Roger Mac Ginty is Professor at the School of Government and International Affairs, and Director of the Durham Global Security Institute, both at Durham University, UK. He edits the journal Peacebuilding, is co-founder of the Everyday Peace Indicators, and his latest book is Everyday Peace: How So-called Ordinary People Can Disrupt Violent Conflict (2021).
Anthony Wanis-St. John is Associate Professor at the School of International Service at American University, USA, where he directed the International Peace and Conflict Resolution program. His latest book is Back Channel Negotiation: Secrecy in Middle East Peacemaking (2011). He co-wrote "Negotiating Civil Resistance," with Noah Rosen, and "Civil Society and Peace Negotiations: Confronting Exclusion," with Darren Kew. He works with both the U.S. Institute of Peace and the Department of Defense as senior advisor and instructor.
Introduction (Roger Mac Ginty & Anthony Wanis-St. John)
Part I: Preparing for Peace 1. Understanding Ripeness: Making and Using Hurting Stalemates (I William Zartman) 2. Cultivating Peace: A Practitioner's View of Deadly Conflict (John Paul Lederach) 3. Conflict Analysis: A System's Approach (Lisa Schirch) Part II: Cross Cutting Issues 4. The United Nations and Peacemaking (Alex J. Bellamy) 5. Women's Participating in Peace Processes (Jana Krause and Louise Olsson) 6. Indigenous Approaches to Peacemaking (Douglas P. Fry Geneviève Souillac) 7. Peacemaking Referendums: Advantages and Challenges for Peace Processes (Joana Amaral) 8. Refugees, Peacemaking and Durable Solutions to Displacement (Maja Janmyr) 9. Time, Sequencing and Peace Processes (Roger Mac Ginty) Part III: Negotiation and Mediation 10. Mediation and Ending of Conflicts (Christopher Mitchell) 11. Diffusion vs. Coherence: The Competitive Environment of Multiparty Mediation (Chester A. Crocker, Fen Osler Hampson & Pamela Aall) 12. Inclusivity in Peace Processes: Civil Society and Armed Groups (Suzanne Ghais) 13. Negotiating Peace in the Shadows (Niall Ó Dochartaigh) Part IV: Violence and Peace Processes 14. Violence and Peace Processes (Kristine Höglund & Desirée Nilsson) 15. Peacemaking and Election Violence (Inken von Borzyskowski & Richard Saunders) 16. Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration of Ex-Combatants (Alp Özerdem)17. Security Sector Reforms (Yuji Uesugi) Part V: Peace Accords 18. Peace Processes and their Agreements (Christine Bell and Laura Wise) 19. Power Sharing after Civil Wars: Matching Problems to Solutions (Timothy Sisk) 20. Peace Accords and Human Rights (Jan Pospisil) 21. The Post-Conflict Constitution as a Peace Agreement (Laurie Nathan) Part VI: Implementation and Reconstruction 22. Transitional Justice and Peacemaking/Peacebuilding (Roddy Brett & Lina Malagón) 23. Peace Education as a Peacemaking Tool in Conflict Zones (Alexander Cromwell) 24. Post Accord Violence (Christina Steenkamp) 25. Everyday Economic Experiences and Peace Processes (Birte Vogel) Conclusion