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Peace Processes: A Sociological Approach

ISBN: 978-0-7456-4776-0
Hardcover
272 pages
March 2010, Polity
List Price: US $72.75
Government Price: US $46.56
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"In many ways a culmination of John D. Brewer’s life work, Peace Processes is simply a remarkable achievement. It should be required reading for scholars, policy makers and practitioners who are concerned with peace."
Glady Ganiel, Sociology

"A very valuable, pioneering study that simultaneously highlights the centrality of sociological analysis for understanding peace processes and opens sociology to such neglected but central topics as peace, war and organized violence."
Siniša Maleševic, Sociology

"Brewer’s sociological approach is refreshingly different; Brewer is a westerner applying much of the wisdom of the non-West to conflicts in the West. A very promising approach."
Johan Galtung, Sociology

"John Brewer's Peace Processes: A Sociological Approach stands out for two reasons: first because it is written in an accessible, reader-friendly manner - a sign, I always think, of the author's self-confidence - and second, because it is replete with references to key writers and debates in the field of what can broadly be called international relations. It would therefore be of interest to the initiated and uninitiated alike."
Times Higher Education Supplement

"Great social science nearly always comes from confronting traumatic experience. That is what we have here, as the result of Brewer's visceral experience in Northern Ireland: a massive contribution to understanding peace processes, adding sociology to prior political science knowledge - and thereby reviving that discipline. The book is moving, scholarly, cognitively powerful and a major contribution to policy. It is a terrific achievement."
John A. Hall, McGill University

"The book provides a comprehensive and original analysis of peace processes. Brewer demonstrates the relevance of a sociological perspective in pointing to the centrality of communal violence and its structural context as well as the wider global context. His analysis of types of post-violence society is most interesting and rich in terms of its comparative content. The argument is nicely situated in the sociological tradition and is immensely readable. It will be an essential work of reference on post-violence societies and in peace processes."
Gerard Delanty, University of Sussex

"John Brewer's book is a unique contribution to our understandings of peace- making, a path-breaking work of creative scholarship that sharply illuminates the complexly contradictory potentials for, and barriers to, pragmatic peace-making in the wake of war and communal violence. The innovative insights in this work will provoke important constructive discussion and policy debates for years to come, while also providing significant conceptual frameworks for peace activists around the world."
John Brown Childs, University of California Santa Cruz


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