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The book brings together analyses of U.S.-based conflicts with those from many regions of the world. International, intra-state, and local conflicts are explored, along with those that have been violent and non-violent.
List of contents
Introduction
Galia Golan, Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Louis Kriesberg, Syracuse University
Chapter 2: Gendered Perspective on Intractable Conflicts and Power Sharing
Ayelet Harel-Shalev, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Chapter 3: Mapping and Monitoring Global Insecurity and the Global Illicit Economy: The Effects of Intractable Conflicts
Margaret Hermann, Syracuse University
Chapter 4: Unrecognized States: Theory, Cases, and Policy Implications
Kristy Buzard, Syracuse University; Benjamin A.T. Graham, University of Southern California; Ben Horne
Chapter 5: Transformation of Armed Conflict: Lessons from the Arab-Israeli Conflict
Galia Golan, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Chapter 6: Dynamics Contexts of Conflict: Complicated Actors and Settings in Northern Ireland
Ronit Berger, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC), Herzliya, Israel
Chapter 7: Social Media Use and Fear Levels after the Paris 2015 Attacks: A Comparative Study
Bernard Enjolras, Institute for Social Research in Oslo, Norway; Shana Kushner Gadarian, Syracuse University; Kari Steen-Johnsen, Institute for Social Research in Oslo, Norway
Chapter 8: The Creation of Space for Conflict Change: Context, Society and Leadership in Northern Ireland during the 1990s
Nimrod Rosler, Tel Aviv University
Chapter 9: Between Ripeness and Necessity: Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and the Tipping Point for External Intervention
Timea Spitka, Hebrew University
Chapter 10: Global Imbalances, Currency Wars, and U.S. Hegemony
Stuart Brown, Syracuse University
Chapter 11: Responding to Gun Murders in Syracuse, NY: A Multilevel, Multimodal Interventions Approach
Robert Rubinstein, Syracuse University; Sandra D. Lane, Syracuse University; Timothy "Noble" Jennings-Bey, Street Addiction Institute, Inc., Syracuse, NY; Najah Salaam
Chapter 12: Intergroup Dialogue, Constructive Conflict and Social Power: Towards Transforming Inequality
Diane Swords, Intergroup Dialogue Program, Syracuse University
Chapter 13: Transforming Conflicts: Barriers and Overcoming Them
Daniel Bar-Tal, Tel Aviv University
Chapter 14: Back to the Tribes: Tribes' Centrality in Iraq's Inter-community Rapprochement
Amatzia Baram, University of Haifa
Chapter 15: U.S. and North Korea: A Gordian Conflict
Stuart Thorson, Syracuse University; Hyunjin Seo, University of Kansas
Chapter 16: Transit Migration, Borders, and Activism: Understanding the Changing Geographies and Temporalities of International Migration
Jared Van Ramshorst and Jamie Winders, Syracuse University
Chapter 17: Transforming Intractable Conflicts under the Shadow of the Past: The Sunk Cost and Inaction Inertia Effects
Lesley Terris, Lauder School of Government, Policy and Diplomacy of the Interdisciplinary Center; Orit E. Tykocinski, Baruch Ivcher School of Psychology, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)
Chapter 18: Velvet Transformation in South Africa: Mandela, De Klerk, or Something Else
Mordechai Tamarkin, Tel Aviv University
Chapter 19: The Fractal Nature of Intractable Conflict: Implications for Sustainable Transformation
Joshua Fisher and Peter T. Coleman, Columbia University
Chapter 20: From Peacebuilding to Constructive Conflict Management: Reconsidering Intervention under Conditions of Intractability
Bruce W. Dayton, SIT Graduate Institute, School for International Training
Conclusion: Looking Forward
Catherine Gerard, Syracuse University and Miriam Elman, Syracuse University
About the author
Edited by Miriam F. Elman; Catherine Gerard; Galia Golan and Louis Kriesberg