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What is peace (in this theme)?
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All Flashcards in Topic 4.1
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4.1.111 cards
What is peace (in this theme)?
A contested idea — not just the absence of war, but for many a just, fair society with no hidden violence. It splits into negative and positive peace.
What is negative peace?
The absence of direct violence — the fighting has stopped (a ceasefire) — but poverty, injustice and oppression may remain.
What is positive peace?
The absence of all violence, including hidden structural violence (unfair systems) and cultural violence (ideas that justify it) — a genuinely just society.
Who created the negative/positive peace distinction?
Johan Galtung, a peace researcher, who also developed the idea of structural and cultural violence.
Why is negative peace not enough?
If a ceasefire leaves the injustices that caused the war, violence tends to return — so lasting peace requires removing the structural and cultural causes too.
What is structural violence?
Harm built into unfair systems — poverty, discrimination, exclusion — that damages people without a direct attacker.
What is cultural violence?
Ideas, beliefs and norms that justify or normalise violence and injustice, making them seem acceptable.
Why is a quiet country not always at peace?
It can have no war yet be deeply unjust (poverty, repression) — that is only negative peace; positive peace requires justice too.
Can positive peace ever be fully achieved?
It may be an ideal no society fully reaches, since some injustice always remains — but supporters see it as a direction to aim at, not a finish line.
Why does lasting peace require positive peace?
Because tackling only the fighting leaves the grievances that cause conflict, so without justice the peace is fragile and violence can reignite.
Give an example of negative peace.
A ceasefire or truce that stops the fighting while the injustices that caused the war remain unresolved.
4.1.211 cards
What is conflict?
A clash between groups over interests, values, resources or needs — a normal part of politics that is not the same as violence.
Is conflict the same as violence?
No — conflict is a clash of interests; violence is one way it can be expressed. Conflict can be handled peacefully.
What is latent conflict?
Hidden or simmering conflict — tensions and grievances not yet in the open, so a society can look peaceful while conflict brews underneath.
What is overt conflict?
Open, visible conflict — protests, disputes or fighting that everyone can see.
How does latent conflict become overt?
When grievances are ignored, hidden tensions can erupt into open protests, riots or war, sometimes triggered by a single event.
Why is conflict not always bad?
Protests, debates and disputes are how societies change and injustices get challenged — the danger is not conflict itself but whether it turns violent.
Why are identity conflicts hard to resolve?
Dignity, belonging and values cannot easily be split or compromised, unlike dividable resources — so their stakes are indivisible.
Why are resource conflicts often easier to resolve?
Resources like land, water or money can be divided or shared, so a compromise is more possible than over identity or values.
Why does spotting latent conflict matter?
A country with no open fighting can still have a serious conflict simmering, so real stability depends on whether hidden grievances are addressed.
What is the goal in managing conflict?
Not to ban conflict (it is normal and can be constructive) but to keep it non-violent and address the grievances behind it.
Does the type of conflict decide if it can be resolved?
It strongly shapes difficulty (identity is harder than resources), but leadership, will and third-party mediation also matter, so type is not destiny.
4.1.311 cards
What are the three types of violence?
Direct (visible physical harm), structural (harm built into unfair systems) and cultural (ideas that justify the other two) — from Johan Galtung.
What is direct violence?
Visible physical harm — war, assault, killing, torture — with a clear attacker.
What is structural violence?
Harm built into unfair systems — poverty, discrimination, denied healthcare — that damages and kills people without any single attacker.
What is cultural violence?
The ideas, beliefs and norms (ideology, religion, propaganda) that make direct and structural violence seem normal or acceptable.
How do the three types connect?
Cultural violence justifies structural violence, which breeds the grievance that fuels direct violence — so they reinforce each other.
Why is structural violence often ignored?
Because it has no single attacker and is built into how society is organised, so it is easy to overlook — yet it harms far more people than war.
How is structural violence linked to conflict?
The injustice it represents — poverty, exclusion — breeds grievance that can erupt into direct violence, so it is often the hidden root of conflict.
How does violence link to positive peace?
Positive peace means the absence of all three types of violence, so removing structural and cultural violence is what makes peace lasting.
Give an example of structural violence.
A child dying of a preventable disease because of poverty, or a group locked out of jobs, schools and political voice.
Is structural violence the root of ALL conflict?
It is a major, often underlying cause, but power, identity, greed and leadership also drive conflict, so it is not the sole root.
Why address structural violence for peace?
Because it tackles conflict at its source — the injustice and grievance — rather than just stopping the fighting.
4.1.411 cards
What is non-violence?
Pursuing change and resisting injustice without physical force — through protest, civil disobedience and non-cooperation. It is an active strategy, not passivity.
What forms does non-violence take?
Peaceful protest, marches, strikes, boycotts, civil disobedience (peacefully breaking an unjust law) and non-cooperation.
What is civil disobedience?
Deliberately and peacefully breaking an unjust law to challenge and expose it, usually accepting the punishment to highlight the injustice.
What is pacifism?
The belief that violence is always wrong, even in self-defence — a deeper commitment than tactical non-violence.
Why is non-violence powerful?
Its strength is mass participation and moral legitimacy: peaceful refusal is hard to crush, and violence against peaceful protesters exposes a regime.
Why is non-violence not passive?
It is active resistance — organising protests, strikes, boycotts and disobedience — that has toppled governments and won rights.
Give examples of non-violent movements.
The Indian independence movement, the US civil rights movement, and 'people power' movements that toppled dictators.
Why can non-violent change last longer?
It wins broad participation and legitimacy, so change is more widely accepted, and it avoids the cycle of revenge and militarised power violent revolutions create.
When does non-violence struggle?
Against a regime willing to use hidden extreme brutality, or where there is no free press or outside pressure, it can be crushed.
How does non-violence turn violence against the regime?
When a regime attacks peaceful protesters, it exposes its own injustice and loses legitimacy at home and abroad.
Is non-violence always the answer?
It is usually more effective and durable, but its success depends on the opponent and context, so it is not guaranteed against every regime.
Topic 4.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Contested meanings: peace, conflict, violence, non-violence
Global Politics exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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