More than ever before, ethnic struggle finds expression in the
growing incidence and scale of displaced persons and refugee flows,
as well as in exacerbated levels of ethnic minority abuse and
involuntary assimilation. Demographic and political sources of
instability in multi-ethnic societies assure the continuing
significance of ethnic strife and the potential for intrastate
ethnic violence far into the next millennium. While not all
disagreements between ethnic groups can be expected to escalate
into violence, more than a few have produced intractable and
destructive conflicts, and one or more of these conflicts could
ultimately reach levels that overwhelm international resources and
capabilities.
Carment and Harvey examine how regional and international
security organizations can prevent destructive ethnic conflict and
manage cases in which violence already is at hand. First they
develop a conceptual framework for advancing basic research on the
prevention and management of intrastate ethnic violence. They
evaluate theoretical knowledge about the nature of ethnic conflict,
using case material and quantitative assessments, and they apply
these assumptions against recent instances of conflict management
through an in-depth study of NATO's involvement in Kosovo and
Bosnia. This book serves as an important research tool for
students, scholars, and policy makers involved with ethnic conflict
and international relations.
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