Lexington Books
Pages: 352
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-1085-0 • Hardback • May 2006 • $116.00 • (£75.00)
Santosh C. Saha is professor of history at Mount Union College in Ohio.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Toward Contexts More Intricate and Subtle
Part 2 Part I: Explaining Ethnic Violence
Chapter 3 Chapter 1: Third-Party Intervention in Ethno-Religious Conflict: Role Theory and the Major Powers of South Asia
Chapter 4 Chapter 2: Ethnic Violence and the Loss of State Legitimacy: Burma and Indonesia in a Context of Post-colonial Developmentalism
Chapter 5 Chapter 3: Not Ethnicity, but Race: Unity and Conflict in Rwanda since the Genocide
Chapter 6 Chapter 4: The Hutu-Tutsi Conflict in Rwanda
Chapter 7 Chapter 5: Politico-Psychological Dimensions of Ethnic and Poltical Conflicts in India: Conflicting Paradigms at Work
Part 8 Part II: Contemporary Regional Ethnic Conflict
Chapter 9 Chapter 6: Multifaceted Ethnic Conflicts and Conflict Resolution in Nigeria
Chapter 10 Chapter 7: George Town Shuffle: Ethnic Politics of Afro-Guyanese, Amerindians, and Indo-Guyanese in Postcolonial Guyana
Chapter 11 Chapter 8: Sudan's Identity Wars and Democratic Route to Peace
Chapter 12 Chapter 9: Ethnic Conflict in Mexico: The Zapatistas
Chapter 13 Chapter 10: Kurdish Ethnonationalism: A Critical Analysis
Chapter 14 Chapter 11: The Roots of Contemporary Ethnic Conflict and Violence in Burundi
This volume is a new path-breaking enterprise both in normative and empirical terms. It is indispensable for public policy makers, diplomats, strategic community and scholars engaged in mind boggling excercises to deal with the complex ethno-political and ethno-religious conflicts with an aim to transform the anarchical world order into a safe, secure and peaceful world.
— B. M. Jain, University of Rajasthan, India
A timely volume that helps open our eyes to the reality of ethnic violence which afflicts virtually every country in the world today. One of its many contributions is the implicit warning it gives to those who exaggerate the virtues of multiculturalism. It makes us wonder which is stronger: ethnocenrism or muticulturalism?
— Anthony Parel, University of Calgary