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  2. Peacebuilding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peacebuilding

    In this sense, peacebuilding includes a wide range of efforts by diverse actors in government and civil society at the community, national, and international levels to address the root causes of violence and ensure civilians have freedom from fear (negative peace), freedom from want (positive peace) and freedom from humiliation before, during ...

  3. Peace and conflict studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_and_conflict_studies

    By the mid-1990s peace studies curricula in the United States had shifted "...from research and teaching about negative peace, the cessation of violence, to positive peace, the conditions that eliminate the causes of violence." [7] As a result, the topics had broadened enormously. By 1994, a review of course offerings in peace studies included ...

  4. Environmental peacebuilding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_peacebuilding

    Environmental peacebuilding can result from unilateral efforts or from cooperation between two adversarial parties. Actors such as international donors, governments or the civil society might work on their own or engage with other stakeholders to resolve environmental and resource management issues that give rise or have the potential to create conflict.

  5. Confidence-building measures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confidence-building_measures

    The existing negative and positive feedbacks prevent a change to a state of peace. Confidence-building measures can change the properties of the system, increasing its dimensionality, so that in the higher dimensional system, positive feedback loops to resolve the conflict are able to overcome the negative feedbacks that tend to maintain the ...

  6. Johan Galtung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johan_Galtung

    Institutionalized racism and sexism are examples of this. Negative vs. positive peace – popularized the concept that peace may be more than just the absence of overt violent conflict (negative peace), and will likely include a range of relationships up to a state where nations (or any groupings in conflict) might have collaborative and ...

  7. Peace process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_process

    For peace processes to resolve an armed conflict, Izumi Wakugawa, advisor to the Japan-based International Peace Cooperation Program, suggests a definition of a peace process as "a mixture of politics, diplomacy, changing relationships, negotiation, mediation, and dialogue in both official and unofficial arenas", which he attributes to Harold H ...

  8. Peace education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_education

    James Page suggests peace education be thought of as "encouraging a commitment to peace as a settled disposition and enhancing the confidence of the individual as an individual agent of peace; as informing the student on the consequence of war and social injustice; as informing the student on the value of peaceful and just social structures and ...

  9. World peace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_peace

    The lesser peace is limited in scope and is concerned with the establishment of basic order and the universal recognition of national borders and the sovereignty of nations. Baháʼís believe that the lesser peace is taking place largely through the operation of the Divine Will and that Baháʼí influence on the process is relatively minor.