2nd Edition

Ethnic Conflict In World Politics

By Barbara Harff, Ted Robert Gurr Copyright 2004
    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    This second edition of Ethnic Conflict in World Politics is an introduction to a new era in which civil society, states, and international actors attempt to channel ethnic challenges to world order and security into conventional politics. From Africa's post-colonial rebellions in the 1960s and 1970s to anti-immigrant violence in the 1990s the authors survey the historical, geographic, and cultural diversity of ethnopolitical conflict. Using an analytical model to elucidate four well-chosen case studies?the Kurds, the Miskitos, the Chinese in Malaysia, and the Turks in Germany?the authors give students tools for analyzing emerging conflicts based on the demands of nationalists, indigenous peoples, and immigrant minorities throughout the world. The international community has begun to respond more quickly and constructively to these conflicts than it did to civil wars in divided Yugoslavia and genocide in Rwanda by using the emerging doctrines of proactive peacemaking and peace enforcement that are detailed in this book. Concludes by identifying five principles of international doctrine for managing conflict in ethnically diverse societies. The text is illustrated with maps, tables, and figures.

    Preface , Ethnopolitical Conflict and the Changing World Order , The World of Ethnopolitical Groups , The Pursuit of Autonomy: The Kurds and Miskitos , Protecting Group Rights in Plural Societies: The Chinese in Malaysia and Turks in Germany , A Framework for Analysis of Ethnopolitical Mobilization and Conflict , The Internal Processes of Ethnic Mobilization and Conflict: Four Cases , The International Dimensions of Ethnopolitical Conflict: Four Cases , Ethnic Groups in the International System: State Sovereignty Versus Individual and Group Rights , Responding to Ethnopolitical Challenges: Five Principles of Emerging International Doctrine , Serious and Potential Ethnopolitical Conflicts in 2002

    Biography

    Barbara Harff