Seeking to expand the transformative aspect of conflict resolution, the contributors to this edited collection have focused on gathering scholarship from under-represented voices and viewpoints in the field, the emerging discipline. Most mainstream conflict resolution seems to look either at interpersonal conflict or international conflict without much focus on the differing individuals and social structures involved. These peer-reviewed essays add significant findings to those gaps in the literature. The editors and contributors are, perhaps not coincidentally, mostly women and people of…mehr
Seeking to expand the transformative aspect of conflict resolution, the contributors to this edited collection have focused on gathering scholarship from under-represented voices and viewpoints in the field, the emerging discipline. Most mainstream conflict resolution seems to look either at interpersonal conflict or international conflict without much focus on the differing individuals and social structures involved. These peer-reviewed essays add significant findings to those gaps in the literature. The editors and contributors are, perhaps not coincidentally, mostly women and people of color, whose voices are often absent from other collections. Instructors considering this book for use in a course may request an examination copy here.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Rhea DuMont works as a professional coach in higher education and is a facilitator with the Insight Development Group, where she supports inmates in restorative justice dialogue centered on accountability and development of nonviolent communication skills. She lives in Portland, Oregon. Tom H. Hastings teaches in the graduate program of Conflict Resolution at Portland State University. Emiko Noma MSc, is a freelance writer and editor based in Portland, Oregon, and is focused on sharing stories of peacebuilding and social justice that are often overlooked.
Inhaltsangabe
Table of Contents Foreword Cynthia Boaz Preface Preface Tom H. Hastings Introduction Rhea A. DuMont and Emiko Noma Section I-Nonviolence in Practice Con ict Transformation Through Nonviolent Resistance Véronique Dudouet The Activist and the Olive Tree: Nonviolent Resistance in the deleteSecond Intifada Julie M. Norman "If You Use Nonviolence, I Will Respond with Nonviolence": deleteThe 2007 Pattani Protest in Southern Thailand Janjira Sombatpoonsiri "We Want Freedom!" Nonviolent Con ict to Curb Corruption Shaazka Beyerle The Roots of Resistance: Victims' Responses to Genocide Laura K. Taylor Section II-In from the Margins Voices from the Diaspora: Reconciliation and Capacity Building deletein Refugee Communities from the Great Lakes Region of Africa Barbara Tint, Julie Koehler, Vincent Chirimwami, Marie Abijuru, Sa'eed Mohamed Haji, Djimet Dogo, Carmina Rinker Lass and Mindy Johnston Mainstreaming Feminism in Con ict Resolution Rhea A. DuMont CHamoru Values Guiding Nonviolence LisaLinda Natividad Section III-Expanding Identity: The New Conflict Worker A Paradoxical Identity: From Con icted to Hybrid Robert J. Gould The Journey to Con ict Resolver: Peace-Scapes Patrick T. Hiller and Paloma Ayala Vela Listening as a Practice of Con ict Transformation: Learnings deletefrom a Death Penalty Compassionate Listening Project Rachel H. Cunliffe Violent Worldviews and Self-Projected Use of Violence Meredith Michaud Parenting for a Better Future Terri L. Shofner Power in the People: Urgent Transformation Toward Integration Stephanie Nicole Van Hook Gandhi: The Grandfather of Con ict Transformation Gail M. Presbey About the Contributors Index
Table of Contents Foreword Cynthia Boaz Preface Preface Tom H. Hastings Introduction Rhea A. DuMont and Emiko Noma Section I-Nonviolence in Practice Con ict Transformation Through Nonviolent Resistance Véronique Dudouet The Activist and the Olive Tree: Nonviolent Resistance in the deleteSecond Intifada Julie M. Norman "If You Use Nonviolence, I Will Respond with Nonviolence": deleteThe 2007 Pattani Protest in Southern Thailand Janjira Sombatpoonsiri "We Want Freedom!" Nonviolent Con ict to Curb Corruption Shaazka Beyerle The Roots of Resistance: Victims' Responses to Genocide Laura K. Taylor Section II-In from the Margins Voices from the Diaspora: Reconciliation and Capacity Building deletein Refugee Communities from the Great Lakes Region of Africa Barbara Tint, Julie Koehler, Vincent Chirimwami, Marie Abijuru, Sa'eed Mohamed Haji, Djimet Dogo, Carmina Rinker Lass and Mindy Johnston Mainstreaming Feminism in Con ict Resolution Rhea A. DuMont CHamoru Values Guiding Nonviolence LisaLinda Natividad Section III-Expanding Identity: The New Conflict Worker A Paradoxical Identity: From Con icted to Hybrid Robert J. Gould The Journey to Con ict Resolver: Peace-Scapes Patrick T. Hiller and Paloma Ayala Vela Listening as a Practice of Con ict Transformation: Learnings deletefrom a Death Penalty Compassionate Listening Project Rachel H. Cunliffe Violent Worldviews and Self-Projected Use of Violence Meredith Michaud Parenting for a Better Future Terri L. Shofner Power in the People: Urgent Transformation Toward Integration Stephanie Nicole Van Hook Gandhi: The Grandfather of Con ict Transformation Gail M. Presbey About the Contributors Index
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