Professionalising Peace Research in Australia: Some Suggestions for the Future
Author(s)
Page, James S.Keywords
Commonwealth GovernmentAVCC
American Friends Service Committee
POLITICAL SCIENCE (160600)
military organisations
higher education
Chancellors'Committee
vulnerability
information
peace and social justice
peace research movement
wide membership
fellowship status
Australian Anthropological Society
lobby
IPRA
transmission
Asia Pacific Peace Research Association
whether a war ought to be fought
culture of violence
Internet
institutions of power
institutional enrolment
strategic studies
activate
ethical dimensions
cross
heads of peace research
national accreditation system
Australian Peace Education and Research Association
policy
counter
Australian Council of Peace Research and Education
elite
speaking truth
European Union
incorporation
professional associations
quasi
UNESCO
normative commitment
APREA
peace research
voice
Quaker
ACPRE
professional accreditation
legitimating
spokesperson
Australia
International Peace Research Assocation
nonviolence
normative science
advocacy
professional organisation
professionalisation
democratic processes
networking
popular opposition
Education not elsewhere classified (139999)
grass
peace advocacy
peace protests
voice against war
military organisations
membership status
peace
roots
Australian Peace Research and Education Association
human dimensions
defence institutions
alternatives to violence
universities
constitutional mandate
James Smith Page
public discourse
how a war is to be fought
higher research degree
UNESCO
making
Australian National Commission for UNESCO
militaristic
alternatives to social injustice
public presence
Australian Vice
nationalistic
power
APPRA
EU
news commnetary
culture of peace
invasion of Iraq
Australian Council of Deans of Education
expert opinion
mobilisation
participatory
for any potential problem there is a peace solution
authoritative
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/3644/Abstract
This essay advances a number of reasons for the establishment of a professional peace research organization in Australia, including 1) promotion of peace research in Australia, 2) input into public policy, such as with the Australian National Commission for UNESCO, and 3) the promotion of peace and social justice in Australian public discourse. A number of possibilities are discussed, although the recommended option in this essay is for the formation of an Australian Council for Peace Research and Education.Date
2005Type
journal articleIdentifier
oai:arrow.nla.gov.au:124962405481925http://eprints.qut.edu.au/3644/
Copyright/License
Copyright 2005 Social AlternativesCollections
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