Nonviolent Peaceforce - Further Reading

Further Reading

  • Alberto L’Abate: Nonviolent Interposition in Armed Conflict, Journal Peace and Conflict Studies 4 (1) June 1993.
  • Weber, Thomas: From Maude Royden's Peace Army to the Gulf Peace Team: An Assessment of Unarmed Interpositionary Peace Forces. Journal of Peace Research, 1 (1993), p. 390.
  • Liam Mahony, Luis Enrique: Unarmed Bodyguards: International Accompaniment for the Protection of Human Rights, West Hartford, Conn: Kumarian Press 1997.
  • Yeshua Moser-Puangsuwan, Thomas Weber: Nonviolent Intervention Across Borders, University of Hawaii Press 2000. Interview with David Hartsough, co-founder of the Nonviolent Peaceforce, in: New Internationalist, 370 (2004), p. 33
  • Lisa Schirch: Civilian Peacekeeping. Preventing Conflict, Making Space for Democracy. Uppsala: Life and Peace Institute 2006.
  • Mel Duncan, Mark Zissman, Patrick Savaiano: Nonviolent Peaceforce: A Realistic Choice for the Future, in. Stout, Chris E. (Ed.): The New Humanitarians: Inspirations, Innovations, and Blueprints for Visionaries, Vol. 3, Changing Sustainable Development and Social Justice, Westport CT/London 2009, pp.. 89-104.
  • Christine Schweitzer: 2010. Civilian Peacekeeping, A Barely Taped Resource. Wahlenau 2010.
  • Stean A.N. Tshiband: Peacekeeping: A Civilian Perspective?, in: Journal of Conflictology 1 (2) 2010, pp. 20–29
  • Molly S. Wallace: Confronting Wrongs, Affirming Difference: The Limits of Violence, the Power of Nonviolence, and the Case of Nonviolent Intervention in Sri Lanka, PH.D., Brown University Providence, Rhode Island, May 2010
  • Shashi Thraaor: Should UN peacekeeping go ‘back to basics’?” Survival. Vol. 37, iss. 4 (Winter 1995)

Read more about this topic:  Nonviolent Peaceforce

Famous quotes containing the word reading:

    After all, what is reading but a vice, like drink or venery or any other form of excessive self-indulgence? One reads to tickle and amuse one’s mind; one reads, above all, to prevent oneself thinking.
    Aldous Huxley (1894–1963)

    To get time for civic work, for exercise, for neighborhood projects, reading or meditation, or just plain time to themselves, mothers need to hold out against the fairly recent but surprisingly entrenched myth that “good mothers” are constantly with their children. They will have to speak out at last about the demoralizing effect of spending day after day with small children, no matter how much they love them.
    —Wendy Coppedge Sanford. Ourselves and Our Children, by Boston Women’s Health Book Collective, introduction (1978)