Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-8561-5 • Paperback • March 1998 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
Connie Peck is coordinator of the Fellowship Program in Peacemaking and Preventive Diplomacy, which is cosponsored by the United Nations Institute for Training and Research and the International Peace Academy.
Chapter 1 Foreword by David A. Hamburg
Part 2 Part I. Contemporary Conflict and Sustainable Peace
Chapter 3 The Second Half of the Twentieth Century
Chapter 4 The Goal of Sustainable Peace
Chapter 5 Diagnosing Contemporary Conflict
Chapter 6 Finding Structural Solutions to Conflict
Part 7 Part II. The Role of the UN, Regional Organizations, and NGOs in Promoting Sustainable Peace
Chapter 8 The United Nations
Chapter 9 The Council of Europe
Chapter 10 The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
Chapter 11 The Organization of American States
Chapter 12 The Organization of African Unity
Chapter 13 The Association of Southeast Asian Nations
Chapter 14 The Developing Role of Nongovernmental Organizations
Part 15 Part III. Organizing for Sustainable Peace
Chapter 16 Sharing Responsibility in Conflict Prevention
Chapter 17 Regional Centers for Sustainable Peace
Chapter 18 The First Half of the Twenty-first Century: Promoting Good Governance Regionally and Internationally
This is a vitally important contribution to the debate about preventive diplomacy, early responses to incipient violent conflict, and medium- to long-term peace-building and peacemaking processes.
— Kevin P. Clements, director, Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University
A thoroughly informative, indeed, a dazzling tour d'horizon of new regional actors in preventive diplomacy.
— Michael W. Doyle, Princeton University
...containing as it does a wealth of valuable and interesting information for the student of conflict and conflict prevention.
— Michael O'Connor, Executive Director, Australia Defence Association; Ethnic Conflict Research Digest
Provides, first, a well-informed and down-to-earth macro-level analysis of the non-coercive conflict prevention mechanisms that are already operating in different parts of the world, and, secondly, a useful synthesis of those uncoordinated mechanisms in the form of a concrete institutional proposal. Peck should be congratulated for this valuable contribution to the conflict prevention literature.
— Pacific Review
This book is an instance of peace research, and a very good one, too.
— Terrorism and Political Violence
This is a very comprehensive survey of the existing organizations working to build sustainable peace. A network of interlocking institutions would indeed be an excellent way of building capacity and institutionalizing knowledge and practice of conflict prevention.
— Olara A. Otunnu, president, International Peace Academy