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Full Description
This encyclopaedia provides a comprehensive overview of major theories and approaches to the study of peace and conflict across different humanities and social sciences disciplines. Peace and conflict studies (PCS) is one of the major sub-disciplines of international studies (including political science and international relations), and has emerged from a need to understand war, related systems and concepts and how to respond to it afterward. As a living reference work, easily discoverable and searchable, the Palgrave Encyclopedia of Peace and Conflict Studies offers solid material for understanding the foundational, historical, and contemporary themes, concepts, theories, events, organisations, and frameworks concerning peace, conflict, security, rights, institutions and development. The Palgrave Encyclopaedia of Peace and Conflict Studies brings together leading and emerging scholars from different disciplines to provide the most comprehensive and up-to-date resource on peace and conflict studies ever produced.
Contents
The Palgrave Encyclopaedia of Peace and Conflict Studies will include an extensive number of entries, which will eventually amount to over 750,000 words, if not over. Although the Palgrave Encyclopaedia of Peace and Conflict Studies will be organised alphabetically, entries will cover the following themes/sections:1. Disciplinary knowledge. Entries under this section will provide a comprehensive coverage of peace, conflict and security cross different humanities and social science disciplines, including: political, science, International Relations, economics, international law, peace and conflict studies, sociology, anthropology, geography, psychology, area studies, post-colonial studies, history, the arts, and other sub-disciplines. 2. Key concepts. Entries under this section will cover key concepts on peace, conflict, and security, such as: peacekeeping, mediation and diplomacy, peacebuilding, statebuilding, reconciliation, transitional justice, security sector reform, civil society, human rights, post-conflict recovery, development, social movements and resistance, local infrastructures for peace, minority protection, institution-building, democratisation, elections, tolerance, compromise, ethnic cleansing, war crimes, horizontal inequality, apology and forgiveness, and hybridity. 3. Types of Conflicts. Entries under this section will examine different types of conflicts, such as: inter-state conflict, intra-state conflict, ethnic conflict, secessionist conflict, diplomatic conflict, environmental conflict, resource conflict, food conflict, water wars, etc.4. Conflict-affected Societies. Entries under this section will examine a comprehensive country case studies of peace and conflict. Currently there are over 40 active conflicts in the world, while several others are either at a recovery stage or about to erupt. Main entries will include case study of past, present, and potential conflicts, as well as account for country-specific peace processes and challenges to recovery. Examples will include: Bosnia, Cambodia, Cyprus, Kosovo, East Timor, Namibia, Northern Ireland, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Congo, Guatemala, Columbia, Myanmar, Solomon Islands, Western Sahara, Yemen, Central African Republic, Somalia, Rwanda, and many other country case studies.5. Actors, Institutions, Networks and Practices. Entries under this section will cover themes such as: international and regional organisations, including the UN, EU, African Union, OSCE, Council of Europe, World Bank, IMF, ASEAN, OAS, etc; non-governmental peace organisations, such as: HRW, AI, etc; actors such as UNSC permanent members, emerging powers (BRICS), small states, as well as influential figures; emerging networks; and practices such as mediation, diplomacy, sanctions etc. 6. Peace Operations. Entries under this section will document all UN and non-UN peace operations and military interventions since 1945. This will include preventive diplomacy, peacekeeping, peacebuilding, and peacemaking operations, as well as other controversial examples of humanitarian interventions, occupation, and counter-insurgency. 7. Peace Agreements. This section will over a comprehensive outline of the evolution of peace treaties throughout history, ranging from the Kadesh Treaty in Mesopotamia and others ending major cycles of war such as those associated with Westphalia in 1648 to those of the Post War Era. 8. Peacegraphy and arts. Entries under this section will document the intellectual biographies of influential and world-renowned peace thinkers and practitioners (eg Gandhi, Einstein, Keynes, Bertrand Russell, Johann Galtung, and others). This has not featured before in other encyclopaedias of this type. This section will also offer a range of engagements with peace in literature, art, theatre, music, architecture, and other related areas.Entries across these sections, entries will be presented alphabetically, as illustrated by this sample list of entries below:Agents of peaceAnthropological approaches on peacebuildingArab SpringArchitectureArtCivil societyCivil warsComplexity theory and peacebuilding practiceConflict and Peace in KosovoConflict managementConflict managementConflict mappingConflict resolutionConflict transformationConflict, Terrorism, and PeacebuildingConstructivism and peacebuildingCouncil of Europe and Human Rights ProtectionCritical theory and peace researchDemocratisationDronesElections in post-conflict societiesEmancipatory peaceEmerging powers and peacebuildingEnvironmental conflictsEthnic cleansingEthnic warsField work in conflict zonesFoucault on peace, conflict and securityGenocideGeographies of peaceGlobal warming, resources, and civil conflictsGlobalisation and peacebuildingHorizontal InequalitiesHuman Rights WatchHuman securityHumanitarian actionHumanitarian InterventionHybrid peaceHybrid peaceHybrid Peacekeeping OperationsHybrid political ordersHybrid threatsInfrastructure for peaceIntelligence Studies and Peace-making ProcessesInternational peace sociologyJohan GaltungLiberal peaceLiteratureLocal ownershipMedia, Conflict, and PeaceMigration and far-right groupsMigration and peacebuildingMinority rightsMusicNGOsNormalisationNorthern Ireland Peace ProcessNuclear warsOSCE and Conflict PreventionPacifismPeace activismPeace agreementsPeace and Conflict in Sierra LeonePeace celebritiesPeace diplomacyPeace economicsPeace educationPeace ethnographiesPeace formationPeace in BosniaPeace MethodsPeace researchPeace-makingPeacebuildingPeaceful political ordersPeacekeepingPeace TreatiesPerformative peacePositive peacePost-colonialPost-humanism and peacebuildingPost-Liberal PeacePostcolonial Approaches to PeacePower-sharingPreventive diplomacyRealism and peacebuildingReconciliationResistanceResponsibility to ProtectRevolutionary justiceRohingya and Ethnic Conflict in MyanmarRule of lawRussian approach to conflict resolutionScientific Realism and Peace ScienceSecessionist conflictsSecuritisationSecurity-Development NexusSelf-determination disputesSocial capital and peaceSocial movements for disarmamentSociology of peaceSomaliaStatebuildingTerrorism, counterinsurgency, and conflict managementThe European Union and PeacebuildingThe right to peaceThe rise of China and global securityTheatre-based peacebuildingToleranceTraditional Peacekeeping OperationsTransitional justiceTruth and reconciliation commissionsUN Human Rights CouncilUN Interim Mission in KosovoUN Peacebuilding CommissionUN Security Council and War-MakingUnrecognised statesViolent extremismVisual peaceWar and Peace in AfghanistanWater warsWomen, peace, and securityYouth and peacebuildingConfirmed Section editors/Editorial Board:Dr Sandra Pogodda (University of Manchester)Dr Jan Pospisil (University of Edinburgh)Dr Stefanie Kappler (Durham University)Vivienne Jabri (King's College London)Professor Richard Caplan (Oxford University)Roger MacGinty (Durham University)Susan Woodward (NYU)Roland Bleiker (University of Queensland)Caroline Hughes (University of Notre Dame)Tom Woodhouse (University of Bradford).Also to note:"As outlined in the proposal and our response memo we will include scholars from global south. You have seen Oliver's series with Palgrave how well it is represented with scholars from global south. Currently, our proposed editorial team and section editors comprises of people working in a wide range of themes and regions and we are confident they will commission entries from global south scholars as well as entries using quantitative approaches/methods. This noted, once we set the project on track, Oliver and I are committed to expanding the editorial team and advisory board with scholars from global-south and quantitative methods."