Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | HN766 .A8 H2943 2014 C2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5152522 | |||
Books | American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Non-fiction | Main Collection | HN766 .A8 H2943 2014 C1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5117633 |
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HN 766 .A8 A72 2003 The Arab human development report 2003 : building a knowledge society. | HN 766 .A8 A72 2014 Arab human develoment in the twenty-first century : The Primacy of Empowerment / | HN 766 .A8 C86 1993 Wasta : the hidden force in Middle Eastern society / | HN766 .A8 H2943 2014 C1 Arab approaches to conflict resolution : mediation, negotiation and settlement of political disputes / | HN766 .A8 H2943 2014 C2 Arab approaches to conflict resolution : mediation, negotiation and settlement of political disputes / | HN 766 .A85 T3713 2014 Arabic Arab knowledge report 2014 : youth and localisation of knowledge. | HN 766.Z9 M358 2017 Media and the experience of social change : the Arab world / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"This book examines Arab approaches to mediation, negotiation and settlement of political disputes. This book proposes that two clusters of independent variables are potentially responsible for the distinctive nature of Arab conflict resolution. Firstly, those linked with Arab political regimes and imperatives, and secondly those linked with Arab and /or Islamic culture. The text also focuses on the Arab League and its history of involvement in crisis and conflict situations, along with the roles of individual leaders, emissaries and extra-regional actors such as IGOs (Inter-Governmental Organisations) in undertaking mediation initiatives. IGO and Arab League activity has taken on new importance since the various intervention attempts in connection with the "Arab Spring" since 2011. During the negotiation process, most Arab regimes tend to view conflicts within a broad historical context and Islamic culture prioritises the cohesion of the community and internal stability of the state over individual autonomy. This has created an authoritarian style of leadership, and in practice, leaders in the Middle East have had near absolute authority in the decision-making process--a fact which will have a lot of weight in conflict management and whether peace will endure for a long period of time"--
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