Book Talk: Making Peace Last, with Robert Ricigliano
- 306 Russell
- 10/11/2012, 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
- http://www.tc-library.org/
Please join Robert
Ricigliano, Director of the Institute
of World Affairs at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, as he discusses
his book, Making
Peace Last: A Toolbox for Sustainable Peacebuilding (Paradigm
Publishers, 2011) on Thursday, October 11th. Organized into three sections
("Unlocking the Power of Peacebuilding"; " Systemic
Peacebuilding Analysis and Planning"; and "Catalyzing Systemic
Change"), this book is based on a combination of field experience and
research into systems thinking, peace and conflict, and conflict resolution,
and it offers sustainable solutions to the world's most pressing social
problems.
Write reviewers:
"No bigger challenge faces humanity than how to build peace. In this
insightful, provocative, and practical book, Robert Ricigliano shows us how to
take a systems approach. A very useful contribution!"
--William Ury, Harvard
Negotiation Project, and author of The Third Side: Why We Fight and How
We Can Stop
"The advance of peace in the post-cold-war era stopped around 2003 and
global peace efforts must be reinvigorated. In his book Rob Ricigliano uses his
research and experience to describe not only why so many well intended peace
programs fail, but, more importantly, what can be done to systematically
untangle the remaining wars and humanitarian outrages on our watch."
--Jan Egeland, UN Under Secretary General for Humanitarian
Affairs, 2003-2006
"Thankfully, Making Peace Last arrives just as American policymakers
realize that in order to build a modern security strategy, we must move away
from reaction and toward resilience, away from borders and toward
relationships. Today, our strength lies in the ability to see the United States
in the scheme of things rather than as the scheme of things. This book shows us
how."
--Lorelei Kelly, Director, New
Strategic Security Initiative
"The field of peacebuilding has long awaited a clear, systematic,, and
coherent convergence of more than thirty years of practical and theoretical
learning that makes a real difference in both pursuing and sustaining peaceful
relationships in settings of protracted conflict. Ricigliano provides the
vision, the tools, and the evidence that peace can last, but it requires a
level of clear analysis, creative engagement and adaptive flexibility that go
beyond our fragmented and too often piecemeal approaches to complex violent
conflict."
--John Paul Lederach, Joan B. Kroc Institute of
International Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame
"It may seem hard to believe but it is true: wars are on the decline. In
the fifteen years between 1988 and 2003, more wars ended through negotiated
settlement than had in the previous two hundred years. Robert Ricigliano tells
us why in this vitally important new book. He details the important lessons we
have learned on how to stop wars and prevent future conflict. If you care about
peace, you need to read this book."
--Joe Cirincione, President, Ploughshares
Fund
Dr. Ricigliano teaches peacebuilding for the Department of Communication at the
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. He has worked with governments, armed groups,
donor agencies, community leaders, and security and development practitioners
in peace processes around the world. He served as Executive Director of the
Conflict Management Group and Associate Director of the Harvard Negotiation
Project. Introducing Dr. Ricigliano is Peter Coleman,
Professor of Psychology and Education and Director, International Center for Cooperation
and Conflict Resolution.
This event is sponsored by the Advanced
Consortium on Cooperation, Conflict and Complexity at the Earth Institute
of Columbia University, International
Center for Cooperation and Conflict Resolution (ICCCR), and Gottesman
Libraries.
Persons wishing to attend may rsvp
by Tuesday, October 8th.
Where: 306 Russell
- Jennifer Govan
- 212-678-3022



