Description: This book builds on the original conceptualization of stable peace by Kenneth Boulding and adds contemporary theoretical and empirical understandings of its nature, causes, conditions, dimensions, and prospects for consolidation and expansion. In original research, fifteen int...
Brief description: James E. Goodby is an Annenberg Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Stanford University and has been a diplomat, negotiator, and policy advisor in several US administrations from Eisenhower to Obama. He is also Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus at Carnegie Mellon University.
Review Quotes: "What I have been suggesting is that it is best to regard the 'democratic peace' phenomenon as a subset of the broader general phenomenon of stable peace. In this connection, I would like to raise the question whether stable peace is possible only and has occurred only between countries that are democracies. A more comprehensive research program would look for historical cases of stable peace between countries that are not democracies, or between states only one of which is a democracy. Some of the research on 'zones of peace' by Professor Arie Kacowicz reported in his earlier publications and referred to in this volume moves in this direction. It is important to apply the distinction between conditional and stable peace also in such studies." --from the Foreword by Alexander L. George