The search for durable peace in lands torn by
ethno-national conflict is among the most urgent issues
of international politics. Looking closely at five
flashpoints of regional crisis, Sumantra Bose asks the
question upon which our global future may depend: how
can peace be made, and kept, between warring groups with
seemingly incompatible claims? Global in scope and
implications but local in focus and method, ''Contested
Lands'' critically examines the recent or current peace
processes in Israel-Palestine, Kashmir, Bosnia, Cyprus,
and Sri Lanka for an answer. Israelis and Palestinians,
Turkish and Greek Cypriots, Bosnia's Muslims, Serbs, and
Croats, Sinhalese and Tamil Sri Lankans, and
pro-independence, pro-Pakistan, and pro-India Kashmiris
share homelands scarred by clashing aspirations and war.
Bose explains why these lands became zones of zero-sum
conflict and boldly tackles the question of how durable
peace can be achieved. The cases yield important general
insights about the benefits of territorial self-rule,
cross-border linkages, regional cooperation, and
third-party involvement, and the risks of a deliberately
gradual ('incremental') strategy of peace-building.Rich
in narrative and incisive in analysis, this book takes
us deep into the heartlands of conflict - Jerusalem,
Kashmir's Line of Control, the divided cities of Mostar
in Bosnia and Nicosia in Cyprus, Sri Lanka's Jaffna
peninsula. ''Contested Lands'' illuminates how chronic
confrontation can yield to compromise and coexistence in
the world's most troubled regions - and what the United
States can do to help. |
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