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On the Fault Line

Managing tensions and divisions within societies

Jeffrey Herbst

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Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Wirtschaft

Beschreibung

Societies in all countries are split by major divisions - or 'faultlines' - caused by differences in race, religion, ethnicity, wealth, class or power. Like geological faultlines, some are plainly evident, whereas others are more concealed and can erupt with little warning.

Violence along faultlines within states, from Sudan to Iraq to the Congo, is the spark of much contemporary conflict. It has cost millions of lives in the past twenty years alone. In extreme cases, this violence threatens to tear states apart. Yet some countries such as Canada, South Africa and Northern Ireland, have largely succeeded in managing their faultlines.

On the Faultline is based on a unique year-long project by some of the world's leading experts to examine the nature of conflict around these divisions. In a world facing acute environmental, migration and resource challenges that can only exacerbate differences, it is an essential guide to understanding a phenomenon that all countries must grapple with in the 21st century.

Rezensionen

s-length away from world leaders who have to deal with fissures within their nations.
This book should not be more than an arm'
s scholarly, multi-region study offers extremely valuable insights and examples. <i>On the Fault Line</i> explodes some widely-held myths and may become the seminal work on a problem that threatens to destabilize important areas around the globe.
Many countries, large or small, experience divisive societal fault lines. While some states fail and descend into anarchy and violence, others overcome clear tensions. The Brenthurst Foundations'

No nation can afford to ignore the fault lines that periodically rumble in their societies, because left unaddressed they can explode with little warning, devastating lives and communities for a generation. This remarkable compendium is an invaluable guide for governments and civil society on the art of managing tensions and divisions among peoples without resort to violence

On the Fault Line is recommended reading - not only to remember where some have gone wrong, but to illustrate how others have got it right.

My own country, South Africa, has suffered the consequences of perhaps the most obvious fault-line of all - race. But as the impact of racial segregation and discrimination dissipates, we face fresh challenges, including stark divisions in wealth and access to it, a new apartheid if you will, along with the re-imposition of racial favouritism in a hazardous attempt to remedy past wrongs. <i>On the Fault Line</i> is invaluable in guiding us through not only the management of such distinctions, but their eventual resolution.

An imperative read as we strive to learn from our mistakes and the experiences of others.

This potent and sobering book should leave no one in doubt about the potential for mass violence along the fault lines that simmer in our societies

A detailed and cogent analysis

This important book is an invaluable contribution to a debate which will shape politics and security in the 21st century.

Fault lines, especially ethnic and religious divisions, and the history of Africa are entwined. Such divides are however not destiny but testimony to the failings of politicians in their reversion to the differences within states as a means to shore up their rule. Hence differences in tribe and religion often give way and pattern wealth divides as the resources are divvied out. <i>On the Fault Line</i> is recommended reading - not only to remember where some have gone wrong, but to illustrate how others have got it right

As the impact of racial segregation and discrimination dissipates in South Africa, my country faces fresh challenges, including stark divisions in wealth and access to it. <i>On the Fault Line </i>is invaluable in guiding us through not only the management of such distinctions, but their eventual resolution.

This remarkable compendium is an invaluable guide for governments and civil society on the art of managing tensions and divisions among peoples without resort to violence.
. Why do some fracture along ethnic, confessional and/or class and wealth lines - countries as varied as Congo, Sudan, Turkey, Bosnia, Lebanon, and Guatemala - while others somehow succeed in managing and containing the stresses? This important book brings these issues into sharp focus, and suggests where and how the international community might best help. It is an invaluable contribution to a debate which will shape politics and security in the 21st century
To deal effectively with deadly conflict within societies, you have first to understand the "what" and above all the "why"

Ethnic and other fault lines are to be expected in African countries, carved as they were from the continent by colonial powers with scant respect for traditional boundaries. That has made their management essential, not least since the politics of ethnic identity has played such a major part in access to resources and power in post-colonial governments, including in my own country. For this reason, and many more, <i>On the Fault Line</i> is an imperative read as we strive to learn from our mistakes and the experiences of others

This may become the seminal work on a problem that threatens to destabilise important areas around the globe

This potent and sobering book should leave no one in doubt about the potential for mass violence along the fault lines that simmer in our societies

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