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Fractured Land, Healing Nations : A Contextual Analysis of the Role of Religious Faith Sodalities Towards Peace-building in Bosnia-Herzegovina

Part of the Studien zur Interkulturellen Geschichte des Christentums/Etudes d'Histoire Interculturelle de Christianisme/Studies in the Intercultural History of Christianity series
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More than a decade after the signing of the Dayton Accord, which was intended to end the violence and rebuild civil society, Bosnia-Herzegovina languishes under a cloud of many unresolved post-war issues.

Fractured Land, Healing Nations makes a compelling case that although religion has been instrumentalised to promote the cause of war, it also can be a positive force for building peace.

Religion thus has the capacity to complement the structural and materialist approach to peace-building by addressing the pressing inter-personal needs of a traumatized society.

The author presents primary research data to demonstrate the role of religio-national myths in nation-building, and examines why and how the supra-national character of religion contributes to social restoration through locally-generated initiatives of religious faith sodalities.

He successfully brings together the disciplines of religious studies, sociology and political science to bear upon the difficult issues facing peace-builders.

This in depth study focused specifically on Bosnia-Herzegovina has important implications for those engaged in conflict resolution and peace-building in many other global hot spots where ethno-religious identity and nationalism unite to perpetuate the cycle of violence.

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Product Details
Peter Lang AG
3631553064 / 9783631553060
Paperback / softback
949.703
11/05/2006
Switzerland
331 pages, 1 table, 1 graph,
140 x 210 mm, 460 grams
Professional & Vocational Learn More