Ethics of Peacebuilding

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Edinburgh University Press, 8 ¸.¤. 2008 - 200 ˹éÒ
This book explores the ethical dimension of peacebuilding. In the aftermath of the Cold War the hope for a more stable and just international order was rapidly dissolved by the internecine conflicts that plagued all continents. The Rwanda and Srebrenica genocides demonstrated the challenge of promoting peace in a world increasingly defined by intra-state conflict and sub-national groups confronting nation-states. Murithi interrogates the role that ethics plays in promoting and consolidating peacebuilding and presents a synthesis of moral philosophy and international relations and an analysis of the ethics of negotiation, mediation, forgiveness and reconciliation. In its attempt to explore the extent to which ethical concerns influence and inform peacebuilding this book contributes to a growing body of literature on ethics and international relations which will enable students, scholars and practitioners to ground their understanding of a principled peacebuilding.
 

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CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
1
CHAPTER 2 MORAL KNOWLEDGE AND PEACEBUILDING
13
A CRITIQUE OF THE STATE SYSTEM AND ITS MANAGEMENT OF SUBNATIONAL CONFLICT
42
CHAPTER 4 THE UTILITY OF NEGOTIATION AND MEDIATION
71
CHAPTER 5 THE VIRTUE OF FORGIVENESS
113
CHAPTER 6 THE VALUE OF RECONCILIATION
136
CHAPTER 7 TOWARDS AN AGENDA FOR ETHICAL PEACEBUILDING
160
CHAPTER 8 CONCLUSION
181
INDEX
187
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Tim Murithi is Senior Research Fellow at the University of Bradford.

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