Beyond Violence: Conflict Resolution Process in Northern Ireland, Mari Fitzduff, November 2002. What were the processes of conflict resolution that enabled Northern Ireland to move beyond violence and agree to such a settlement? What brought the conflict to an end. More details and ordering informaiton available at U.N. Publications.
Both Sides of the Bench: New Perspectives on International Law and Human Rights, The International Center for Ethics, Justice and Public Life, 2004. Intended to serve as a resource for individuals and institutions involved in the work of the international judiciary. This book highlights the work of the Brandeis International Fellows in Human Rights, Intervention, and International Law. It also documents the themes raised in the related symposium.
Catholics, Jews, and the Prism of Conscience: Response to James Carroll's Constantine's Sword, Sylvia Fuks Fried and Daniel Terris, eds., 2001. Reflections on a symposium, held at Brandeis on Jan. 22, 2001, to coincide with the publication of Carroll's book. Authors include Kanan Makiya, Eva Fleischner, Irving Greenberg, James Carroll, Arthur Green, Eugene Fisher, Robert Wistrich, Donald Dietrich, and Paul Mendes-Flohr.
Coexistence and the Quest for Justice, (HTML) multiple authors, 2000. Project Summaries of the 1998 Brandeis International Fellows. Fellows were selected from the Balkans, the Middle East, South Africa, and Sri Lanka to engages in a cross-cultural process of reflection on coexistence methods and to stimulate consideration of the ethical dimensions of coexistence work.
Ethics at Work: Creating Virtue in an American Corporation, Dan Terris, 2005. An assessment of the ethics program at Lockheed Martin, one of the world's largest defense contractors.
The International Judge, Daniel Terris, Cesare Romano, Leigh Swigart, 2007. Based on interviews with more than 30 international judges, this book is the first comprehensive portrait of the men and women in this new global profession. To view a webcast of a panel discussion on the book at the Carnegie Council for Ethics and International Affairs, click here. To listen to a discussion of the book at the American Society of International Law, click here.
Literary Responses to Mass Violence, 2004. A collection of the presentations made during the symposium of the same name. Selections include the work of the poets who attended the event and reflections on the themes addressed in the symposium. Authors include Ilana Rosen, Peter Dale Scott, Taha Muhammad Ali, Antjie Krog, Rachel Talshir, Yigal Schwartz, and Eugene Goodheart.
NGOs at the Table: Strategies for Influencing Policies in Areas of Conflict, Mari Fitzduff with Cheyanne Church, eds., April 2004. An examination a several NGOs, diverse in size, location, and financial means, that have successfully influenced both policy and program development in conflicts throughout the world. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc.
The Psychology of Resolving Global Conflicts: From War to Peace, Mari Fitzduff and Christopher Stout, eds. Greenwood Press and Praeger Publishers, December 2005.
Republic of Fear: The Politics of Modern Iraq, Kanan Makiya, updated edition 1998. First published in 1989, just before the Gulf War broke out, this was the only book that explained the motives of the Saddam Hussein regime in invading and annexing Kuwait. This edition has a substantial introduction focusing on the changes in Hussein's regime since the Gulf War.
The Rock: A Tale of Seventh-Century Jerusalem, Kanan Makiya, 2002. A grand tour of seventh-century Jerusalem serves as a bracing talisman for our times by reminding us of how much Jews and Muslims once shared.
The Rock: Jerusalem's Sacred Space: Responses to Kanan Makiya's Novel, The Rock: A Tale of Seventh-Century Jerusalem, Sylvia Fuks Fried and Daniel Terris, eds., 2003. Authors include Zvi Ben-Dor, Eugene Goodheart, and Oleg Grabar. The publication looks beyond the current political conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians to explore the ways in which men and women of three ancient faiths have invested meanings in the city's stones.
Working with Integrity: A Guidebook for Peacebuilders Asking Ethical Questions, Cynthia Cohen, 2001. A resource for people who promote coexistence and further reconciliation in historically divided communities. It is designed to engage its users in practicing an approach to ethical inquiry that is well suited to the kinds of dilemmas and questions that arise in the work of building peace. Because the document is so large, we have divided the Guidebook into smaller documents: