The Anthropology of War and Peace: Perspectives on the Nuclear Age
By (Author) David Pitt
By (author) Paul R. Turner
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 1988
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Peace studies and conflict resolution
Anthropology
355.825119
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
284g
Drawing parallels between tribal behavior and international relations to demonstrate that societies are not inherently aggressive but are led into conflict when pride or in-group pressures push people to fight, this profound look at the chilling reality of cold war and its arsenal of nuclear destruction offers valuable new insights into how prejudices and stereotypes contribute to what may seem like an inexorable drift to war. Yet the authors conclude that war is not inevitable, as they offer suggestions for an end to the arms race in the nuclear age. Based on original research, this is a long overdue contribution to the study of war and peace in our time and a text for newly emerging courses on the subject.
[The] material is important, well-presented, insightful and comprises a handy package of ideas and problems for study.-Human Peace
"The material is important, well-presented, insightful and comprises a handy package of ideas and problems for study."-Human Peace
"[The] material is important, well-presented, insightful and comprises a handy package of ideas and problems for study."-Human Peace
t /f David