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Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Interdisciplinary studies > Peace studies
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Identity Conflicts - Can Violence be Regulated? (Paperback)
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Identity Conflicts - Can Violence be Regulated? (Paperback)
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Social conflicts are ubiquitous and inherent in organized social
life. This volume examines the origins and regulation of violent
identity conflicts. It focuses on the regulation of conflict: the
constraining, directing, and repression of violence through
institutional rules and understandings. The core question the
authors address is how violence is regulated and the social and
political consequences of such regulation. The contributors provide
a multidisciplinary multi-regional analysis of identity conflicts
and their regulation. The chapters focus on the forging and
suppression of religious and ethnic identities, problematic
national identities, the recreation of identity in post-conflict
peace-building efforts, and the forging of collective identities in
the process of democratic state building. The instances of violent
conflict treated here range across the globe from Central and South
America, to Asia, to the Balkans, and to the Islamic world. One of
the key findings is that conflicts involving religious, ethnic, or
national identity are inherently more violence prone and require
distinctive methods of regulation. Identity is a question both of
power and of integrity. This means that both material and symbolic
needs must be addressed in order to constrain or regulate these
conflicts. Accordingly, some chapters draw on a political-economy
approach that places primary emphasis on resources, organization,
and interests, while others develop a cultural approach focusing on
how identities are constructed, grievances defined, blame
attributed, and redress articulated. This volume offers new ideas
about the regulation of identity conflicts, at both the global and
local level, that engage both tradition and modernization. It will
be of interest to policymakers, political scientists, human rights
activists, historians, and anthropologists.
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