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Dieter Senghaas

    August 27, 1940
    Von Europa lernen. Entwicklungsgeschichtliche Betrachtungen
    Kritische Studien zur Politikwissenschaft
    Weltwirtschaftsordnung und Entwicklungspolitik
    Rüstung und Militarismus
    On Perpetual Peace
    Dieter Senghaas
    • 2013

      Dieter Senghaas

      Pioneer of Peace and Development Research

      • 153 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      Dieter Senghaas, professor emeritus of international relations, University of Bremen, was one of most innovative contemporary German social scientists, with major contributions on peace and development research and on music and peace. He was awarded many prizes: the International Peace Research Award (1987), Göttingen Peace Prize (1999), Culture and Peace Prize of the Villa Ichon in Bremen (2006), and the Leopold-Kohr Prize of the Austrian Ministry of Science and Research (2010). In addition to his autobiographic notes and his selected bibliography, this book offers a global audience five key texts by D. Senghaas (1974-2009): Towards an Analysis of Threat Policy in International Relations; Friedrich List and the Basic Problems of Development; Developing the Definitions of Perpetual Peace (‘para pacem’): Through What and How is Peace Constituted Today?; Sounds of Peace: On Peace Fantasies and Peace Offerings in Classical Music; and Enhancing Human Rights – A Contribution to Viable Peace.

      Dieter Senghaas
    • 2007

      On Perpetual Peace

      A Timely Assessment

      • 242 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      Dieter Senghaas, a prominent authority in conflict research and management, highlights the remarkable transformation in the OECD world, particularly within the European Union, where violent conflict has become largely unthinkable over the past fifty years. This shift fosters his optimism regarding the potential for lasting peace globally, despite the ongoing violent conflicts in various regions. Senghaas's insights emphasize the prerequisites necessary for achieving enduring peace and the lessons that can be drawn from historical progress.

      On Perpetual Peace