Diminishing Conflicts in Asia and the Pacific/ why some subside and others don't Aspinall, Edward [ed.] - 1st ed. - London: Routledge, 2013. - xxi, 296 p.

Introduction: diminishing conflicts: learning from the Asia-Pacific --
Timor Leste: international intervention, gender and the dangers of negative peace / Susan Harris Rimmer --
Maluku: anomie to reconciliation / John Braithwaite --
Aceh: democratization and the politics of co-option / Edward Aspinall --
Solomon Islands: from uprising to intervention / Matthew Allen and Sinclair Dinnen --
Punjab: federalism, elections, suppression / Robin Jeffrey --
Sri Lanka: the end of war and the continuation of struggle / Bina D'Costa --
Bougainville: conflict deferred? / Anthony Regan --
The Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT): diminishing violence or violent peace? / Kabita Chakma and Bina D'Costa --
Eastern Burma: long wars without exhaustion / Desmond Ball and Nicholas Farrelly --
11. Fiji: the politics of conflict reduction / John Fraenkel --
Southern Thailand: marginalization, injustice and the failure to govern / Tyrell Haberkorn --
Pakistan's federally administered tribal areas: cause or symptom of national insecurity? / Paul D'Arcy --
Southern Philippines: the ongoing saga of Moro separatism / Ron J. May --
Kashmir: placating frustrated people / Christopher Snedden --
The southern highlands of Papua New Guinea: conflict ignored / Nicole Haley --
Conclusion.

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