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Vol. XVI, No.3 Spring,
2002
MEDIA NOTES
Michael T, Klare, Resource Wars: The
New Landscape of Global Conflict, is 288 pp for $15 paper
from Owl Books, obtainable from Holtzbrinck Academic Marketing,
115 W. 18 St., 6 Fl., New York, NY 10001, FAX: (202)645-2610,
academic@hholt.com, www.henryholt.com
Michael Nagler, Is There No Other
Way?: The Search for a Nonviolent Future
is published by Berkeley Hill Books. Ho-Won Joeng, has two edited
volumes.
Conflict Resolution: Dynamics, Process
and Structure (238 pp., for $34.95
paper, $84.95 cloth), and The New Agenda for Peace Research
(382 pp. $44.95 paper,
$109.95 cloth), both from the Institute for Conflict Analysis
and Resolution, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA.
Grace Feuerverger, Oasis of Dreams:
Teaching and Learning Peace in a Jewish-Palestinian Village in
Israel is published by Routledge Falmer of New York and London.
Noel Malcolm, Kosovo: A Short History,
with a new introduction by the author, is $35 (plus shipping)
cloth from NYU Press, 838 Broadway, New York, NY 10003, FAX:
(212)995-4798. www.nyupress.nyu.edu
The United States Institute of Peace
Press current offers include:
Princeton N. Lyman, Partner to History:
the U.S. Role in South Africa's Transition to Democracy (384
pp. for $19.95 paper);
David R, Smock, Ed., Interfaith Dialogue
and Peacebuilding (144 pp. for $14,95 paper);
Chester A. Crocker, Fen Osler Hampson
and Pamela Aall, Eds., Turbulent Peace: The Challenge of Managing
International Conflict (936 pp. for $35 paper, $59 cloth);
James Goodby, Petrus Buwalda and Dimitri
Trenin, A Strategy for a Stable Peace: Toward a Euroatlantic
Security Community (205 pp. for $17.50 paper); all plus $4
per item shipping from USIP Press, P.O. Box 605, Herndon, VA,
(800)868-8064, www.usip.org
Also available, often at no charge:
Special Reports, including: "Training
to Help Traumatixed Populations," and occasional single
topic issues of Peaceworks, including: "The Role of International
Financial Institutions in International Humanitarian Law: Report
from the International Humanitarian Law Working Group;"
from USIP,1200 17 St., Suite 200, NW, Washington, DC 20036 (202)457-1700,
usip_requests@usip.org, www.usip.org
The Stanley Foundation produces
a number of publications that often can be obtained at no charge
including: short reports such as: Reconnecting Serbia Through
Regional Cooperation: A Summary of the Findings and Recommendations
of the Euro-Atlantic Initiative Project: Serbia and the Challenge
of Regional Integration; Bulletins of the Atlantic Council of
the United States on such topics as: "Moving Past Dual Containment:
Iran, Iraq, and the Future of U.S. Policy in the
Gulf," by David H. Saltiel and Jason S. Purcell; and Quarterly
issues of the Stanley Foundation Courier: Providing Thought and
Encouraging Dialogue about the World. For a complete list and
other information contact the Stanley Foundation, 209 Iowa Ave.,
Muscatine, IA 52761 (563)264-1500. reports.stanleyfoundation.org
Among the offerings from Routledge
are:
Ilan Pappe, Ed., The Israel/Palestine
Question (288 pp. for $25.95 paper, $85 cloth);
David Brown, Contemporary Nationalism:
Civic, Ethnocultural and Multicultural Politics (208 pp.
for $27.99 paper, $85 cloth);
Kjell Goldman, Ulf Hanners and Charles
Westin, Eds., Nationalism and Internationalism in the Post
Cold-War Era (304 pp. for $29.99 paper, $100 cloth);
Richard A. Falk, Human Rights Horizons:
The Pursuit of Justice in the Globalizing World (288 pp.
for $19.95 paper, $55 cloth); and
William R. Thompson, Ed., Evolutionary
Interpretations of World Politics (304 pp. for $26.95 paper
and $90 cloth);
All plus $4 first item, $1 for each additional,
shipping, from Routledge, Customer Service, 7625 Empire Dr.,
Florence, KY 41042 (800)634-7064, www.routledge-ny.com
New from Jossey-Bass are:
Ethan Katsh and Janet Rifki, On Line
Dispute Resolution: Resolving Conflicts in Cyberspace (240
pp. hardcover for $35);
Victor A. Kremenyuk, Ed., International
Negotiation: Analysis, Approaches, Issues (592 pp. for $50
paper);
Jeanne M. Brett, Negotiating Globally:
How to Negotiate Deals, Resolve Disputes, and Make Decisions
Across Cultural Boundaries (288 pp. for $35 cloth);
Michael Watkins and Susan Rosegrant,
Breakthrough International Negotiation: How Great Negotiators
Transformed the World's Toughest Post-Cold War Conflicts (368
pp. for $40 cloth);
Barbara Madonik, I Hear What You Say,
But What Are You Telling Me: The Strategic Use of Nonverbal Communication
in Mediation (320 pp. cloth for $40); William L. Ury, Ed.,
Must We Fight: From the Battlefield to the Schoolyard-A New
Perspective on Violent Conflict and Its Prevention (128 pp.
cloth for $19.95)
All plus $5 for the first item, $3 for
each additional item, shipping from Jossey-Bass, 989 Market St.,
5th Fl., San Francisco, CA 94103 (888)378-2537,
www.josseybass.com
Deborah A. Prentice and Dale T. Miller
Ed., Cultural Divides: Understanding and Overcoming Group
Conflict is 524 pp. for $18.95 paper from Russell Sage Foundation
Books, 112 E. 64 St., New York NY 10021 (800)524-6401, www.russellsage.org.
The North American Peace Movement, A
Directory: Organizations, Museuems, Peace Studies/Conflict Resolution
Programs, Memorials (Gardens, Monuments), Compiled by Dick
Bennett is published by McFarland & Co., www.mcfarlandpub.com;
336-246-4460.
Denise Breton and Stephen Lehman, The
Mystic Heart of Justice: Restoring Justice in a Broken World
is available from Swedenborg Foundation Publishers, 320 N. Church
St., West Chester, PA 19380 (800)355-3222, ex 20, customerservice@swedenborg.com,
www.swedenborg.com.
Douglass H. Boucher, Ed, The Paradox
of Plenty: Hunger in a Bountiful World is 368 pp. for $18.95
paper (plus $4.50 first item, $1.50 each additional item shipping)
from Food First, The Institute for Food & Development Policy,
398 60 St., Oakland, CA 94618 (800)243 0138, (610)654-4400, www.foodfirst.org
Global Exchange September 11 Campaign
Resources at: http://www.globalexchange.org/september11/resources.html,
offers the following: Books: http://store.globalexchange.org/911.html:
Noam Chomsky: 9-11 (In 9-11, Noam Chomsky examines the
root causes of the September 11th catastrophe, the historical
precedents for it, and the possible outcomes as the world moves
forward into the post-September 11 reality); http://store.globalexchange.org/after911.html
After 9/11: Solutions for a Saner
World (After months of relentless
news about terrorism, anthrax, war and the hunt for Osama bin
Laden, our national conversation has taken a dramatic shift.
Reflection has superseded our initial grief and anger, as we
try to understand how the nightmare of 9/11 will affect us, our
loved ones and our country in the long term. This collection
of 42 articles published by AlterNet untangles the knot of our
new post-9/11 landscape)
http://store.globalexchange.org/another.html Another World
is Possible: Conversations in a Time of Terror (In a collection
of responses to September 11th, more than 100 contributors -
including family members of victims, rescue workers, journalists,
scholars, religious figures, international voices, and community
advocates - reflect on how the crisis has impacted their lives,
explore the roots of anti-American terrorism, and offer concrete
solutions for preventing future
atrocities)
http://store.globalexchange.org/binladen.html
Bin Laden, Islam & America's New
'War on Terrorism' (Lebanese
scholar As'ad AbuKhalil examines the roots of the September 11
crisis, the causes for antipathy toward the United States, and
the historical relations between the US and the Islamic world.
Beginning with an introduction on the legacy of Western misconceptions
about Islam and Arabs, the book focuses on Islamic fundamentalism
and US foreign policy, and the way both polarize the world into
a "good and evil" "with us or against us"
view)
http://store.globalexchange.org/covering.html Covering Islam:
How the Media and the Experts Determine How We See the Rest of
the World (In this classic work, Edward Said reveals the
hidden agendas and distortions of fact that underlie even the
most "objective" coverage of the Islamic world)
http://store.globalexchange.org/roguestate.html
Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower (On
September 11, four planes were hijacked and terrorists proceeded
to carry out the most devastating attack on American soil in
history. The physical destruction and personal suffering caused
by the attacks has been immense. In addition to punishing the
perpetrators, we must not allow the event to pass without deriving
important lessons from it. Clearly, the most important lesson
to be learned is the answer to the question "Why?"
Whatever we think we know about US foreign policy, William Blum's
Rogue State makes it clear that we don't know nearly enough)
http://store.globalexchange.org/taliban.html Taliban: Militant
Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia (The most extreme
and radical of all Islamic organizations, the Taliban inspires
fascination, controversy, and especially fear in
both the Muslim world and the West. Pakistani correspondent Ahmed
Rashid, who has covered Afghanistan for the last 21 years, brings
the shadowy world of the Taliban into sharp focus in this volume)
Terrorism and War (Extrapolated from new interviews conducted
with Howard Zinn since the tragic events of September 11 and
the bombing campaign against
Afghanistan, this is Zinn's most up-to-date thinking on war,
terrorism, and the new global order, the growth of the American
empire, as well as the long tradition of resistance in this country
to US militarism)
http://store.globalexchange.org/terrorism.html Terrorism,
Theirs & Ours (In part one, Eqbal Ahmad holds up the
concepts of "terrorist" and "freedom fighter,"
to US foreign policy. What do these terms mean? Where do they
apply? How can the roots of political violence be stemmed? In
part two, David Barsamian interviews Ahmad about Pakistan, India,
Kashmir, Afghanistan, the Taliban, Muslim Fundamentalism, and
US foreign policy.)
http://store.globalexchange.org/unholy.html Unholy Wars: Afghanistan,
America and International Terrorism (John Cooley examines
the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and why the United States
formed an extraordinary anti-Communist alliance with militant
Islamic forces. He marshals a wealth of evidence to demonstrate
the devastating consequences of this alliance between the US
government and radical Islam, from the assassination of Sadat,
the destabilization of Algeria and Chechnya and the emergence
of the Taliban, to the bombings of the World Trade Center and
the US embassies in Africa). A number of Videos and Audio Tapes
are also available from http://store.globalexchange.org/mideast.html
Guy and Heidi Burgess, "Dealing
with the Terrorism Crisis: Potential Contributions from the Conflict
Resolution Fields is a 10 page compendium of the strengths and
tools conflict resolvers have available to have an impact on
violence. It is available at http://www.Crinfo/intractable/terrotism
essay b. Cfm or http://www.conflictRes.org/terror.htm. A slightly
condensed version is in the January issue of Conflict Resolution
Notes.
The Journal of Peacebuilding and Development
is a new tri-annual publication examining critical peacebuilding
and development topics. It is available from Journal of Peacebuilding
and Development, School of International Service, American University,
4400 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, DC 20016, erinmdc@aol.com
orabunim@american.edu. Peace Building is available twice yearly
for $30 for 2 years from the Peace Education Commission, c/o
Ian Harris, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, P.O. Box 413,
Milwaukee, WI 53208, imh@csd.umw.edu
Rumors of Peace, Newsletter of the
Nonviolent Peaceforce is available
at, www.nonviolentpeaceforce.org, in English, Spanish and French.
The Nonviolent Peaceforce Feasibility Study, one of the most
comprehensive examinations of third
party nonviolent intervention ever produced, may accessed at,
www.nonviolentpeaceforce.org, at the top of the home page.
The following piece was in the "Feed Your Hope" section
of the February 2002 issue. "A Native American grandfather
was talking to his grandson about the tragedy on September 11th.
He said, 'I feel as if I have two wolves fighting in my heart.
One wolf is vengeful, angry, and violent. The other one is loving
and compassionate.' The grandson asked, 'Which wolf will win
the fight in your heart?' The grandfather answered, 'The one
I feed.' (From 'Finding Hope When Dreams Have Shattered' by Ted
Bowman)." Conflict Resolution Quarterly is $30 a year from
Jossey-Bass, 989 Market St., 5th Fl., San Francisco, CA 94103
(888)378-2537, www.josseybass.com.
The Common Ground radio program
is available on line at www.commongroundradio.org. Live feeds
of Amy Goodman's radio series, Democracy Now can be heard on
line at www,freespeech.org.
Transitions Online (TOL) officially launched the TOL Wire in January,
further expanding its coverage of Central and Eastern Europe,
the Balkans, and the former Soviet republics. The TOL Wire http://wire.tol.cz
is a daily news service
featuring selected news articles and analysis published by independent
local partner publications across the region.
Peacefultomorrows.org A new peace campaign being launched by relatives
of people who perished on Sept. 11th at the WTC and Pentagon
is http://peacefultomorrows.org/.
A new peace and social justice coalition
that replaced a number of other groups is reachable at http://www.kairoscanada.org/.
The Fall Winter issue of the COPRED-PSA
Peace Chronicle published a list of "Alternative Information
& Educators Resource List on September 11 and the 'War on
Terrorism,'" with short information statements, compiled
by Jacques DeListe, Anya Hankin and Karuna Maraji, from which
the following web addresses are drawn:
- American Civil Liberties Union, www.aclu.org;
- Independent Media Institute, alternet.org,
Center for Economic and Social Rights; www.cesr.org; an on line
newsletter of alternative political views, www.counterpunch.org/wtclinks.html;
- a variety of news perspectives from
central Eurasia, www. eurasianet.org; alternative reviews of
mainstream media and alternative views of the Afghanistanwar,
September 11 and the Bush Administration's role, www.fair.org;
- the Manchester Guardian, www.guardian.co.uk/weblog;
- Women of Color Against Violence, www.incite-national.org;
- a South Asian perspective on current
events: www.indowindow.com/akhbar; alternative viewpoints, www.indymedia.org;
- the Legal Education Network, http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/terrorism.htm;
- Muslims Against Terrorism, www.matusa.org;
- Middle East Report magazine,www.merip.org;
- BBC, http://news.bbc.co.uk/;
- links to a variety of news sources around
the globe, http://news.yahoo.com
Links to factual information, different perspectives and teaching
ideas, www.rethinkingschools.org; and essays by activists on
the terrorism war with links to information about current events,
www.zmag.org/ZNET.htm.
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Change nor its publisher, Organization Development Institute,
or any of its staff, nor of CirclePoint which is housing the
Nonviolent Change Journal.
©2002. All rights reserve. The Nonviolent Change Journal
is published by the Research/Study Team on Nonviolent Large Systems
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