Our Brains at War: The Neuroscience of Conflict and Peacebuilding
Autor Mari Fitzduffen Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 sep 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197512654
ISBN-10: 0197512658
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 155 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197512658
Pagini: 216
Dimensiuni: 155 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Emotions and instincts, of which we are often barely aware, end up shaping profoundly the way we humans make war and make peace. Inspired by her personal experience as a first-hand witness in a deep-seated ethnic conflict, and informed by her professional experience as a peace-builder, Mari Fitzduff delves deep into the new behavioural sciences to offer us an eye-opening and thought-provoking set of insights about the brain and conflict and what we can do to help make peace possible. A true pleasure to read and recommend to others!
An excellent and readable book describing Our Brains at War and more besides. I recognise from long experience and introspection much of what Mari Fitzduff tells us and I found the explanation of the effects of social media revealing. I recommend the book to those who seek to resolve the confrontations that give rise to conflicts and the military who engage in them.
This remarkable book, by one of the field's most innovative thinkers and one of its most inspirational practitioners, brings neuroscience into the service of peace. It will transform our understanding of peacebuilding, while providing a welcome charge of oxytocin for all those struggling to respond to the personal and political demands of making peace in a troubled world.
Growing up in a violent community teaches you how little rational argument contributes to conflict resolution. If you doubt that, you need to read this book to catch up with the complex biopsychosocial research picture that has been emerging in recent years. The book is full of the multi-disciplinary references you need if you are to understand what is happening.
A psychological tour de force! In Our Brains at War, renowned scholar Mari Fitzduff sheds light on powerful neuropsychological factors that propel groups to war and that can move them toward peace. This book is a must-read for peacebuilders, military leaders, government officials, students of conflict resolution, and anyone who care about the future of our planet. Highly recommended!
Mari Fitzduff expertly unpacks 21st century drivers of conflict—fear, 'them and us' thinking, irrationality and mob mentality—leaving us with neurological wisdom and fresh and practical strategies for building peace! Cutting edge and brilliant as ever! A welcome tome!
A tour de force, Mari Fitzduff's Our Brains at War is indispensable reading for researchers, academics, policy makers, and practitioners grappling with the causes of war and violent conflict as well as strategies for peacebuilding. Building on the strong foundations of the multidisciplinary literature on conflict and peace studies, Fitzduff masterfully weaves in the exciting advances in neuroscience that allow us to better understand the psychological and biophysical correlates underlying human attitudes and behaviour leading to violence and their implications for peacebuilding.
How are human beings propelled to war? Via our emotions or reason? It seems that we, as individuals, groups, ornations, are often propelled to war by the compelling engines of unrecognised toxic emotions and rational biases. The good news is that by understanding and acknowledging this, as Fitzduff explains, we can better use our reason and emotions to prevent war and better effect peace.
The integration of neuroscience is critical to the peacebuilding field's effectiveness, but few peacebuilders have experience in neuroscience. This book should be required reading for anyone working in conflict settings and is precisely what is needed to understand our 'brains on conflict' and effectively integrate this knowledge into conflict prevention and resolution programs.
In this pioneer peacebuilding book, peace builders scholars and practitioners and policy makers, finally have a current, systematic, and well documented exploration of the links between our minds and bodies and human engagement in war and peace. Mari Fitzduff, offers a fascinating set of stories and enough evidence that we no longer can afford to avoid the impact of genetic, neurological, and hormonal predispositions on our so called "rational thinking" and decision making processes. Considering the flow of information and images in our globalized reality, it is a must for peacebuilders and policy makers to seriously understand and take into account the implicit and explicit roles that our biosocial and neural legacies play when confronting violence and war. The book opens many doors for intellectually stimulating discussions and possible practical tips for practitioners.
This book is a foundational primer that is not just an introduction to what promises to be an integrative, critical field of applied science, but also a harbinger for encouraging improvement in the human condition via areas heretofore untested—epigenetics or neural plasticity? Dr. Fitzduff is to be applauded for such a comprehensive review of the scientific literature and to make it accessible and understandable to all. Now it is up to us to put it into action
An excellent and readable book describing Our Brains at War and more besides. I recognise from long experience and introspection much of what Mari Fitzduff tells us and I found the explanation of the effects of social media revealing. I recommend the book to those who seek to resolve the confrontations that give rise to conflicts and the military who engage in them.
This remarkable book, by one of the field's most innovative thinkers and one of its most inspirational practitioners, brings neuroscience into the service of peace. It will transform our understanding of peacebuilding, while providing a welcome charge of oxytocin for all those struggling to respond to the personal and political demands of making peace in a troubled world.
Growing up in a violent community teaches you how little rational argument contributes to conflict resolution. If you doubt that, you need to read this book to catch up with the complex biopsychosocial research picture that has been emerging in recent years. The book is full of the multi-disciplinary references you need if you are to understand what is happening.
A psychological tour de force! In Our Brains at War, renowned scholar Mari Fitzduff sheds light on powerful neuropsychological factors that propel groups to war and that can move them toward peace. This book is a must-read for peacebuilders, military leaders, government officials, students of conflict resolution, and anyone who care about the future of our planet. Highly recommended!
Mari Fitzduff expertly unpacks 21st century drivers of conflict—fear, 'them and us' thinking, irrationality and mob mentality—leaving us with neurological wisdom and fresh and practical strategies for building peace! Cutting edge and brilliant as ever! A welcome tome!
A tour de force, Mari Fitzduff's Our Brains at War is indispensable reading for researchers, academics, policy makers, and practitioners grappling with the causes of war and violent conflict as well as strategies for peacebuilding. Building on the strong foundations of the multidisciplinary literature on conflict and peace studies, Fitzduff masterfully weaves in the exciting advances in neuroscience that allow us to better understand the psychological and biophysical correlates underlying human attitudes and behaviour leading to violence and their implications for peacebuilding.
How are human beings propelled to war? Via our emotions or reason? It seems that we, as individuals, groups, ornations, are often propelled to war by the compelling engines of unrecognised toxic emotions and rational biases. The good news is that by understanding and acknowledging this, as Fitzduff explains, we can better use our reason and emotions to prevent war and better effect peace.
The integration of neuroscience is critical to the peacebuilding field's effectiveness, but few peacebuilders have experience in neuroscience. This book should be required reading for anyone working in conflict settings and is precisely what is needed to understand our 'brains on conflict' and effectively integrate this knowledge into conflict prevention and resolution programs.
In this pioneer peacebuilding book, peace builders scholars and practitioners and policy makers, finally have a current, systematic, and well documented exploration of the links between our minds and bodies and human engagement in war and peace. Mari Fitzduff, offers a fascinating set of stories and enough evidence that we no longer can afford to avoid the impact of genetic, neurological, and hormonal predispositions on our so called "rational thinking" and decision making processes. Considering the flow of information and images in our globalized reality, it is a must for peacebuilders and policy makers to seriously understand and take into account the implicit and explicit roles that our biosocial and neural legacies play when confronting violence and war. The book opens many doors for intellectually stimulating discussions and possible practical tips for practitioners.
This book is a foundational primer that is not just an introduction to what promises to be an integrative, critical field of applied science, but also a harbinger for encouraging improvement in the human condition via areas heretofore untested—epigenetics or neural plasticity? Dr. Fitzduff is to be applauded for such a comprehensive review of the scientific literature and to make it accessible and understandable to all. Now it is up to us to put it into action
Notă biografică
Mari Fitzduff is Professor Emerita at Brandeis University where she was the Founding Director of the international programs in Conflict Resolution and Coexistence. She has undertaken research and training on issues of mediation, conflict resolution, and peacebuilding in the Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Europe. Her books include The Psychology of Resolving Global Conflicts: From War to Peace, (co-edited with Chris Stout) , and Why Irrational Politics Appeals: Understanding the Allure of Trump.