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Conflict, Cultural Heritage, and Peace offers a series of
conceptual and applied frameworks to help understand the role
cultural heritage plays within conflict and the potential it has to
contribute to positive peacebuilding and sustainable development in
post-conflict societies. Designed as a resource guide, this general
volume introduces the multiple roles cultural heritage plays
through the conflict cycle from its onset, subsequent escalation
and through to resolution and recovery. In its broadest sense it
questions what role cultural heritage plays within conflict, how
cultural heritage is used in the construction and justification of
conflict narratives and how are these narratives framed and often
manipulated to support particular perspectives, and how we can
develop better understandings of cultural heritage and work towards
the better protection of cultural heritage resources during
conflict. It moves beyond the protection paradigm and recognises
that cultural heritage can contribute to building peace and
reconciliation in post-conflict environments. The study offers a
conceptual and operational framework to understand the roles
cultural heritage plays within conflict cycles, how it can be
targeted during war, and the potential cultural heritage has in
positive peacebuilding across the conflict lifecycle. Conflict,
Cultural Heritage, and Peace offers an invaluable introduction to
cultural heritage at all stages in conflict scenarios which will
benefit students, researchers and practitioners in the field of
heritage, environment, peace and conflict studies.
Conflict, Cultural Heritage, and Peace offers a series of
conceptual and applied frameworks to help understand the role
cultural heritage plays within conflict and the potential it has to
contribute to positive peacebuilding and sustainable development in
post-conflict societies. Designed as a resource guide, this general
volume introduces the multiple roles cultural heritage plays
through the conflict cycle from its onset, subsequent escalation
and through to resolution and recovery. In its broadest sense it
questions what role cultural heritage plays within conflict, how
cultural heritage is used in the construction and justification of
conflict narratives and how are these narratives framed and often
manipulated to support particular perspectives, and how we can
develop better understandings of cultural heritage and work towards
the better protection of cultural heritage resources during
conflict. It moves beyond the protection paradigm and recognises
that cultural heritage can contribute to building peace and
reconciliation in post-conflict environments. The study offers a
conceptual and operational framework to understand the roles
cultural heritage plays within conflict cycles, how it can be
targeted during war, and the potential cultural heritage has in
positive peacebuilding across the conflict lifecycle. Conflict,
Cultural Heritage, and Peace offers an invaluable introduction to
cultural heritage at all stages in conflict scenarios which will
benefit students, researchers and practitioners in the field of
heritage, environment, peace and conflict studies.
In this final part to his bestselling A Force Like No Other series,
Colin Breen brings together more compelling insider stories from
RUC officers who served during the Troubles. 'A most powerful and
unique insight into the world's most dangerous job in policing in
the 1970s and '80s.' Henry McDonald, Observer and Guardian 'This
book of real RUC insider anecdotes ... has, of course, the best
possible sources - the cops themselves.' Hugh Jordan, Sunday World
'A Force Like No Other recalls the horrors of the Troubles but also
some of the funnier stories of everyday life as a cop.' Stephen
Gordon, Sunday Life
Brings together over thirty of the leading scholars in Post
Medieval archaeology and examines how this relatively new
discipline has developed and where it is going. The impetus for
this volume lies in the expansion of interest in Post Medieval
archaeology in university, commercial, and voluntary sectors. The
study of Post Medieval archaeology is a relatively new discipline
but, within archaeology as a whole, it represents one of the
fastest growing areas of study. Archaeologists seek to avoid the
fragmentation of a still small discipline into subfields such as
pre-1750 post-medieval archaeology, post-1750 industrial
archaeology, or the incorporation of theory as somehow outside of
the purview of the work of the older organisations. This important
and timely volume brings together articles that consider the
commonalties between approaches as well as the unique contributions
made by members of each organisation towards the study of the
material heritage of the post-1550 period. The chapters in the
volume derive from a well-attended three day conference held at the
University of Leicester in April 2008 and sponsored by the Society
for Post-medieval Archaeology, the Association for Industrial
Archaeology, and the Irish Post-Medieval Archaeology Group. The aim
of the discussion-focused conference was to foster enhanced
understanding and cooperation between the organisations and their
approaches; with in-depth consideration of the future of the
broader field of historical archaeology. The volume will bring the
debatefrom the conference to a wider academic, professional, and
vocational audience and, it is anticipated, will act as a benchmark
by which future development will be judged.
In 1983, Interpol named Northern Ireland the most dangerous place
in the world to be a police officer. In 1968, the RUC was
catapulted into the Troubles. Bombs, death threats and murder
became a regular part of the day job. Working right at the heart of
the conflict, police officers were often caught in the middle -
heroes to some, villains to others. Now, for the first time, the
men and women who policed the Troubles tell their own stories in
their own words. Covering all aspects of police work, from handling
informants and conducting interviews with notorious criminals to
dealing with the aftermath of tragic bombings, these candid, moving
and sometimes blackly comic stories show the unpredictable, brutal
and surreal world in which the RUC operated. As a former police
officer, Colin Breen has unparalleled access to former RUC, Special
Branch and CID officers who have never spoken out before. Their
stories reveal the mayhem and madness that officers dealt with
every day; the psychological and personal toll of the job; and the
camaraderie - and the whiskey - that helped them to cope. Raw,
unsettling and frank, A Force Like No Other tells the real story of
the RUC.
In this follow-up to his bestselling A Force Like No Other, Colin
Breen brings together more compelling insider stories from RUC
officers who served during the Troubles. Includes stories about the
IRA border campaign (1958-62), the Shankill Butchers murders and
the 1987 Remembrance Day bombing in Enniskillen.
Development is a contested area, but can be summarised as the
attempt to bring about good change in society. Archaeology has
played only a very limited role within this agenda so far, but has
considerable scope to integrate into its practice and structures.
This short incisive book focuses on Africa, examining the key
issues and threats affecting the archaeological resource, including
governance, neglect, conflict, climate change and globalisation.
The authors examine the context of archaeology within international
development and the remit and work of the key organizations
involved, ranging from multi-lateral agencies like the UN and the
World Bank to NGOs.
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