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Toward a Theory of Peace: The Role of Moral Beliefs: About the Author

Toward a Theory of Peace: The Role of Moral Beliefs
About the Author
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Table of Contents
  2. Editors’ Note
  3. Introduction: Randall Forsberg and the Path to Peace
  4. Abstract
  5. Acknowledgments
  6. Preface
  7. Part I. Toward a Theory of Peace
  8. Chapter 1. The Idea of a Theory of Peace
    1. 1.1 Introduction
    2. 1.2 Defining the End of War
    3. 1.3 Standards for the Theory of Peace
  9. Chapter 2. Conditions for the Abolition of War
    1. 2.1 Introduction
    2. 2.2 Main Hypothesis
    3. 2.3 Comparison With Other Approaches
    4. 2.4 Conclusions
  10. Part II. Socially-Sanctioned Violence
  11. Chapter 3. The Roles of Innate Impulses and Learned Moral Beliefs in Individual and Group Violence
    1. 3.1 Introduction
    2. 3.2 Sources and Features of Violence by Individuals
    3. 3.3 Sources and Features of Violence by Groups
    4. 3.4 Motives for Participation in Institutionalized Group Violence
  12. Chapter 4. Socially-Sanctioned Group Violence: Features, Examples, and Sources
    1. 4.1 Introduction
    2. 4.2 Some Socially-Sanctioned Forms of Physical Violence and Violation
    3. 4.3 Human Sacrifice, Slavery, and Corporal Punishment
    4. 4.4 The Declining Tolerance for Violence
    5. 4.5 The Rise of Institutionalized Forms of Violence
    6. 4.6 The Demise of Institutionalized Forms of Violence
    7. 4.7 Goals, Efficacy, and Morality in Institutionalized Violence and Violation
  13. Chapter 5. Ritual Cannibalism: A Case Study of Socially-Sanctioned Group Violence
    1. 5.1 Introduction
    2. 5.2 The Global Incidence and Correlates of Cannibalism
    3. 5.3 The Purposes and Forms of Cannibalism
    4. 5.4 Morality and Affect in Customary Cannibalism
    5. 5.5 The Demise of Customary Cannibalism
  14. Chapter 6. Sanctioned Violence, Morality, and Cultural Evolution
    1. 6.1 Introduction
    2. 6.2 The Pattern of Successive Forms of Socially-Sanctioned Violence
    3. 6.3 Directed Cultural Evolution and Priorities Among Human Needs
    4. 6.4 The End of Socially-Sanctioned Forms of Violence
  15. Appendix: The Debate on the Existence of Cannibalism
  16. Bibliography
  17. About the Author
  18. About the Editors

About the Author

Randall Caroline Watson Forsberg (1943-2007) was born in Huntsville, Alabama, and educated at Barnard College in New York City, where she majored in English. She began her career as an analyst of military policy at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute in 1968. In 1974, she moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where she would eventually receive her Ph.D. In 1979, she founded the Institute for Defense and Disarmament Studies and drafted the Call to Halt the Nuclear Arms Race, a manifesto that helped launch the Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign. In 1982, the campaign organized what was then the largest political demonstration in U.S. history in New York’s Central Park. Forsberg was a MacArthur Fellow and a member of the Director’s Advisory Committee of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. She wrote or co-wrote several books and was granted honorary doctorates from the University of Notre Dame and Governors State University. At the time of her death at age 64 she held the Anne and Bernard Spitzer Chair in Political Science at The City College of New York.

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