In this edited volume, experts on conflict resolution examine the impact of the crises triggered by the coronavirus and official responses to it.
Richard E. Rubenstein, J.D. is a University Professor of Conflict Resolution and Public Affairs at George Mason University and is a long-time faculty member and former director of the Carter School.
Solon Simmons, PhD. is an Associate Professor of Conflict Analysis and Resolution at George Mason University with a Ph.D. in sociology.
Foreword Introduction PART I. CONFLICT RESOLUTION IN A PERIOD OF SOCIAL CRISIS 1. Big Peace: An Agenda for Peace and Conflict Studies After the Coronavirus Catastrophe 2. Lessons from Disaster: History and the Current Crisis 3. From the Frying Pan to the Fire: The Next Stage of Environmental Crisis and its Implications for Conflict Resolution PART II. GLOBAL POLITICAL CONFLICTS AFTER THE PANDEMIC 4. Pandemics, Globalization and Contentious Politics 5. Global migration after the pandemic 6. COVID-19, Nationalism, and Changing Political Identities 7. Resolving Great Power Conflicts in the Post-Pandemic Era PART III. INTERGROUP CONFLICTS AFTER THE PANDEMIC 8. Twilight of the Market Gods: The Revaluation of Socioeconomic Values in a Period of Social Reconstruction 9. The Pandemic and the Struggle for Racial and Ethnic Justice in America 10. The Impact of Crisis and Recovery on Gender Relationships, Roles, and Conflicts 11. Eternal and Internal Security: Impact of the Crisis on Religious Identity and Peacemaking PART IV. CONFLICT RESOLUTION INITIATIVES AFTER THE PANDEMIC 12. Peace Engineering in a Post- Pandemic World 13. Threats of Escalation and Prospects for Peace in Israel-Palestine 14. The future of U.S.-China Relations: The Rocky Road to Peace Concluding Note