Volume 36, Issue 1 (2024) The Changing Character of War and Peacemaking
This issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy, with Lord John Alderdice as the guest editor, examines how, with the advent of sophisticated technologies and AI, the conduct of wars and peacemaking in the opening decades of the twenty-first century has changed, with implications for the future of both and society at large.Front Matter
Editor's Note
Editor's Note
Padraig O'Malley
Articles
Introduction to the Special Issue
John, Lord Alderdice
New Technologies in Wars, Old and New
John, Lord Alderdice
Employing Multi-Agent AI to Model Conflict and Cooperation in Northern Ireland
Katherine O'Lone, Michael Gantley, Justin E. Lane, and F. LeRon Shults
Brothers and Sisters from Another Mother–Promoting Inter-cultural Understanding, Conflict Reduction, and Solidarity Among Partner Forces in the Sahel
Alain Tschudin and James Smith
Understanding the Indirect Strategy Moment in Global Affairs
Kumar Ramakrishna
Coping with the Complexity of the Changing Character of War: Toward a New Paradigm of Adaptive Peace
Cedric de Coning
Muscat, Madrid, Ulster, and the Holy Land: The MEDRC Model of Environmental Peacebuilding in a Revived Middle East Peace Process
Ciarán Ó. Cuinn
The Middle East: From an Inflammable Region to A Resilient Land of Opportunities–A Case Study of EcoPeace Middle East's Approach to Conflict and Environmental Action
Yana Abu Taleb and Thalsa-Thiziri Mekaouche
Pioneering the Digital Frontier: CMI's Approach to Forward-Looking Dialogues
Johanna Poutanen and Felix Kufus
Editors
- Editor
- Padraig O'Malley
- Guest Editor
- Lord John Alderdice
- Copy Editor
- K. Rhett Nichols
- Citation Editor
- Erin K. Maher
- Design Editor
- Paul Cain