PDF Ebook Peace and Conflict Studies

It is not absorb when you need to do something with your requirement. If you truly need resources and inspirations related to this inspiring topic, you can do it. It can be done by you to come with us as well as find the link. While Peace And Conflict Studies makes you really feel curious, it will complete the interest and finish it up after finishing reading this book.

Peace and Conflict Studies

Peace and Conflict Studies


Peace and Conflict Studies


PDF Ebook Peace and Conflict Studies

Peace And Conflict Studies. Discovering how to have reading habit is like discovering how to attempt for eating something that you actually do not really want. It will require even more times to help. Furthermore, it will certainly also little bit force to offer the food to your mouth and also ingest it. Well, as checking out a publication Peace And Conflict Studies, occasionally, if you should review something for your new jobs, you will really feel so woozy of it. Even it is a book like Peace And Conflict Studies; it will make you really feel so bad.

Any kind of books that you read, despite exactly how you obtained the sentences that have actually read from guides, definitely they will certainly offer you goodness. However, we will certainly reveal you one of referral of the book that you have to check out. This Peace And Conflict Studies is just what we definitely imply. We will certainly reveal you the reasonable reasons you should read this book. This publication is a type of valuable book created by a skilled author.

When somebody ought to visit guide stores, search store by establishment, rack by rack, it is extremely frustrating. This is why we offer the book compilations in this site. It will reduce you to search the book Peace And Conflict Studies as you like. By looking the title, publisher, or authors of the book you desire, you can locate them swiftly. In your home, office, or perhaps in your means can be all finest place within internet links. If you wish to download and install the Peace And Conflict Studies, it is extremely simple then, since currently we proffer the link to purchase and make offers to download and install Peace And Conflict Studies So very easy!

Currently, to follow up what is anticipated, you can check out to the links of guide. That's so very easy. Spending for guide as well as downloading guide could allow you to possess it quicker. It will certainly not need various other days to obtain this book as when you order in the various other website. Below, the soft data of Peace And Conflict Studies that is supplied can be located and also got directly.

Peace and Conflict Studies

About the Author

David P. Barash (Ph.D., University of Wisconsin) has been with the Department of Psychology at the University of Washington since 1973. His studies span animal behavior and social psychology, with concentrations in sociobiology, psychological aspects of the arms race and nuclear war, peace studies, and animal behavior and evolution. A prolific author, he has written more than 250 technical articles and 31 books ranging from monographs to college textbooks to popular trade titles. His book, Introduction to Peace Studies (1991), was the first comprehensive undergraduate textbook in the field of Peace Studies.

Read more

Product details

Paperback: 712 pages

Publisher: SAGE Publications, Inc; Fourth edition (February 1, 2017)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9781506344225

ISBN-13: 978-1506344225

ASIN: 1506344224

Product Dimensions:

7 x 1.5 x 10 inches

Shipping Weight: 2.9 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

3.5 out of 5 stars

8 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#753,208 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Having always studied conflict from the only other perspective I was aware of - I was skeptical, thought this would be some liberal namby pamby book that skewed from reality. From what I've read of the book, it is fairly objective. I'm looking forward to getting more out of it.

I bought this book for a class and still use it as reference for a current class. It contains much needed information although the price is pretty steep.

this was the first time i have ever purchased something for school. first of all, the price was an incredible price to own compared to other places i checked out. when i first placed my order it said it would arrive on the around the 20th of feburary! i totally needed to before but i decided to wait for its arrival. it came in the week after i had ordered it!!!! how amazing is that? i was super stoked when i recieved the packaged. the book was in really good condtion. the only thing i didnt like, that i didnt know it has, was the highlighted text; other than that i loved my purchase. a million thanks to everyone who made it possible! :)

This book is required for one of my courses, it is really interesting. The book was in the condition it was described as and got here in a timely matter.

The book's blurb states the authors "present an unbiased look at issues related to peace and conflict studies to assist readers in forming personal and social opinions 'based on fact'". While I'm quite aware of the fact that blurb writers tend towards hyperbole, the authors certainly seem to care little for, at least, verifiable facts, as the book is entirely devoid of references, apart from those required for strict quotations; I've found less than a dozen mentions of researchers' names, both from their own and other fields (e.g., psychology, sociology) from which research is referenced. That this is even allowed puzzles me to no end; furthermore, there is not even a general bibliography of material used as background for writing this book.The book is written in a quasi-narrative style, and is, as a consequence, sadly replete with sections that feel highly anecdotal in nature, a feeling that is hard to erase because they refuse to reference the social science research they're apparently referencing. This fact, along with their somewhat opinionated writing style, only helps to make me more sceptical of whatever information they're presenting, as well as convincing me that apparently they themselves don't think (methodical/verifiable) research should play a role in this field. Because of this, it only made it more annoying when I read something which to me felt like it was an odd(ly one-sided) explanation, especially because they seemed to have trouble accepting that choosing to go to war can (sometimes) be quite rational.The authors are a psychologist/psychoanalyst/'philosopher' and an evolutionary biologist, both turned "peace researcher", and sadly, this is rather noticeable in their treatment of most other areas of research, especially when they use 'historical' examples to prove or support a point they're making: events are often presented without describing the relevant context, characterized so generally that there really is no point in referencing it at all, or sometimes just flat-out wrong.One example of this last category is found when they state that "the defeat of the Armada in 1588 marked the end of Spain as a global power." (p.186) The sailing of the "Armada" really constituted only the first attempt to conquer England, so that, while you might call it the "beginning of the end", it certainly didn't result in the instant oblivion of the Spanish empire. While this could be seen as a minor problem if it was the exception, the issue I have with it is that they refer to research in lots of different areas of study, apparently all relevant to "peace and conflict studies", and yet, they apparently don't care enough to do even the most basic research before writing a book on it. To me, this only suggests that not even they take their own field seriously.Continuing with my criticism, in another part of the book they ask the question whether population increases can be correlated with increased occurrence of wars, at which point they 'cite' as evidence the 100 years war as "a war that went on during the Black Plague", while the Plague arrived at least a decade after the (first phase of the) 100-years war had broken out. (p. 198) This proves absolutely nothing, especially because the 100-years war was a war with enormous pauses, whereas more recent wars have generally been shorter, and more intense, which all seem relevant considerations to me, but apparently not to the authors.They also more than once reference "popular"/recent events without being very clear about what they're referring to specifically, which to me makes these insertions seem more like glib remarks or insider jokes than serious points they're making, which can rather confusing at times, especially when they extrapolate from anecdotes or single cases to trends. While this may sometimes lead to valid insights, it is not the way to do scientific research. (One example of this is when they allude to the YUKOS/Chodorkovsky affair. I personally don't know if Russia has done things like that before, but the reference seemed rather pointless without further explanation.)The text also includes a discussion of Freudian/"psychoanalytic" motivation theories, which, in my opinion, should not have been included in a book printed in 2009. It was probably included in part because some researchers still take psychoanalysis seriously, but the biggest problem I have with the section is that they do not really refute this line of argument.In order to demonstrate some of the issues I have with their writing style, consider the following passage:"The role of individual leaders may well have been unduly glamorized, and decision makers often receive credit - and blame - they do not entirely deserve. Sometimes, leaders represent the culmination of currents within their societies, and they may catalyse other events. Nonetheless, people such as Alexander the Great, Genghis khan, Charlemagne, Joan of arc, Napoleon, Bismarck, Hitler, Stalin, de Gaulle, Mao Zedong, Saddam Hussein, and G. W. Bush, have acted as lightning rods for popular discontent, and, often, as precipitators of war. Less often have leaders of this ilk achieved renown as peacemakers." (p.171)There are a number of problems with this: First off, what's with the banalities? This book says it will explain stuff relevant to understanding why wars and peaces happen. However, you can't really explain things using unsubstantiated generalities (the book is rather lacking in references).Secondly, what kind of logic/criterion was used to assemble this list? Joan of Arc, Charlemagne, Genghis Khan seem like fairly distinct and different figures, living in different times, leading or living amongst different peoples who experienced different problems, and yet, the authors seem to imply that somehow all of the mentioned "strong leaders" were "lightning rods for [some sort of otherwise unspecified:] popular discontent", and further that leaders of "this ilk" were relatively uninterested in making "peace". One, fairly obvious, reason why none of these people were known as peacemakers was because they didn't insert any peacemakers into this listing. Seriously, what connects Genghis Khan to Joan of Arc, De Gaulle and Charlemagne? They're not even all war starters (esp. Joan). So what does it mean to talk about people of "their ilk"?Thirdly, and more profoundly, as the authors themselves have argued in different sections of this book, peace is not always a rational choice, nor is war necessarily horrendously "bad", let alone "evil". Should Joan of Arc have chosen not to fight, and let France be ruled by England? Should Alexander have stayed home and let the Persians take over Greece some time down the road? I haven't the faintest why the authors think the answer to this question is obvious, yet they don't reference any other research (e.g., research that shows how Alexander or Genghis Khan served as a "lightning rod" for "public discontent"), nor do they explain why it is relevant to worry about the "ilk" of the leaders. I have no problem with the suggestion that it is possible for leaders to lead people in a certain direction, but what does all the other stuff have to do with that statement being true or not?Now, I'm fine with writers using anecdotes, even slightly unfair ones, but presenting tendentious remarks like that as though they're deep insights worth pondering seems trite at best, and not at all appropriate for a putatively academic text. One doesn't read a work like this to be entertained or overawed, one reads this because one expects a rigorous if not exhaustive analysis of the relevant factors at play.At the bottom of the page we find another, rather odd statement, with which they are apparently trying to tell us something: "many leaders may be moved by the desire to go down in history as peacemakers." (ibid.) Now, one of the key "problems" with "war" is that it sometimes can be advisable, or even required (to ensure your group's survival) to go to war. War is not necessarily evil, and, as such, it is only politically 'good' for you to 'go down in history as a peacemaker' when there is popular support for such a move; yet they seem to think it 'obvious' that every population would prefer this.Their economic commentary is at times downright ridiculous:"governments typically obtain military forces by paying for them."[...]"Military spending is perhaps the most inflationary way for a government to spend money. By using up major resources without producing consumable goods, military spending reduces supply while also increasing demand for raw materials, thereby contributing doubly to inflation. Moreover, costs tend to rise yet further when the supply of money and credit increases without corresponding increases in productivity." (p.210)I have, quite honestly, absolutely no idea what they're trying to tell me here. I included the first line only to show you how lazy their editors were, but if we look at the second line, they seem to be saying something about credit simultaneously in- and decreasing, and that the money, while being spent, is not received by anyone. Yet earlier, they told the readers about how Haliburton made a killing providing services to the government. I am unsure how to combine those two facts, and I'm equally unsure what to make of their suggestion that money spent on capital intensive goods causes more inflation than money spent otherwise. Why do these statements not deserve more of an explanation? I am, in any case, at a loss in trying to figure out what they mean. Lastly, where does the stated "increase in the supply of money and credit" come from?Conclusion:While the book at first appears to be highly organized, after reading it 1.5 times for a course, I've come to the conclusion that the text contains an enormous number of redundant passages, as well as information that is presented in different sections of the book when it would have been far more logical to put them together. Furthermore, literally dozens of (sub)sections contain paragraphs that present points that are entirely unrelated to the section heading under which they are presented.Extrapolating from this, far too little time was spent weeding out redundant passages like the one cited here, and the reader is, throughout the book, confronted with a veritable deluge of weasel words (especially "may be", "may have", "could be", "has possibly", and worst of all "perhaps") employed in order to "make points" without really making them, or at least without having to defend them. (The most painful, and one of the most irrelevant ones, was probably "The Earth's protective ozone layer has been thinning, perhaps dangerously." p.399) It's not clear to me at all why statements phrased that way should even be allowed to be in academic texts, let alone why they belong there, as they have very little explanatory value, and are often little more than (redundant) restatements of points made earlier, presented in the form of a conclusion.The book as a whole certainly contains some useful information and insights, but there sadly is also an enormous amount of fluff, which are presented as equally valid.While the scope of the book is certainly broad, it's terribly lacking in academic rigour. And although I'm sympathetic to the authors' plight, I cannot seriously recommend this book to anyone.

I have not read the book other than the section on envrionmental conflicts, where there is a basic, and fundamental, error. The author calls "use of resources" a tragedy of the commons. In fact, as long as there are clear property rights to resources this is incorrect. The authors write "It may be inconvenient to recycle and, in fact, easier for individuals simply to throw their garbage away, or to use more than their share of scarce commodities." This, however, is not based on the tragedy of the commons but an arbitrary concept of fair share. This is ideology masquerading as analysis.Many have claimed to know what the proper level of resource use is and promised that the end was near due to overuse. These predictions have universally proven false because the price mechanism is far superior to any claim to knowledge by doomsaying professors. If the rest of the book is based on simliar thinking, it is useful only in reifying a particular ideology but probabaly offers few insights.

Very broad and objective overview of the nature of conflict, conflict resolution and peacebuilding. Well recommended for students of conflict resolution as well as for anyone interested in the subject. Well written and reads very easily.

It's a great text. Highly recommend for anyone interested in violence, war and peace research.

Peace and Conflict Studies PDF
Peace and Conflict Studies EPub
Peace and Conflict Studies Doc
Peace and Conflict Studies iBooks
Peace and Conflict Studies rtf
Peace and Conflict Studies Mobipocket
Peace and Conflict Studies Kindle

Peace and Conflict Studies PDF

Peace and Conflict Studies PDF

Peace and Conflict Studies PDF
Peace and Conflict Studies PDF