TY - BOOK AU - Brown,Amy Benson AU - Poremski,Karen TI - Roads to reconciliation: conflict and dialogue in the twenty-first century SN - 0765613336 AV - HM1126 .R63 2005 U1 - 303.69 22 PY - 2005///] CY - Armonk, N.Y. PB - M.E. Sharpe KW - Conflict management KW - Reconciliation KW - Violence N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Rites and remembrance : living with the dead of September 11 / Gary Laderman -- Vengeance is never enough : alternative visions of justice / Theophus Smith -- Murder, mourning, and the ideal of reconciliation / Tammy Krause -- September 11 : clash of civilizations or Islamic revolution? / Richard C. Martin -- Reconciling trauma and the self : the role of narrative in coping with sexual abuse and terrorism / Robyn Fivush -- Reconciliation and the craving for revenge in psychotherapy / Robert A. Paul -- The law of the jungle : conflict resolution in primates / Frans B.M. de Waal -- Reflections on the future of life / E.O. Wilson -- United we stand : terrorism and national identity / Angelika Bammer -- Reconciliation and the beloved community / John Lewis -- Toward a vision of reconciliation : moving beyond a black/white "race" paradigm / Johnnetta B. Cole -- Race, class, and reconciliation / Dan Carter -- All God's children got shoes : social justice and reconciliation / Joseph E. Lowery -- Practicing reconciliation in the classroom after September 11 / Barbara Patterson -- September 11 and the search for justice and accountability / Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im -- Reconciliation in the new millennium / Jimmy Carter -- An agenda for higher education / Rebecca Chopp N2 - "The twin presence of South African archbishop Desmond Tutu and former U.S. president Jimmy Carter on the campus of Emory University in Atlanta prompted the university to sponsor a year-long symposium on the theme of reconciliation; Members of the community from many fields joined together with colleagues from Harvard and the University of Chicago to explore the roots of conflict and the meaning of reconciliation; Inspired by Tutu's teaching on reconciliation in South Africa and the Carter Center's efforts fostering conflict resolution, they began to ask questions about barriers to many kinds of reconciliation."; "The came September 11, 2001. After the attacks, the participants' explorations of the possibilities and limits of reconciliation were briefly put aside; But within a short while it became clear that the time was ripe for serious conversation about the roots of conflict and the long and complicated process of reconciliation."; "This collection seeks to chronicle the dynamics of the process of reconciliation as conceived in different fields, from religion to biology and psychology; It speaks to the issues in light of September 11, and with full awareness that all too many more acts of violence have taken place since that day."--Jacket ER -