Not exact matches
Part
of his work with the YPO
Peace Action Network is to connect members from
conflicting areas
of the world in order to seek
out resolution.
The
conflict: Americans and Canadians are battling it
out over the
Peace Bridge, which links Fort Erie, Ont., to Buffalo, N.Y. Americans on the binational authority overseeing the bridge are accusing Canadians
of foot - dragging on a redevelopment project on the U.S. side, and Cuomo said the bridge is a «metaphor for dysfunction.»
The English tradition
of religious toleration, which is the source
of our legal ideal
of the free exercise
of religion, arose in the wake
of long and bloody religious wars to secure some
peace among
conflicting sects by keeping individual belief
out of the state's reach.
Its a balance
of maintaining a clear stance
of right and wrong but living with a softness
of knowing that my own life and
peace is more valuable than dragging
out a
conflict.
We may as Christians think that the notion
of peace has sufficiently penetrated the life and history
of the Church to secure a satisfactory ethical basis for Christian
conflict resolution, a
peace ministry or to carry
out the World Council
of Churches» «Program to Overcome Violence» and that the Church, therefore, is not pressed for other alternatives.
He concludes that both in war and in
peace people need to work
out together their
conflicting sides and find positions faithful to the central thrust
of scripture.
Turkey's military coups 1993 — Claims
of a «covert coup» intended to prevent a
peace settlement with the Kurdistan Workers» Party (PKK) 1980 — Military coup following armed
conflict between right - wing and left - wing groups in the 1970s 1971 — Military coup known as the «coup by memorandum», which the military delivered instead
of sending
out tanks 1960 — Coup by group
of young military officer outside chain
of command, against the democratically - elected Democrat Party
In Colombia,
peace negotiations between Colombia's government and the rebel group FARC hold
out the promise
of an end to more than five decades
of violent
conflict, which has left 220,000 dead and produced a refugee crisis second in scale only to that
of Syria.
In some ways, my job wasn't as
conflict driven as Laurie's, but he loves his daughter a lot and he's trying to keep everyone at
peace until she can get
out of the house.
Among openDemocracy's articles on African politics and
conflicts: Gillian Slovo, «Making history: South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission» (5 December 2002) Katharine Houreld, «The cost
of peace in Ivory Coast» (15 February 2006) Patricia Daniel, «Mali: everyone's favourite destination» (11 May 2006) Gilles Yabi, «Guinea: a state
of suspension» (28 February 2007) Angelique Haugerud, «Kenya: spaces
of hope» (23 January 2008) Anna Husarska, «Kenya's displaced people: a photo - essay» (5 February 2008) Lyndall Stein, «Ethiopia: the tears and the rains» (23 July 2008) Emmanuelle Bernard, «Guinea - Bissau: drug boom, lost hope» (13 September 2008) Lara Pawson, «Angola's elections: the politics
of no change» (23 September 2008) Elleke Boehmer, «Beyond the icon: Nelson Mandela in his 90th year» (12 November 2008) Gérard Prunier, «The eastern DR Congo: dynamics
of conflict» (17 November 2008) John Makumbe, «Zimbabwe: wrong way, right way» (2 February 2009) Gérard Prunier, «The Kenya we want» (3 February 2009) Gérard Prunier, «Somalia: beyond the quagmire» (25 February 2009) Roger Southall, «South Africa's election: a tainted victory» (7 April 2009) I advised the macadamia nut - farmers to form a cooperative and work together to get to the bottom
of what had happened - find
out who owned the macadamia trees; create a register; then determine who was selling macadamia nuts even though they had no trees growing on their own land.
... that it is time enough for the rightful purposes
of civil government, for its officers to interfere when principles break
out into overt acts against
peace and good order; that truth is great and will prevail if left to herself, that she is the proper and sufficient antagonist to error, and has nothing to fear from the
conflict, unless by human interposition disarmed
of her natural weapons, free argument and debate, errors ceasing to be dangerous when it is permitted freely to contradict them.