Obligatory Reading: (no more than 500 pages)
- Oliver P. Richmond, The Transformation of Peace (Palgrave 2007)
- David Cortright, Peace: A History of Movements & Ideas (Cambridge 2008)
Supplementary Reading:
- Hobbes, Leviathan , Chapters 13 & 14
- Locke, Second Treatise of Government, Chapters 2 & 3
- Patrick Hayden, John Rawls: Towards a Just World Order (2002), pp. 151-168
- Beate Sj?fjell, “If Not Now, When? European Company Law in a Sustainability Development Perspective”
- Christina Voigt, “Sustainable Security”
- Christine Chinkin & Hilary Charlesworth, Building Women into Peace: The International Legal Framework, in Richard Falk, Balakrishnan Rajagopal & Jacqueline Stevens, International Law and the Third World (Routledge 2008)
- Martin Luther King, Jr. , Letter from a Brimingham City Jail
- Corrine Parver & Rebecca Wolf, “Civil Society’s Involvement in Post-Conflict Peacebuilding”, International Journal of Legal Information (Spring 2008)
- Kathryn Abrams, “Women and Anti-War Protect: Rearticulating Gender and Citizenship” in 87 Boston University Law Review (October 2007)
- Roland Paris, At War’s end. Building Peace after Civil Conflict (Cambridge 2004), Chapters 1-8, 10
- Roland Paris and Timothy D. Sisk, (eds), The Dilemmas of Statebuilding. Confronting the contradictions of postwar peace operations (Routledge 2009), Chapter 1.
- James Lee Roy, Does Democracy Cause Peace?
- Scott Gates & Kaare Str?m, Power Sharing, Agency and Civil Conflict
- Chandra Lekha Sriram, Confronting Past Human Rights Violations. Justice vs Peace in Times of Transition (Cass 2004), Introduction & Chapters 1-2
- Naomi Roth-Arriaza, The Pinochet Effect. Transnational Justice in the Age of Human Rights (Pennsylvannia 2005), Chapters 7-8