Description
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Healing the Wounds: Essays on the Reconstruction of Societies after War 2004 by Edited by Marie-Claire Foblets Edited by Trutz Von Trotha Edited by David Nelken Edited by Rosemary Hunter
In recent decades the world has experienced the rise of so-called low intensity conflicts. Unlike conventional wars these very bloody armed conflicts are no longer the affair of state governments and their armies. In their place appear police-like armed units security services and secret services groups and organizations of religious political and social fanatics ready to resort to violence militias bands of mercenaries or just gangs of thugs led by the condottiere of the 21st century consisting of militant charismatics militia generals drug barons and warlords of various kinds. They conduct wars in which the soldiers no longer wear uniforms and there is no meeting of armies in open battle. The armed organizations fight in urban agglomerations and in difficult inaccessible regions. The combatants fight for religion and quasi-religious ideologies for the rights of the people or national liberation for power gain and booty and above all for recognition.For the practice of peace this kind of war has far-reaching consequences. In this book the authors examine various paths to peace and reconciliation in low intensity conflicts. They look at processes of peace making from South Africa and the North of Mali to Indonesia and South East Asia. Common to most studies is that they stress the particular local contexts of peace making tied to the highly localized nature of most low intensity conflicts. The logic of peace has become a logic of local and regional power. The articles shed new light not only on ways and chances of interventions by the international community but also on the role of nongovernmental organisations in violent conflicts.show more