Theory and Practice in Ethnic Conflict Management Theorizing Success

Throughout the world there are efforts both large and small to address ethnic conflicts-identity based disputes between groups who are unable to live side-by-side in the same state. This book brings together a collection of case studies on interventions i

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Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to University of Wollongong - PalgraveConnect - 2016-05-03

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10.1057/9780230513082preview - Theory and Practise in Ethnic Conflict Management, Edited by Marc H. Ross and Jay Rothman

Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to University of Wollongong - PalgraveConnect - 2016-05-03

THEORY AND PRACTICE IN ETHNIC CONFLICT MANAGEMENT

General Editors: Seamus Dunn, Professor of Conflict Studies and Director, Centre for the Study of Conflict, and Valerie Morgan, Professor of History and Research Associate, Centre for the Study of Conflict, University of Ulster, Northern Ireland With the end of the Cold War, the hitherto concealed existence of a great many other conflicts, relatively small in scale, long-lived, ethnic in character and intra- rather than inter-state has been revealed. The dramatic changes in the distribution of world power, along with the removal of some previously resolute forms of centralised restraint, have resulted in the re-emergence of older, historical ethnic quarrels, many of which either became violent and warlike or teetered, and continue to teeter, on the brink of violence. For these reasons, ethnic conflicts and consequent violence are likely to have the greatest impact on world affairs during the next period of history.

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This new series examines a range of issues related to ethnic and intercommunity conflict. Each book concentrates on a well-defined aspect of ethnic and intercommunity conflict and approaches it from a comparative and international standpoint. Rather than focus on the macrolevel, that is on the grand and substantive matters of states and empires, this series argues that the fundamental causes of ethnic conflict are often to be found in the hidden roots and tangled social infrastructures of the opposing separated groups. It is through the understanding of these foundations and the working out of their implications for policy and practical activity that may lead to ameliorative processes and the construction of transforming social mechanisms and programmes calculated to produce longterm peace.

10.1057/9780230513082preview - Theory and Practise in Ethnic Conflict Management, Edited by Marc H. Ross and Jay Rothman

Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to University of Wollongong - PalgraveConnect - 2016-05-03

ETHNIC AND INTERCOMMUNITY CONFLICT SERIES

Theorizing Success and Failure Edited by

Marc Howard Ross William R. Kenan, Jr, Professor of Political Science Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr Pennsylvania USA

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and

Jay Rothman Director, the ARIA Group Inc and Scholar-in-Residence McGregor School ofAntioch University Yellow Springs Ohio USA

10.1057/9780230513082preview - Theory and Practise in Ethnic Conflict Management, Edited by Marc H. Ross and Jay Rothman

Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to University of Wollongong - PalgraveConnect - 2016-05-03

Theory and Practice in Ethnic Conflict Management

First published in Great Britai