Rethinking intractable conflict: the perspective of dynamical systems

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Publisher
American Psychological Association
Date Issued
2010
Note

Intractable conflicts are demoralizing. Beyond destabilizing the families, communities, or international regions in which they occur, they tend to perpetuate the very conditions of misery and hate that contributed to them in the first place. Although the common factors and processes associated with intractable conflicts have been identified through research, they represent an embarrassment of riches for theory construction. Thus, the current task in this area is integrating these diverse factors into an account that provides a coherent perspective yet allows for prediction and a basis for conflict resolution in specific conflict settings. We suggest that the perspective of dynamical systems provides such an account. This article outlines the key concepts and hypotheses associated with this approach. It is organized around a set of basic questions concerning intractable conflict for which the dynamical perspective offers fresh insight and testable propositions. The questions and answers are intended to provide readers with basic concepts and principles of complexity and dynamical systems that are useful for rethinking the nature of intractable conflict and the means by which such conflict can be transformed.

Language
Type
Genre
Extent
28 p.
Identifier
2683585
Additional Information
Intractable conflicts are demoralizing. Beyond destabilizing the families, communities, or international regions in which they occur, they tend to perpetuate the very conditions of misery and hate that contributed to them in the first place. Although the common factors and processes associated with intractable conflicts have been identified through research, they represent an embarrassment of riches for theory construction. Thus, the current task in this area is integrating these diverse factors into an account that provides a coherent perspective yet allows for prediction and a basis for conflict resolution in specific conflict settings. We suggest that the perspective of dynamical systems provides such an account. This article outlines the key concepts and hypotheses associated with this approach. It is organized around a set of basic questions concerning intractable conflict for which the dynamical perspective offers fresh insight and testable propositions. The questions and answers are intended to provide readers with basic concepts and principles of complexity and dynamical systems that are useful for rethinking the nature of intractable conflict and the means by which such conflict can be transformed.
This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record. The final published version is available online at http://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/amp/ Vallacher, Robin R., Peter T. Coleman, Andrzej Nowak, Lan Bui‐Wrzosinska (2010) Rethinking Intractable Conflict: The Perspective of Dynamical Systems, American Psychologist 65(4)262‐278. DOI: 10.1037/a0019290
Department of Psychology Charles E. Schmidt College of Science
Date Backup
2010
Date Text
2010
DOI
10.1037/a0019290
Date Issued (EDTF)
2010
Extension


FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing7160", creator="creator:SPATEL", creation_date="2010-08-04 10:06:41", modified_by="super:FAUDIG", modification_date="2013-09-26 13:23:54"

IID
FADT2683585
Person Preferred Name

Vallacher, Robin R.

creator

vallacher@fau.edu
Physical Description

28 p.
application/pdf
Title Plain
Rethinking intractable conflict: the perspective of dynamical systems
Origin Information

American Psychological Association
2010
Title
Rethinking intractable conflict: the perspective of dynamical systems
Other Title Info

Rethinking intractable conflict: the perspective of dynamical systems