This book provides new insights into the development of integrated approaches to peace and sustainability in the era of global change. Since the late 1980s, and in order to regulate the increasingly detrimental impacts of humans on the environment, the transition towards sustainability has been high on the agenda of researchers and policymakers alike. Meanwhile, peace considerations have expanded in recent decades to include the varied types and sources of conflict, from inter-state to intra-state conflicts due to various social, political, economic, and environmental factors. Through providing theoretical and empirical insights, this book demonstrates that sustainability and peace as intrinsically interrelated. The book elaborates on the multi-dimensional and constantly evolving concepts of sustainability and peace. In addition, the book contributes to a better understanding of the complex and dynamic interlinkages between peace and sustainability by presenting examples of pathwayswhere sustainability and peace interact considering the different factors and contexts that are constantly shaping and reshaping the conditions for sustainable and peaceful societies.
Содержание
Introduction: the need for integrated approaches to peace and sustainability.- A state of art review of the peace-sustainability nexus.- Women’s Movement towards Building Sustainable Peace in Cross-Cultural Society: the Case of Peace Agenda of Women in the Deep South of Thailand.- Boko Haram Insurgency on North-Eastern Nigeria, how has this influenced food insecurity in the region?.- Exploring the need for an Integrated Conflict Sensitivity Framework in development assistance that contributes to peaceful and sustainable post-conflict societies.- The Components of Peace Agreements and FDI Inflows in.- Post-Civil War Economies: a cross country analysis over the period 1990 to 2019.- Peace through Community Building Efforts of the Rohingya in Bangladesh.- The Humane yet Ambivalent Attitude Towards Refugees: A Potential Threat to Peace.- The Role of Media and Social Cohesion between Host and the Rohingyas in Cox’s Bazar.- Human rights, social security and Ghana’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.- Non-adherence to principles of international law: The bane of environmental insecurity.- Peace, justice and security in Ghana: the need for peace education.- Co-benefits and synergies between food security and eight positive peace pillars.- Concluding remarks
Об авторе
Ayyoob Sharifi is Professor at the Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Hiroshima University. He also is Core Member of the Network for Education and Research on Peace and Sustainability (NERPS). His research is mainly focused on climate change mitigation and adaptation. Ayyoob actively contributes to global change research programmes such as the Future Earth and has served as Lead Author for the Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The ultimate goal of his education and research activities is to inform actions towards building sustainable and peaceful communities.
Dahlia Simangan is Associate Professor at Hiroshima University’s Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences where she teaches Global Governance and Peacebuilding Case Studies. She is former Kanagawa University JSPS Postdoctoral Research Fellow (nominated by the United Nations University-Centre for Policy Research in Tokyo). She obtained her Ph.D. in International, Political and Strategic Studies from the Australian National University in 2017, her M.A. in International Relations from the International University of Japan in 2010, and her B.A. in Sociology from the University of the Philippines, Diliman, in 2006. Her research interest in peace and conflict studies includes topics on international peacebuilding, the United Nations peacekeeping operations, and International Relations in the Anthropocene. She is Assistant Editor of Peacebuilding and Member of the Planet Politics Institute.
Shinji Kaneko is Executive Vice President for Global Initiatives and Professor at the Graduate School of Humanities and Social Science at Hiroshima University. He graduated from the School of Engineering at Kyushu University majoring in water engineering (Dr. of Engineering). Immediately after the completion of his doctoral programme, he joined the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES) in 1999 as Researcher and conducted research on urban climate policy in Asian megacities for three years. He also worked at global Change System for Analysis, Research and Training (START) as Research Fellow for three years from 2005. In 2018, he was appointed as Director of Network for Education and Research on Peace and Sustainability (NERPS) at Hiroshima University. He has conducted numerous policy research on natural resources, energy, and the environment in developing countries.