
Hate and Reconciliation
Approaches to Fostering Relationships between People and Peace
Guido Cuyvers(Autor*in)
Simon + Schuster LLC (Verlag)
Erschienen am 29. November 2022
248 Seiten
978-1-59211-251-7 (ISBN)
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Beschreibung
Every day the media confront us with the many forms and excesses of hatred: cyber hatred, hate speech, bullying, hate groups, religiously inspired violence against dissidents and genocides. Hatred is human and current. It is an intrinsic part of what can happen between people. Personal experiences can lead people to hate someone. In society and even on a global level, hatred is again and again the motor of misunderstanding and often also of violence between people. Sometimes hate smoulders almost unconsciously; at other times he is furious and serves as a flag for serious violence. Hatred has many faces and seems omnipresent, that much is clear. The term "Erida complex," after the Greek goddess of hate, symbolizes the common and deeply rooted nature of hatred. Hatred is mighty as a destructive force. He knows how to motivate individuals and large groups of people to bring out the worst in themselves. He turns life among people into a desert. However, he cannot compete with Irene, the goddess and the symbol of peace. After all, he is unable to correct what went wrong. Nor is it a ground for building a peaceful society. At the same time, hatred is impotent against the positive freedom of people to transcend the negative. Those who are open to this will see many connecting, and therefore Irenean, initiatives. Hatred does not and should not have the last word. Opposite the well of Erida is the Irenese, the way to peace. After examining the nature of hate, this book focuses a wide-angle lens on its many faces, in individuals and groups as well as peoples. Facing the negativity of hatred, this book presents constructive approaches to fostering relationships between people and peace.
Weitere Details
Sprache
Englisch
Verlagsort
New York
USA
Dateigröße
5,04 MB
ISBN-13
978-1-59211-251-7 (9781592112517)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Weitere Ausgaben
Person
During his professional life Guido Cuyvers was affiliated with a university college (Thomas More), department of social work, as a lecturer, researcher, and head of department. He studied criminology, sexology, and philosophy. He holds a doctorate in criminology with a study on the victims of crime. He is currently engaged in civil society, elderly policy, and research on the social participation of elderly people in society. As an author, he has published extensively on all kinds of social themes.
Inhalt
- Intro
- Contents
- Introduction: From Erida to Eirene
- Chapter 1 Roots of Hatred
- 1. Hate - A Complex Dynamic
- 1.1 Hate as a process
- 1.2 A combination of feelings, beliefs and behavior
- 1.3 Individual and social
- 2. From hate to crime
- 3. The Erida complex
- 4. The many-sided face of hate
- 4.1 Types of Everyday Habits
- 4.2 Prejudices
- 4.3. Discrimination
- 4.4 Violence
- 4.5 Genocide and eradication
- Chapter 2 Why People Hate
- 1. Opinions
- 1.1 Prejudices
- 1.2 Ideologies
- 1.3 Stereotypes
- 2. Values and norms
- 3. Authoritarian personality
- 4. Self-esteem
- 5. Needs and self-interest
- 6. Unresolved conflicts
- 7. Hater typology
- Chapter 3 The Road from Erida - At What Price?
- 1.2 Evolving into violence
- 1.3 Hate in human evolution
- 2. Impact on all involved
- 2.1 Consequences for the victims
- 2.2 Consequences for the target group
- 2.3 Consequences for society
- 2.4 Consequences for the haters
- Chapter 4 Small-Scale Hatred
- 1.2 Stakeholders
- 1.3 Consequences of bullying
- 2. Bullying at work
- 2.1 Kinds of bullying at work
- 2.2 Some facts
- 2.3 Special bully: the psychopath
- 3. Cyberbullying
- 3.1 Other than just bullying
- 3.2 Forms of cyberbullying
- 4. Homophobia and LGBT hatred
- 5. Discrimination, racism, and xenophobia
- 5.1 Forms of discrimination
- 5.2 Fight against racism and xenophobia
- 6. Hate speech
- Chapter 5 Hate Groups
- 1. White racism (White supremacy)
- 1.1 General
- 1.2 Ku Klux Klan
- 1.3 Christian Identity (Identity Church)
- 1.4 World Church of the Creator (Creativity Movement)
- 3. Neo-Nazi groups
- 3.1 Hammerskin Nation
- 3.2 Stormfront
- 3.3 Blood & Honor
- 4. Skinheads
- 4.1 From mod to skinhead
- 4.2 Evolution of the skinhead movement
- Chapter 6 Large-Scale, Hate-Driven Conflicts
- 1. Armenian genocide
- 1.1 Situation of the Armenian population
- 1.2 Course of the genocide
- 2. Genocide in Rwanda
- 2.1 What preceded
- 2.1.1 A piece of colonial history
- 2.1.2 Hutu manifesto
- 2.2 Murders
- 2.3 Human toll
- 2.4 Role of propaganda
- 2.5 After the genocide
- 2.5.1 Tribunal
- 2.5.2 Gacaca
- 3. The war in Yugoslavia
- 3.1 What preceded
- 3.2 Striving for independence
- 3.3 Ethnic cleansing and genocide
- 3.4 Victims
- 3.5 Prosecution of war criminals
- 4. Genocide in Darfur
- 4.1 What preceded
- 4.2 Genocide
- 4.3 Continued
- 5. Islamic State
- 5.1 Definition of terms
- 5.2 Origin of IS
- 5.3 Caliphate
- 5.4 Purpose
- 5.5 Resources
- 5.6 Impact
- 5.7 Role of hatred
- 5.8 Dabiq
- 6 Boko Haram
- 6.1 Origin
- 6.2 Further development
- 6.3 Objectives
- 6.4 Resistance
- 7. The Holocaust
- 7.1 Anti-Semitism
- 7.2 Nazi Germany
- 7.3 Eradication
- 7.4 Still a problem
- 8. Northern Irish conflict
- 8.1 History
- 8.2 Uprising
- 8.3 Hate fueled
- 8.4 Peace
- 9. Israeli-Palestinian conflict
- 9.1 Genesis
- 9.2 Course of the conflict
- 9.3 Peace Initiatives
- 10. Conflict in Myanmar
- 10.1 A piece of history
- 10.2 Fate of the Rohingya
- 10.3 Background
- Chapter 7 Beyond Hate - Eirenese
- 1. Training as a beacon against hatred
- 1.1 Developing a critical attitude
- 1.2 Citizenship education
- 1.3 Peace education
- 2. Build a strong community
- 3. Prevention
- 4. On the road to recovery
- 4.1 Restorative work with young people
- 4.2 Restorative justice
- 4.3 Truth commissions
- 5. Forgiveness and reconciliation
- 5.1 Forgiveness
- 5.2 Path of forgiveness
- 5.3 Recognition of yourself and the other as a condition for forgiveness
- 5.4 Finally
- Bibliography
- Footnotes
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