What Makes an Effective Antiwar Movement? Theme-Issue Introduction.
International Journal of Peace Studies 2008, Spring-Summer, 13, 1
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Publisher Description
Antiwar Movements: Definitional Considerations The contributions to this Special Issue of the International Journal of Peace Studies consider antiwar protests' potential to influence national-security policies. They are particularly concerned with questions of movement efficacy and with developing contingent generalizations about features of antiwar movements and features of the political environment that together determine movements' influence on state policies and, possibly, on political structures and societal values.
Mission Accomplished?: Israel's "Four Mothers" and the Legacies of Successful Antiwar Movements.
2008
Strategic Changes and Cultural Adaptations: Explaining Differential Outcomes in the International Plowshares Movement.
2008
Protest, Power, and Change
1997
Beyond the Time and Space of Peace Talks: Re-Appropriating the Peace Process in Sri Lanka.
2006
History and Hope
2013
Reconstructing Iraq: Iraq State-Building, Nation-Building, And Violence (Report)
2010
Transforming Islamic-Western Identity Conflict: A Framework for Strategic Engagement.
2007
The Emergence of Human Security: A Constructivist View (Report)
2009
Track II Interventions and the Kurdish Question in Turkey: An Analysis Using a Theories of Change Approach.
2007
Liberia's Truth and Reconciliation Commission: An Interim Assessment.
2008
Resisting Occupation Or Institutionalizing Control? Israeli Women and Protest in West Bank Checkpoints.
2008
The Peacebuilding Dilemma: Civil-Military Cooperation in Stability Operations.
2006