Call for Essays for PEACE REVIEW



PEACE REVIEW FALL 2003 
Call for Essays (from the Peace & Justice Studies Association list)

Ubuntu*: Humane Solutions and Success Stories from Africa
Special Editors: Karen Bouwer, University of San Francisco
Ange-Marie Hancock, Penn State University
Submission Deadline: May 1, 2003

PEACE REVIEW invites the submission of essays on humane solutions and
success stories from Africa.  The issue will focus not solely on the
challenges faced by African nations but developing solutions that will
work in the new millennium.  Suggested themes include democratization,
social activism or justice, cultural criticism and intervention, truth and
reconciliation, community or grassroots empowerment (economic, social,
political, environmental, cultural, psychological), conflict resolution
and peace, regional cooperation, continental integration, the roles of
allies, coalition building, and stands in solidarity, and repairing
cleavages of gender, ethnicity or class.  Essays will be accepted from
various disciplines across the social sciences and humanities, and may be
academic or prescriptive in style.

PEACE REVIEW is a quarterly, multidisciplinary, transnational journal of
research and analysis, focusing on the current issues and controversies
that underlie the promotion of a more peaceful world.  We define peace
research to include human rights, development, ecology, culture, race,
gender and related issues.  We present the results of this research and
thinking in short (2500 - 3500 words), accessible and substantive essays.

For Peace Review's Writer's Guidelines, editorial correspondence,
including manuscripts and disks, contact Anne Hieber (hieber@usfca.edu )
or Robert Elias (Eliasr@usfca.edu), Peace Review, University of San
Francisco, 2130 Fulton Street, San Francisco, CA 94117, USA.  Tel:
415-422-6349/2910.  Fax:415-422-5671, Attn. Elias or Hieber.  Submissions
may also be made by E-mail attachment to hieber@usfca.edu.


* Ubuntu is a South African proverb that states, "We are only human in
relation to other humans."


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