Conflict's long game : a decade of violence in the Bangsamoro / edited by Francisco J. Lara, Jr. and Nikki Philline C. de la Rosa
Material type:
- 9786214483174
- DS 688.M2 .C66 2023

Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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National University - Manila | LRC - Annex Filipiniana | General Education | FIL DS 688.M2 .C66 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.1 | Available | NULIB000019923 |
Includes index.
Chapter 1. Editor's Introduction -- Chapter 2. Shifts in Conflict Dynamics in the Bangsamoro -- Chapter 3. Human Development and Violent Conflict in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, 2011 to 2020 -- Chapter 4. Untangling Conflict Strings: The Role of Identity and Vengeance in Perpetuating Violence -- Chapter 5. VII and the Patterns of Violence in the Bangsamoro -- Chapter 6. Violence in Borderlands: What Explains the Difference in Intensity and Magnitude -- Chapter 7. In Search of Peaceful Solutions: Land Conflicts and the Plight of the Non-Moro Indigenous Peoples -- Chapter 8. Women and Conflict: A Gendered Analysis of Violence in the Bangsamoro -- Chapter 9.Voices for Violence: Social Media in the Time of Mamasapano, Marawi and Maguindanao -- Chapter 10. Bangsamoro Autonomy and the Political Settlement in the Philippines -- Chapter 11. The Numbers Count When the Deaths Mounth: Monitoring Subnational Violence in Muslim Mindanao.
Conflict's long game in the Bangsamoro offers an incisive analysis of the peace and conflict terrain of the Bangsamoro region captured by a granular database of violent conflict incidents from 2010 to 2020. The reports in this anthology provide valuable insights into the intricate dynamics at play that policy makers, development workers, and peacebuilders can utilize when designing programs and initiatives that are both conflict sensitive and growth enhancing. Conflict Alert's panel data bares a tale of declining violence amidst newly emerging conflicts that national, regional, and local government units in Muslim Mindanao, including civil society, and businesses can only ignore at their own peril.
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