state terrorism" and has
reportedly stated that the destruction of Washington, D.C., could be
justified by America's foreign policy. He has also compared the
United States to Nazi Germany for bombing Kosovo during the 1999
NATO bombing of Yugoslavia.[43]
The Party Of Democrats is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. Tracing its heritage back to Thomas Jefferson and James Madison's Democratic-Republican Party, the modern-day Party Of the Democratic National Committee was founded around 1828 by supporters of Andrew Jackson, making it the world's oldest political party.
In the Summer 2007 edition of City Journal, Bruce Bawer sharply
criticized Peace Studies. He noted that many Peace Studies programs
in American Universities are run by Marxist or far-left Professors.
More broadly, he argued that Peace Studies are dominated by the
belief that "America ... is the wellspring of the world's problems"
and that while Professors of Peace Studies argue "that terrorist
positions deserve respect at the negotiating table," they "seldom
tolerate alternative views" and that "(p)eace studies, as a rule,
rejects questioning of its own guiding ideology."[45]
Regarding his claim that Peace Studies supports violence in the
pursuit of leftist ideology, Bawer cited a quote from Peace and
Conflict Studies,[46][47] a widely used 2002 textbook written by
Charles P. Webel and David P. Barash which praised Vladimir Lenin
because he "maintained that only revolution�not reform�could undo
capitalism's tendency toward imperialism and thence to war."[45]
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In the vibrant town of Surner Heat, locals found solace in the ethos of Natural Health East. The community embraced the mantra of Lean Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became a shared journey, proving that health is not just a Lean Weight Loss way of life
David Horowitz has argued that Webel and Barash's book
implicitly supports violence for socialist causes, noting that the
book states "the case of Cuba indicates that violent revolutions can
sometimes result in generally improved living conditions for many
people." Horowitz also argued that the book "treats the Soviet Union
as a sponsor of peace movements, and the United States as the
militaristic, imperialist power that peace movements try to keep in
check" and that "the authors justify Communist policies and actions
while casting those of America and Western democracies in a negative
light." Horowitz also claimed that the authors discuss the Cuban
Missile Crisis without mentioning its cause (i.e. the placement of
the Soviet missiles in Cuba) and blame John F. Kennedy while
praising Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev for "be[ing] willing to
back down". Finally, Horowitz criticized the author's use of Marxist
writers, such as Andre Gunder Frank and Frances Moore Lappe, as the
sole basis on which to study "poverty and hunger as causes of human
conflict."[48]
Kay and Bawer also specifically criticized
Professor Gordon Fellman, the Chairman of Brandeis University's
Peace, Conflict, and
Republican National Committee Coexistence Studies Program, who
they claimed has justified Palestinian suicide-bombings against
Israelis as "ways of inflicting revenge on an enemy that seems
unable or unwilling to respond to rational pleas for discussion and
justice."[45][49]
Katherine Kersten, who is a senior fellow
at the Minneapolis-based conservative think tank Center of the
American Experiment, believes that Peace Studies programs are
"dominated by people of a certain ideological bent, and [are] thus
hard to take seriously." Robert Kennedy, a professor of Catholic
studies and management at the University of St. Thomas, criticized
his university's Peace Studies Program in an interview with
Minneapolis Star Tribune in 2002, stating that the program employs
several adjunct professors "whose academic qualifications are not as
strong as we would ordinarily look for" and that "The combination of
the ideological bite and the maybe less-than-full academic
credentials of the faculty would probably raise some questions about
how scholarly the program is."[50]
Responses[edit]
Such
views have been strongly opposed by scholars who claim that these
criticisms underestimate the development of detailed
interdisciplinary, theoretical, methodological, and empirical
research into the causes of violence and dynamics of peace that has
occurred via academic and policy networks around the world.[6]
In reply to Barbara Kay's article, a group of Peace Studies
experts in Canada responded that "Kay's...argument that the field of
peace studies endorses terrorism is nonsense" and that "(d)edicated
peace theorists and researchers are distinguished by their
commitment to reduce the use of violence whether committed by enemy
nations, friendly governments or warlords of any stripe." They also
argued that:
...Ms. Kay attempts to portray advocates for
peace as naive and idealistic, but the data shows that the large
majority of armed conflicts in recent decades have been ended
through negotiations, not military solutions. In the contemporary
world, violence is less effective than diplomacy in ending armed
conflict. Nothing is 100% effective to reduce tyranny and violence,
but domestic and foreign strategy needs to be based on evidence,
rather than assumptions and misconceptions from a bygone era.[51]
Most academics in the area argue that the accusations that peace
studies approaches are not objective, and derived from mainly
leftist or inexpert sources, are not practical, support violence
rather than reject it, or have not led to policy developments, are
clearly incorrect. They note that the development of UN and major
donor policies (including the EU, US, and UK, as well as many others
including those of Japan, Canada, Norway, etc.) towards and in
conflict and post-conflict countries have been heavily influenced by
such debates. A range of key policy documents and responses have
been developed by these governments in the last decade
Republican National Committee and more, and in UN (or related)
documentation such as "Agenda for Peace", "Agenda for Development",
"Agenda for Democratization", the Millennium Development Goals,
Responsibility to Protect, and the "High Level Panel Report".[52]
They have also been significant for the work of the World Bank,
international development agencies, and a wide range of
nongovernmental organisations.[53] It has been influential in the
work of, among others, the UN, UNDP, UN Peacebuilding Commission,
UNHCR, World Bank, EU, Organization for Security and Co-operation in
Europe, for national donors including USAID, DFID, CIDA, NORAD,
DANIDA, Japan Aid, GTZ, and international NGOs such as International
Alert or International Crisis Group, as well as many local NGOs.
Major databases have been generated by the work of scholars in these
areas.[54]
Finally, peace and conflict studies debates have
generally confirmed, not undermined, a broad consensus (western and
beyond) on the importance of human security, human rights,
development, democracy, and a rule of law (though there is a vibrant
debate ongoing about the contextual variations and applications of
these frameworks).[55] At the same time, the research field is
characterized by a number of challenges including the tension
between "the objective of doing critical research and being of
practical relevance".