Social Justice

Social Justice is published four times a year as a journal of the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution at George Mason University. Social Justice is a broadly defined forum for articles that make contributions within the following areas:
  • human rights in all their theoretical, political, and cultural dimensions;
  • peace and security studies, conflict analysis and resolution processes;
  • social justice advocacy and analysis;
  • violence and its meanings and implications;
  • and methodology.
The journal promotes critical scholarship in both the subject matter and in the sustained engagement with debates in theory or methods that reflect the best of current scholarship and reflective practice. Social Justice is intended as a venue where both new and established scholars, researchers, practitioners and activists can make valuable contributions.



Vol 6, No 1 (2006)

Table of Contents

Articles

Environmental Justice as Place-Making: A Study of Mexican Migrants, Transnational Advocacy, and Urban Rehabilitation in Matamoros, Mexico PDF
Suzanne Simon 1-29
Four Years After 11 September: What Can 'Conflict Resolution' Possibly Tell Us About Terrorism? PDF
Dennis J.D. Sandole 30-48
Transnational NGOs and Local Struggles PDF
Agnieszka Paczynska 49-74
The European Effect and Diffusion of the Human Rights Norms in Turkey PDF
Ulas Doga Eralp 75-97
Social Justice and Indigenous Identities PDF
Daniel Rothbart 98-112
Linguistics and Positioning Theory within Conflict Analysis and Resolution: Work in Progress PDF
Tom Bartlett 113-133
Experiences and Views on War: Voices from War-affected Communities Abstract PDF
Al B. Fuertes 134-148
Review of The Cultural Defense (Alison Dundes Renteln, Oxford 2004) PDF
Terry Beitzel, Jennifer Dougherty 149-154
Review of Doing Research: Methods of Inquiry for Conflict Analysis (Daniel Druckman, Sage 2005) PDF
Terry Beitzel, Jennifer Dougherty 155-158