First published 1999 by Ashgate Publishing
Reissued 2018 by Routledge
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Copyright Ho-Won Jeong 1999
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A Library of Congress record exists under LC control number: 98049093
ISBN 13: 978-1-138-33842-5 (hbk)
ISBN 13: 978-1-138-33846-3 (pbk)
ISBN 13: 978-0-429-44174-5 (ebk)
Chadwick F. Alger is Mershon Professor of Political Science and Public Policy Emeritus, the Ohio State University. He served as Secretary General, International Peace Research Association (19831987), President, International Studies Association (1978-79), and Chairperson, Consortium on Peace Research, Education and Development (1974-75). Professor Alger has published widely on the UN system based on first-hand research at the United Nations in New York and Geneva. His most recent book is The Future of the United Nations System: Potential for the Twenty First Century (1998).
Paul F. Diehl is Professor of Political Science at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He has published widely on such topics as the causes of war, United Nations peacekeeping, international law, and arms control. His recent books include Territorial Changes and International Conflict (1992), International Peacekeeping (1993), and The Politics of Global Governance (1997). He served recently on the National Academy of Science Committee on Techniques for the Enhancement of Human Performance.
Daniel Druckman is Professor of Conflict Resolution at George Mason Universitys Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, Fairfax. He directed National Academy of Science committees from 1985 to 1997. He has published widely on such topics as conflict resolution and negotiation, nationalism, group processes, non-verbal communication, and modelling methodologies. He sits on the boards of six journals, including the Journal of Conflict Resolution and the American Behavioral Scientist as well as International Negotiation.
Arturo Escobar is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. His current research interests are political ecology and the anthropology of development, social movements, and science and technology. For the past five years, he has been working in the Pacific rainforest region of Colombia on the issues of cultural politics and biodiversity conservation. He is the author of Encountering Development: The Making and Unmaking of the Third World (1995).
Jonathan Friedman is Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Lund, Sweden. He has done research on Southeast Asia and the Pacific. His theoretical work concentrates on the study of long-term historical processes and the relations between a global process and cultural identity. He has been President of the European Society of Oceanists and has editorial functions on several journals such as Identities, Critique of Anthropology, Review of International Political Economy. Among his books are Modernity and Identity (co-edited with Scott Lash, 1992), Cultural Identity and Global Process (1994), Consumption and Identity (1994), Hawaii: Return to Nationhood (co-edited with James Carrier, 1995).
Ho-Won Jeong is on the Faculty of the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University. Dr. Jeong is Editor of International Journal of Peace Studies as well as Peace and Conflict Studies sponsored by the Network of Peace and Conflict Studies. He has written extensively on international political economy and organisations, environmental conflict, conflict resolution and peace research.
Jyrki Kknen is Director of Tampere Peace Research Institute, Finland. His current research interests are environmental security, regionalisation and civil society. His edited volumes include Perspectives on Environmental Conflict and International Relations (1992) and Green Security or Militarized Environment (1994).
Sandra J. MacLean is Assistant Professor of International Development Studies and Research Fellow at the Centre for Foreign Policy Studies, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada.. Her research interests include new security issues, democratisation and civil society. She has published recently in Canadian Journal of Development Studies, New Political Economy, and Journal of Contemporary African Studies.
Bjrn Mller is Senior Research Fellow, Project Director and on the Board of the Copenhagen Peace Research Institute and Associate Professor of International Relations, Institute of Political Science, University of Copenhagen. He currently serves as Secretary General of the International Peace Research Association, member of the UNIDIR Expert Group on Confidence-Building in the Middle East, Project Director of the Global Non-Offensive Defence Network funded by the Ford Foundation and Editor of NOD and Conversion. He is the author of Resolving the Security Dilemma in Europe (1991), Common Security and Nonoffensive Defense (1992) and Dictionary of Alternative Defense (1995).
Michael N. Nagler is Professor Emeritus at University of California, Berkeley where he founded the Peace and Conflict Studies Program and still regularly teaches the upper-division non-violence course. Professor Nagler has spoken and written widely for campus, religious, public and special interest groups on the subject of peace and non-violence for twenty-five years in addition to his career in classics. He has consulted for the US Institute of Peace and many other organisations and is President of Centers for Nonviolence Education. He is the author of America Without Violence, The Upanishads (with Sri Eknath Easwaran).
Iver B. Neumann is on leave from his job as head of the Russian Centre at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs and is presently working on the Planning Staff of the Norwegian Foreign Ministry. His most recent books are The Future of International Relations (co-edited with Ole Waever, 1997) and Uses of the Other: The East in European Identity Formation (1998).
Jennifer Jackson Preece is Lecturer in European Nationalism at the European Institute, London School of Economics and Political Science. She has published widely on nationalism, minority rights and ethnic conflict. Dr. Preece is the author of