The Human Security Report 2009/2010 argues that long-term trends are reducing the risks of both international and civil wars. The Report, which is funded by the governments of Canada, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, also examines recent developments that suggest the world is becoming a more dangerous place.
The Human Security Report 2009/2010 argues that long-term trends are reducing the risks of both international and civil wars. The Report, which is funded by the governments of Canada, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, also examines recent developments that suggest the world is becoming a more dangerous place.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
The Human Security Report Project (HSRP) is an independent research centre affiliated with Simon Fraser University (SFU) in Vancouver, Canada. Formerly located at the University of British Columbia and known as the Human Security Centre, the HSRP joined SFU in May of 2007. The HSRP tracks global and regional trends in organized violence, their causes and consequences. Research findings and analyses are published in the Human Security Report, Human Security Brief series, and the miniAtlas of Human Security. HSRP publications have received major coverage in the international media and are regularly cited by national governments, international agencies, and NGOs, as well as the research community.
Inhaltsangabe
* Overview * Part I - The Causes of Peace * Introduction * Chapter 1: Why International Wars Are Increasingly Rare * Chapter 2: The Causes of War and Peace: A Nontechnical Guide to Recent Research Findings * Chapter 3: The East Asian Peace: Explaining the Remarkable Decline in Political Violence in Northeast and Southeast Asia * Chapter 4: The Decline in Civil Wars * Part II - The Shrinking Costs of War * Introduction * Chapter 5: Deadly Connections: Wartime Violence and "Indirect Deaths " * Chapter 6: The Paradox of Mortality Rates that Decline in Wartime * Chapter 7: The Death Toll in the Democratic Republic of the Congo * Chapter 8: Can Retrospective Mortality Surveys Be Used to Determine Excess Death Tolls? * Chapter 9: Armed Conflict and Health Policy * Part III - Trends in Human Insecurity * Introduction * Chapter 10: State-based Armed Conflict * Chapter 11: Non-State Armed Conflict * Chapter 12: Assaults on Civilians
* Overview * Part I - The Causes of Peace * Introduction * Chapter 1: Why International Wars Are Increasingly Rare * Chapter 2: The Causes of War and Peace: A Nontechnical Guide to Recent Research Findings * Chapter 3: The East Asian Peace: Explaining the Remarkable Decline in Political Violence in Northeast and Southeast Asia * Chapter 4: The Decline in Civil Wars * Part II - The Shrinking Costs of War * Introduction * Chapter 5: Deadly Connections: Wartime Violence and "Indirect Deaths " * Chapter 6: The Paradox of Mortality Rates that Decline in Wartime * Chapter 7: The Death Toll in the Democratic Republic of the Congo * Chapter 8: Can Retrospective Mortality Surveys Be Used to Determine Excess Death Tolls? * Chapter 9: Armed Conflict and Health Policy * Part III - Trends in Human Insecurity * Introduction * Chapter 10: State-based Armed Conflict * Chapter 11: Non-State Armed Conflict * Chapter 12: Assaults on Civilians
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