Reconciliation after terrorism: strategy, possibility or absurdity?/ edited by Judith Renner, Alexander Spencer.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Central Library, Sikkim University General Book Section | 363.325 REN/R (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | P23065 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction: Reconciling the Seemingly Irreconcilable?, Judith Renner and Alexander Spencer
Part I: Theoretical Reflections on Reconciliation after Terrorism -- 1. Orthodox Terrorism Theory and Reconciliation: The Transition out of Terrorism, Jason Franks -- 2. Marginalizing 'Victims' and 'Terrorists': Modes of Exclusion in the Reconciliation Process, Michael Humphrey --
Part II: Empirical Case Studies of Reconciliation in Terrorist Conflicts -- 3. Reconciliation following Terrorism in South Tyrol: A Successful Story of Peacemaking by Consociational Democracy and Power-Sharing, Gunther Pallaver and Manuel Fasser -- 4. Reconciliation and Paramilitaries in Nothern Ireland, Marie Breen Smyth -- 5. Reconciliation with 'Terrorists': Understanding the Legacy of Terror in South Africa, Nokukhanya Mncwabe and Hugo van der Merwe -- 6. Overcoming Terrorism in Peru without Negotiation or Reconciliation, David Scott Palmer -- 7. Undermining Reconciliation: Colombian Peace Spoilers in- and outside the Negotiation Process, Katrin Planta and Carolin Goerzig -- 8. Talking: A Potential Path to Reconciliation in Mindanao, Harmonie Toros -- 9. Terror, Empathy and Reconciliation in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, Yehudith Auerbach and Ifat Klang-Maoz --10. Conclusion: The (im)Possibility of Reconciliation in Afghanistan and the 'War on Terror', Judith Renner and Alexander Spencer.
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