Introduction
Chapter 2 - Contemporary Studies of Peace
Chapter 3 - A Perceptual Approach to Quality Peace
Chapter 4 - A Procedural Approach to Quality Peace
Chapter 5 - A Relational Approach to Quality Peace
Chapter Six: Concluding Observations
References
Christian Davenport is a Professor of Political Science at the
University of Michigan, as well as Global Fellow and Research
Professor at the Peace Research Institute Oslo. His primary
research interests include political conflict (e.g., human rights
violations, genocide/politicide, torture, political surveillance,
civil war and social movements), measurement, racism and popular
culture. He is the author of seven books and numerous articles
appearing in the American Political Science Review, the American
Sociological Review, the American Journal of Political Science, the
Journal of Politics, the Journal of Conflict Resolution,
Comparative Political Studies, and
the Monthly Review (among others). Davenport is also engaged in
various data collection efforts, developing crowd-sourcing data
collection programs and co-organizing
workshops/conferences/webportals facilitating the development of
conflict/peace studies.
Erik Melander is a Professor at the Department of Peace and
Conflict Research at Uppsala University, Sweden. His research
interests concern gender, masculinities, armed conflict, and peace.
His articles have been published in journals such as European
Journal of International Relations, International Studies
Quarterly, Journal of Conflict resolution, Journal of Gender
Studies, and Journal of Peace Research. He has experience from
field-work in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia,
Russia, South Africa, Thailand and the Yugoslav Federation.
Patrick M. Regan is a professor of political science and peace
studies at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at
the University of Notre Dame. He researches the impact of climate
change and social adaptation on armed conflict. His most recent
book, The Politics of Global Climate Change (Paradigm, 2015),
articulates a multi-level political process for influencing climate
change legislation, beginning with local politics.
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