
The Idea Of Studying Peace Has Gained Considerable Traction In The Past Few Years After Languishing In The Shadows Of Conflict For Decades But How Should It Be Studied? The Peace Continuum Offers A Parallax View Of How We Think About Peace And The Complexities That Surround The Concept (i.e., The Book Explores The Topic From Different Positions At The Same Time). Toward This End, We Review Existing Literature And Provide Insights Into How Peace Should Be Conceptualized - Particularly As Something More Interesting Than The Absence Of Conflict. We Provide An Approach That Can Help Scholars Overcome What We See As The Initial Shock That Comes With Unpacking The 'zero' In The War-peace Model Of Conflict Studies. Additionally, We Provide A Framework For Understanding How Peace And Conflict Have/have Not Been Related To One Another In The Literature. To Reveal How The Peace Continuum Could Be Applied, We Put Forward Three Alternative Ways That Peace Could Be Studied. With This Approach, The Book Is Less Trying To Control The Emerging Peace Research Agenda Than It Is Trying To Assist In/encourage Thinking About The Topic That We All Have Some Opinion On But That Has Yet To Be Measured And Analyzed In A Way Comparable To Political Conflict And Violence. Indeed, We Attempt To Help Facilitate A Veritable Explosion Of Approaches And Efforts To Study Peace.
The Peace Continuum investigates how peace can be rigorously conceptualized and measured as a distinct phenomenon rather than merely the absence of conflict. The authors, Christian Davenport, Erik Melander, and Patrick M. Regan, draw upon their extensive backgrounds in political science and conflict research to challenge the traditional binary model of war and peace. They argue that by moving beyond the 'zero' in conflict studies, scholars can develop more nuanced frameworks for analyzing peace as a complex, multifaceted state of affairs.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of international relations recognize this work as a significant attempt to formalize peace studies as a measurable discipline. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for researchers and students seeking to expand the methodological boundaries of conflict analysis.
Page Count:
224
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190680148
ISBN-13:
9780190680145
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