Search the World's Largest Database of Information Science & Technology Terms & Definitions
InfInfoScipedia LogoScipedia
A Free Service of IGI Global Publishing House
Below please find a list of definitions for the term that
you selected from multiple scholarly research resources.

What is Turbulent Peace

Handbook of Research on Transitional Justice and Peace Building in Turbulent Regions
A very ambiguous kind of peace which is characterized like a period of transition between a previous situation of war among people toward a new state of struggle by people against nature (and by opulent people against poor persons and future generations). A partial and incomplete peace can be attained among individuals that in the past were enemies, but that peace agreement open the doors to a process of unbound economic progress which generates indirect violence against marginal persons and future generations because the destruction of nature (depletion of natural resources and contamination that is condition to the development of “productive forces”).
Published in Chapter:
Turbulent Peace, Power, and Ethics
Fredy Cante (Universidad del Rosario, Colombia)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-9675-4.ch001
Abstract
A situation of turbulent peace is defined as an ambiguous transition from direct violence (which ends by means a fragile and incomplete peace agreement among enemies) to an indirect and subtle violence euphemistically denominated as progress. Indeed, a big rate of economic growth implies growing prosperity, incremented consumption, and increasing investment in the present but, sadly, the consequence of this material progress will be the suffering of future generations because the exhaustion and deterioration of nature in a world where the entropy is worsened by the rapacity of actual generations. The depletion and contamination of natural resources is the inherent cost of material progress and development of “productive” forces. The ideological, coercive and economic power of some organized minorities, and the acquiescence of a big majority of human beings constitutes the root of this problem. The antidote against this power is the critical examination of values by active citizens and the guide of ethics. In the long run this problem can be solved promoting a nonviolent economy.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
eContent Pro Discount Banner
InfoSci OnDemandECP Editorial ServicesAGOSR