Bültmann & Gerriets
Quality Peace
Peacebuilding, Victory and World Order
von Peter Wallensteen
Verlag: OUP US
Reihe: Studies in Strategic Peacebuil
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-0-19-021555-2
Erschienen am 06.10.2015
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 234 mm [H] x 156 mm [B] x 16 mm [T]
Gewicht: 455 Gramm
Umfang: 264 Seiten

Preis: 47,70 €
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Biografische Anmerkung
Klappentext

  • Table of Contents

  • Dedication

  • Acknowledgements

  • Preface

  • 1. Peacebuilding, Victory and Quality Peace

  • 1.1 The Challenge of Peace after War

  • 1.2 Peacebuilding: A Conceptual History

  • 1.3 Victory, World Order and Quality Peace

  • 1.4 Perspectives on Peace after War

  • 1.5 This Book

  • Box 1.1.

  • Table 1.1

  • 2. Quality Peace and Contemporary Scholarship

  • 2.1 Peace in Post-Cold War Conditions

  • 2.2. Post-War Conditions in Contemporary Writing

  • 2.3 The Strategic Approach: At War's End

  • 2.4 The Systemic Approach: Works by Doyle and Sambanis

  • 2.5 Structural Approaches: Civil War as Instability

  • 2.6 Lessons from Inter-State Wars

  • 2.7 The Post-Cold War Period as World Order

  • 2.8 Measurements and Indicators

  • Table 2.1

  • Table 2.2

  • Table 2.3

  • 3. Quality Peace after Civil Wars

  • 3.1. Civil War Outcomes

  • 3.2 After Civil War: Peacebuilding Strategies

  • 3.3 Civil War and International Attention

  • 3.4 Drawing General Conclusions

  • 3.5 Quality Peace after Civil War

  • Table 3.1

  • 4. Quality Peace and State Formation

  • 4.1 Outcomes in State Formation Conflicts

  • 4.2 Challenges to Peace in State Formation Conflicts

  • 4.3 Termination of State Formation Conflicts: An Overview

  • 4.4. State Separation and Quality Peace

  • 4.5 Autonomy and Quality Peace

  • 4.6 Autonomy: Solution v. Step to Separation

  • 4.7 Quality Peace in State Formation Solutions

  • Table 4.1

  • 5. Quality Peace between States: A Challenge

  • 5.1 Inter-State Peacebuilding: A Neglected Field

  • 5.2 Quality Peace and the Settlement of Issues

  • 5.3 Quality Peace and Security Building

  • 5.4 Quality Peace and Dignity

  • 5.5 Challenges of Inter-state Quality Peace

  • Table 5.1

  • 6. Quality Peace and World Order: Uncharted Terrain

  • 6.1 Bringing in World Order

  • 6.2 After World War II: The Consolidation of Victory

  • 6.3 After the Cold War: A 'New World Order'

  • 6.4. World Order and Quality Peace

  • 7. International Organizations and Quality Peace

  • 7.1 World Order and Global Institutions

  • 7.2 Regional Orders and Their Limits

  • 7.3 The United Nations in the Post-Cold War Period

  • 7.4 International Organizations and the Future of Quality Peace

  • Graph 7.1

  • 8. Paths to Quality Peace

  • 8.1 Twenty-Five Conclusions

  • 8.2 The Value of Quality Peace

  • References

  • Index

  • Box 1.1UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali and Peacebuilding

  • Table 1.1 Peacebuilding in Contemporary Scholarship

  • Table 2.1 Peace Agreements and Types of Conflict 1975-2010

  • Table 2.2 Victory in Armed Conflicts since 1975

  • Table 2.3 Peacebuilding and Incompatibility in Internal Conflicts since 1944

  • Table 3.1 Peacebuilding Missions, War Outcomes and Democracy

  • Table 4.1 Post-War Situations in State Formation Conflicts, since 1989

  • Table 5.1 Inter-state Armed Conflicts: Outcomes, 1975-2010

  • Graph 7.1 UN Security Council Resolutions, 1946-2013

  • Appendix 3.1 Success in Peacebuilding, Revisiting Doyle and Sambanis

  • Appendix 3.2 Case Information for Table 3.1

  • Appendix 3.3 Statistical Information for Table 3.1



Peter Wallensteen is a pioneer in peace research, having worked in the field since the 1960s. He was a founder of the Department of Peace and Conflict Research at Uppsala University and the first holder of the Dag Hammarskjöld chair in peace research in Sweden in 1985. He directed the Uppsala Conflict Data Program, which has become a leading provider of data on armed conflict and other forms of organized violence around the world. Since 2006, Wallensteen has served as the Richard G. Starmann Sr. Research Professor of Peace Studies at the Kroc Institute, University of Notre Dame.



In Quality Peace, leading peace researcher Peter Wallensteen offers a broad analysis of peacebuilding, isolating what does and not work when settling conflicts. The book uses statistical analysis to compare two war outcomes-negotiated settlement and victory- in the post-Cold War era


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