01538 2200253 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001600097041000800113082001100121084001700132100005600149245008600205260006300291300002600354504001300380520075700393650003001150990002601180990002601206990002601232990002601258INLIS00000000000346120221031082222 a0010-0520003461221031 | | eng  a979xxxxxxxx aeng a341.73 a341.73 ADV a0 aAdvances in Understanding International Peacemaking1 aAdvances in Understanding International Peacemaking /cEdited by Anne-Marie Smith aWashington, DC :bUnited States Institute of Peach,c1996. avi, 52 p. ;c27,8 cm. ap. 53-57 aIn these early years of the post-Cold War era, war and peace are being manifested in wholly new ways. Classic interstate wars are giving way to internal conflicts that pit different regions, ethnic groups, and religions agains each other. International organization and unofficial diplomacy are gaining prominence in managing such conflicts. Nongovermental organizations (NGOs) are emerging as international actors intheir own right, increasingly engaged as conflict managers, but also raising a new questions about their supposed neutrality in the distribution of humanitarian aid. Moreover, these new manifestations of conflict and emerging actors raise even more questions about the international legal principles of sovereignty and nonintervention. 4aInternational cooperation a05296/MKRI-P/III-2008 a05296/MKRI-P/III-2008 a05296/MKRI-P/III-2008 a05296/MKRI-P/III-2008