后covid -19时代津巴布韦大学从战争研究到和平建设和社会转型:新方向

Baldwin Hove, B. Dube
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摘要

本文采用积极的和平视角,通过考虑全球大流行并寻求该领域的新方向,研究了2021年津巴布韦大学战争与战略研究(WSS)学位课程在冲突、建设和平与社会转型(CPST)方面的演变。本文解决了两个问题:1)是什么变化和因素引发了方向的变化,从WSS课程到CPST, 2)重新包装战争与战略研究学位课程的潜在好处是什么?这篇论文认为,范式转变适应了像COVID-19这样的流行病,它构成了社会、政治和经济生活模式,并出现了一个新的方向,即从消极的焦点转向积极的和平。从WSS到CPST,课程变化的原因之一是希望赋予该方案人性化的面孔,并使学位保持一致,以便促进积极的和平与可持续发展,以解决与新出现的人类非暴力威胁(如全球流行病)相关的轨迹。最后,我们认为CPST的新方向是一种反霸权战略,以解决人类冲突的对抗性和军国主义方法。2019冠状病毒病提醒我们,对抗性政治正在慢慢变得与解决生活中的矛盾心理无关,也与遏制对和平、安全与发展构成新威胁的全球大流行病的斗争无关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From War Studies to Peace Building and Social Transformation at the University of Zimbabwe in the Post-COVID-19 Era: New Directions
This paper uses a positive peace lens to examine the evolution of the War and Strategic Studies (WSS) degree curriculum, to the degree in Conflict, Peace Building, and Social Transformation (CPST) at the University of Zimbabwe in the year 2021, by considering the global pandemic and seeking new directions in the field. The paper addresses two questions: 1) What changes and factors provoked the change in direction, from the WSS curriculum to CPST, and 2) What are the potential benefits of repackaging the war and strategic studies degree programme? The paper argues that the paradigm shift accommodates pandemics like the COVID-19 which configured social, political, and economic patterns of life, and a new direction emerged, that is, a change of focus from negative to positive peace. Among the reasons for curriculum changes, from WSS to CPST, was the desire to give the programme a human face, and to align the degree so that it promotes the positive peace and sustainable development needed to address trajectories associated with emerging nonviolent threats to humanity – such as a global pandemics. Lastly, we see the new direction of the CPST as a counterhegemonic strategy to address confrontational and militaristic approaches to human conflict. COVID-19 has reminded us that confrontational politics are slowly becoming irrelevant for addressing the ambivalence of life, and in the struggle to contain global pandemics, which pose new threats to peace, security and development.
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