The Psychology of Peacekeeping
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:27th Aug '98
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

An edited volume of scholarly research combining psychology, diplomacy, economics, political science, and peacekeeping setting forth interdisciplinary solutions to persistent and violent conflicts plaguing the international community.
Langholtz examines how psychology and other social sciences can offer both theoretical explanations and practical applications in the resolution and amelioration of potentially violent international conflicts.
Langholtz examines how psychology and other social sciences can offer both theoretical explanations and practical applications in the resolution and amelioration of potentially violent international conflicts. Since the end of the Cold War and bipolar ideologies, the international community has been willing to intervene using approaches that are founded as much in psychology as in force and these remedies have not been confined to the violent periods of conflicts. This book examines psychological interventions and issues during three phases of conflicts. First, the book examines measures available in advance of a threatening conflict through early intervention and an examination of ethnopolitical issues, economic problems, and potential diplomatic solutions. Second, psychological facets of peacekeeping are examined: the selection of peacekeepers, psychological ambiguities of peacekeeping, and the numbing that comes with widespread suffering. Finally the book examines the psychological measures available to strengthen a cease-fire, deal with mines and related after-effects of war, encourage reconciliation, and hasten the return to a stable and durable peace.
ISBN: 9780275962326
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
280 pages