Posts Tagged ‘transformational peacemaking’
Book Review: The Three Laws of Performance
- February 27th, 2009
The Three Laws of Performance: Rewriting the Future of Your Organization and Your Life. by Steve Zaffron and Dave Logan. Jossey-Bass: San Francisco, CA. 2009 The Three Laws of Performance is not the kind of book I usually review on this blog. Written for an audience committed to improving the performance of business organizations, it might be hard to see what this book has to do with creating a peaceful world. I have also written about transformational peacemaking and shifting the conversation about peace and violence in the world. The ideas outlined in this book, though oriented toward the business community, are eminently transferable to the larger challenge of creating change in the international geopolitical arena where war, terrorism and genocide take place.
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The Knot at the Heart of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
- February 3rd, 2009
Great Op-Ed NYT piece Opens New Ground for Diplomacy A groundbreaking op-ed piece “How Words Could End a War” by Scott Atran and Jeremy Ginges” appeared in the New York Times last week. For years I have observed how geo-politicians ignore the way human beings think, feel and behave in the real world. It’s no wonder that diplomats and political leaders fail to achieve permanent peace. Research Into Moral Values Under I/P Conflict Atran and Ginges’ article, based on some fascinating academic research, validates for the first time that both sides in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are more concerned with deep moral values than they are with accepting compromises based on self-interest. They note that: “Diplomats hope that peace and concrete progress on material and quality-of-life matters . . . will eventually make people forget the more heartfelt issues.
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From a Local Us to a Global We
- January 9th, 2009
The Era of Exclusive National Self-Interest is Over I was startled to hear Henry Kissinger, on a recent Charlie Rose program, suggest that the world’s countries can no longer afford to conduct foreign policy based solely on their own self-interest. Globalization has progressed so far and the world has so dwindled in size, that every nation’s interest is now entangled with that of every other country. From issues of global finance to rogue nuclear bombs to global warming and pandemic flu, we are now in a new era. If the new world order has not yet arrived, it is certainly on its way. Transformational Diplomacy Is at Hand While former Secretary Kissinger did not quite say, “We must now think as one,” he came very close to it. Even key Bush administration figures have changed their thinking radically in the past few years, and these changes came because raw experience on the ground fighting terror in Iraq and Afghanistan forced them to shift their approach. Condoleeza Rice in the State Department has been calling for transformational diplomacy and the emphasis in that department is now on planning and implementing good governance. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has also given speeches in the past year in which he declared that the sharp divisions between war, peace, diplomacy and development are no longer useful. The goal is now to stabilize governments in troubled areas around the globe. Failed States Endanger Everyone Failed states present one of the most difficult challenges to peace in the twenty first century. From Somalia, where pirates attack ships because it is so lucrative, to raging war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo where rape is a prime weapon, to the genocide in Darfur/Sudan, to the corrupt government in Afghanistan, installed by the U.S. after the fall of the Taliban, all of these states present ominous threats to the safety and security of surrounding states, as well as to the western world, and they threaten the lives and health of millions of innocent women and children caught in the crossfire. The Desperate are Frightened, Hungry, Sick and Violent The problems are deep and vast. Millions of people desperate for the basics of life: food, clean water, a roof over their heads, electricity, roads, sanitation, reliable government services that are not riddled with corruption, a money supply free from inflation. In short, they long for a chance to make it in the world, a chance to survive and thrive without fear of being slaughtered, raped, tortured or dying of disease or starvation at a very young age.
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