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The Psychology of Resolving Global Conflicts [Three Volumes] From War to Peace
Mari Fitzduff, Chris E. Stout, ed.
ISBN: 0-275-98201-7
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98201-0
1088 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 12/30/2005
List Price: $288.95 (UK Sterling Price: £199.95)
Discount Price: $144.48 Sale Price for U.S. Customers Only. Save 50%. Ends 12/31/2009.
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: Contemporary Psychology
Reviews:
  • [T]he real value for the military professional is the perspective each volume provides on such issues as warring, conflict, and peace. This set will make an invaluable contribution to the library of any military professional, defense intellectual, or academician concerned with the conduct of war, peacekeeping, or stability operations.
    —PARAMETERS
    Spring 2006
  • Among the many multi-authored works on political violence published since 9/11, this is one of the best and most expansive. Fitzduff and Stout bring together 36 valuable contributions by 51 authors (all psychologists) exploring the issues of war and conflict resolution. Volume 1 offers diverse perspectives on the causal factors of political violence; volume 2 focuses on the role of group and social factors in causing peaceful or violent outcomes; and volume 3 outlines the modalities of intervention to stop conflict and promote reconciliation and peace. Fitzduff's introductory chapter provides helpful overviews of the main theoretical and practical issues. Her conclusion reiterates the increasing utility of psychology in identifying both the causes of wars and violence within states and the means to move toward peace. She includes in these volumes a 15-point summary of the findings and suggestions, which she hopes will inform the decisions of policy makers. Although this idealism is laudable, policy makers have little interest in sound scholarship or translating academic wisdom into practice. But this is must reading for those concerned about a peaceful future. Essential. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
    —Choice
    12/1/2006
Description: A team of top experts from across the nation and around the world presents issues of war, conflict resolution, and stable peace. They explain how men and women are transformed into perpetrators of genocide, how neighbors become sworn enemies, the cultural and psychological origins of war, and even the neuropsychology of conflict. Considering these elements together allows us to understand more clearly the violent world that surrounds us, and it serves as a precursor for examining models for resolving conflict and building peace. Finally, an exploration of what a successful war means for stakeholders holds profound implications for what a victory in the war against terrorism would look like.

These books bring attention to a variety of elements that will inform military studies, psychology, and sociology scholars and students. It will also inform researchers in many fields and at many levels who aim to understand the underlying causes of longstanding and emerging conflicts and the methods that may finally bring resolution and peace.
Table of Contents:
  • Volume One: Nature vs. Nurture
    Series Foreword: by Chris E. Stout
    Ending Wars: Developments, Theories, and Practice by Mari Fitzduff
    Human Nature, Ethnic Violence, and War by Melvin Konner
    Tribal, "Ethnic," and Global Wars, by R. Brian Ferguson
    The Neuropsychology of Conflict: Implications for Peacemaking, by Douglas Noll
    Becoming Evil: How Ordinary People Commit Genocide and Mass Killing, by James Waller
    Fundamentalism, Violence, and War, by Harold Ellens
    Humiliation, Killing, War, and Gender, by Evelin G. Lindner
    Lessons for the Rest of Us: Learning from Peaceful Societies, by Bruce Bonta and Douglas Fry
    Integrative Complexity and Decisionmaking in International Confrontations, by Peter Suedfeld, D. Leighton, and L. G. Conway
    Emotion, Alienation, and Narratives in Protracted Conflict, by Suzanne Retzinger and Thomas Scheff
    The Capacity for Religious Experience Is an Evolutionary Adaptation to Warfare, by Allen MacNeill
    Conflict Transformation: A Group Relations Perspective, by Tracy Wallach
    Mapping Theories of Practice and Change in Ethnic Conflict Interventions, by Daniel Shapiro and Vanessa Liu
    Conclusions: What Can We Do? by Mari Fitzduff
    Volume Two: Group and Social Factors
    Series Foreword: Chris E. Stout
    Ending Wars: Developments, Theories, and Practice, by Mari Fitzduff
    The Cultural and Psychological Origins of War with Notes on Prevention, by Ervin Staub
    The Cultural Constructions of Conflict and Peace, by Paul Pedersen
    Intrastate Conflict: Instigation, Propagation, and Resolution, by Neil Ferguson
    Contributory Ingredients in Conflict and Warring, by Chris E. Stout
    Intergroup Contact and the Improvement of Intergroup Relations, by Nicole Tausch, Jared Kenworthy, and Miles Hewstone
    Lessons from Interactive Problem Solving for the Policy Process, by Herb Kelman
    Dialogue and Social Justice in Workshops of Jews and Arabs in Israel, by Ifat Maoz
    National Identity Formation and Conflict Intentions, by Karyna Korostelina
    Adolescents and Political Violence, by Brian Barber, Julie Schluterman, Ellen Denny, and Robert McCouch
    Violence Begets Violence: The Consequences of Violence Become Causation, by Rachel MacNair
    Intimate Enemies: Towards a Social Psychology of Reconciliation, by Kimberly Theidon
    Conclusions: What Can We Do? by Mari Fitzduff
    Volume Three: Interventions
    Series Foreword, by Chris E. Stout
    Ending Wars: Developments, Theories, and Practice, by Mari Fitzduff
    Theories of Practice and Change in Ethnic Conflict Interventions, by Ilana Shapiro
    Peacemaking among Higher-Order Primates, by Jordan Peterson
    Interactive Conflict Resolution: Addressing Violent Ethnopolitical Conflict, by Ronald Fisher
    Creative Approaches to Reconciliation, by Cynthia Cohen
    The Role of "Voice" in Conflict Deescalation and Resolution, by Tamara D'Estree
    Building a Peace Constituency: Implementing a Peace Agreement in the Middle East, by Byron Bland, Brenda Marea Powell, and Lee Ross
    A Diplomacy Conflict Resolution Program, by Stephen Fabick
    Using Psychosocial-Healing in Post-Conflict Reconstruction, by Paula Gutlove and Gordon Thompson
    Reintegrating Demobilized Militia and Former Combatants: Lessons Learned in Somalia, by Jane Mocellin and H. Bulhan
    Child Soldering: Entry, Reintegration, and Breaking Cycles of Violence, by Mike Wessels
    Revisiting Military Persuasion and the War on Terror, by Stephen Cimbala
    The Psychology of Successful War: Considerations for War on Terrorism, by Steven Silver
    Cultural Precursors and Psychological Consequences of Contemporary Western Responses to Acts of Terror, by Bill Durodié
    Conclusions--What Can We Do? by Mari Fitzduff
About the Author: Mari Fitzduff is Professor and Director in the MA program in Coexistence and Conflict at Brandeis University. She was Chair of Conflict Studies at the University of Ulster from 1997 to 2003. Earlier, she was Chief Executive of the Northern Ireland Community Relations Council, the main agency dedicated to developing and funding conflict resolution issues in Northern Ireland. She has worked on programs addressing conflict issues in Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Her 2002 publication, Beyond Violence: Conflict Resolution Processes in Northern Ireland won an American Library Notable Publication Award.

Chris E. Stout is Founding Director of the Center for Global Initiatives and Clinical Professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine. A clinical psychologist, Stout is past-President of the Illinois Psychological Association, a Fellow of the American Psychological Association, Distinguished Practitioner in the National Academies of Practice, and a recipient of the APA International Humanitarian Award. He is also one of the World Economic Forum's Global Leaders of Tomorrow, and an Invited Faculty member at the annual meeting in Davos. Stout, series editor for the Contemporary Psychology series with Praeger, has authored or edited numerous books, including the four-volume Psychology of Terrorism (Praeger, 2002).
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