HNUH228A
Peace in our time? Conflict and Conflict Resolution in International Politics
Is the world getting more peaceful? There are currently civil wars raging in much of the world and millions of people have fled these wars as refugees or internally displaced persons. Terrorist attacks kill thousands, and can occur in any corner of the planet. At the same time many actors use strategies such as peacekeeping, mediation, promotion of human rights and post-conflict justice to resolve conflicts and build peace. In this course, we will examine conflict, peace, and conflict resolution in contemporary international politics. We will interrogate concepts such as peace, conflict, and violence, the different forms that these phenomena can take, and how we can measure their occurrence. We will discuss theoretical explanations for why individuals and groups have disputes and why these actors choose to use violence (or not) in these disputes and examine these arguments in specific cases. We will analyze conflict resolution strategies such as mediation, peacekeeping, and human rights promotion both theoretically and empirically. This discussion will allow students to develop an argument for whether the world is getting more peaceful, why it is or is not, and what this could mean about the future of violence and peace. Restricted to UH students matriculating in Fall 2020 or later. This course is the required I-Series course in the War & Peace cluster. War & Peace courses will not be offered after spring 2022. You should only take this course if you have either previously completed one coursein the War & Peace cluster, or if you will take both HNUH228A and one other War & Peace course together in spring 2022.
Sister Courses: HNUH228B, HNUH228C, HNUH228O, HNUH228R, HNUH228U, HNUH228V, HNUH228W, HNUH228Y, HNUH228Z
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