- NO ISSUE is on the human mind more than the search for peace. Numerous factors, such as justice, power, national interest, ethnic rivalry, hunger, the environment, values, human nature, economics, and sustainability have an impact on world peace. International Journal on World Peace is concerned with all of these.
Past Issues
February 2012 M T W T F S S « Dec 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 -
Meta
Author Archives: admin
Peace in an Imbalanced World
Introduction to IJWP, December 2011 This issue of IJWP contains three articles that reveal some of the toughest challenges to peace that relate to imbalances in power, imbalances in wealth, and imbalances in the treatment of individuals and groups. Our … Continue reading
Posted in Introductions
Leave a comment
Balancing Rule of Law and Self-determination
Introduction to IJWP, September 2011 Rule of law is necessary for the order, stability, and peace of any nation.Without rule of law there is anarchy in which gangs, warlords, and conquerors compete for control to establish their own rule of … Continue reading
Posted in Introductions
Leave a comment
Nation-States, CSOs, and Second-Track Diplomacy
Introduction to IJWP, June 2011 As the Soviet empire collapsed around 1990, there was great hope that the many peoples whose national identities had been suppressed would get their own nation-states. The ideal of a nation-state as the normal form … Continue reading
Posted in Introductions
Leave a comment
The Chinese Miracle, Turkey, and Zionism
Download .pdf from Paragon House, $5.95 Introduction to IJWP, March 2011 This issue of IJWP contains articles on three different topics, Chinese economic growth, politics in Turkey, and Zionism. The first article, “Re-Interpreting the ‘Chinese Miracle’” by Xingyuan Feng, Christer … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment
Research on Democracy
Download .pdf from Paragon House, $5.95 Introduction to IJWP, December 2010 This issue of IJWP focuses on democracy: how to establish it and its relation to violence. We continue from the September issue’s last article “Internal vs. External Requisites of … Continue reading
Posted in Introductions
1 Comment