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Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Figures and Tables
About the Editors
List of Contributors
1. Introduction: The Search for Global Peace: Concepts and Currents in Twenty-First-Century Peace History Scholarship
Toward a Global History of Peace, Ancient Times to 1500 CE
2. Ancient Egyptian Peace Traditions
3. Peace in Ancient Greece
4. Ancient Rome and the Quest for Peace
5. Discourses and Debates on Peacemaking in Imperial China
6. The Idea of Peace during the European “Middle Ages”
Peace in an Age of Empires, 1500 to 1914 CE
7. The Search for Peace in Europe: 1500–1914
8. African Peace Traditions and Resistance to Colonial Rule
9. Modern East Asia and Peace: Pacification and Harmony in Imperialist Times
10. The Idea of Peace in North America until 1780
11. US Efforts to Promote Peace in the Nineteenth Century
12. Latin America and the Idea of Peace
From Sarajevo to the Twenty-First Century: The Pursuit of Peace in an Era of Global Conflict
13. Defining Struggles: Peace Activism in the United States, 1914 to 2023
14. European Peace Movements since 1914
15. The Inter-American Quest for Peace and Justice
16. Pacification in Asia since the End of the Cold War: Illiberal Peacebuilding?
17. Muslim Nonviolent Civil Resistance in Modern World History
18. The Ongoing Quest for Marginal Peace in the Arab World
19. India and Pakistan: An Elusive Peace
Builders of Peace, Advocates of Change: Exemplary Individuals in the History of Peacemaking
20. Erasmus and the “Invention of Peace”
21. Elihu Burritt: America’s Nineteenth-Century International Peacemaker
22. Bertha von Suttner: The Making of a Peace Activist
23. Toyohiko Kagawa of Japan
24. Nobel Peace Laureates Jane Addams and Emily Greene Balch: Claiming Women’s Political Voice and Opposing Nationalism
25. Mohandas Gandhi
26. “Pilots of Our Struggle”: Albert Luthuli and the Ending of Apartheid
27. Against War: Olof Joachim Palme’s Legacy of Peace
28. Sérgio Vieira de Mello: Lessons on Negotiating with the Devil
Essential Issues Related to Peace History
29. Trade, Insecurity, and the Costs of Conflict
30. International Law, International Institutions, and the Pursuit of Peace
31. International Dimensions of Anti-Nuclear Activism
32. The Literature of Peace: A War Refugee’s “Orphaned Voice” in The Sympathizer
33. Gender, Sexuality, and Peace
34. Religious Peacebuilding since World War II
35. Addressing Inequality in Peace Studies: How the Peace-Development Nexus Is Driving a Needed Transformative Turn
36. Conscientious Objection: A Brief International History
37. Socialism, Internationalism, and Peace: 1869–1919
Future of Peace History
38. Is There a Place for the History of Violence in the History of Peace?
39. The Future of Peace History
40. Exploring Archives, Examining Resources, and Developing Strategies for Research in Peace History
Postscript
Suggested Readings on Peace History and Peacemaking
Index

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The Oxford Handbook of Peace History offers a comprehensive analysis of peace history from ancient times to the present day. With contributions from forty-four scholars based all over the world, the Handbook provides researchers, students, and instructors a timely examination of the global dimensions of peace work.

The Oxford Handbook of Peace History offers a comprehensive analysis of peace history from ancient times to the present day. With contributions from an international roster of scholars, the Handbook provides researchers, students, and instructors a timely examination of the global dimensions of peace work. Organized around six major sections ? three chronological and three thematic ? the Handbook explores concepts such as peace activism, internationalism,social justice, and cultures of nonviolence as transformative ideas and policy practices. It also demonstrates how conceptions of peace and approaches to peacemaking have varied and developed since antiquity. By including interdisciplinary perspectives on peace, the Handbook introduces new pathways forunderstanding war, conflict, peacemaking, and violence. The chapters, along with the volume's comprehensive Introduction, provide useful resources for understanding the development of peace history as a discipline while highlighting the connections between peace history and fields such as peace and conflict studies.