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Peace First: A New Model to End War by Uri Savir β€” book cover

Peace First: A New Model to End War

by Uri Savir, Richmond Hoxie
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Synopsis

In this groundbreaking new guide to building peace, international ambassador Savir exposes the deadly ironies and anachronisms in contemporary efforts to solve global conflicts, and presents a radical new model for modernizing the efforts to build real and lasting peace.

Publishers Weekly

Former Israeli peace negotiator Savir (The Process) unveils his proposal for achieving lasting world peace: a carefully conceived and constructed model "that leads to a future of cooperation and understanding." The model for peace is predicated upon a shift from globalization to "glocalization," based on the idea that city leaders can forge bonds across boundaries that national leaders cannot because "cities have become our primary social unit... in both the developed and developing worlds." Savir emphasizes that peace must come from the grassroots rather than the top down and offers practicable solutions, from joint economic ventures designed to attract tourists to a NATO-like Mediterranean alliance. This book is compelling not for its specific blueprint but for the author's eternal optimism in the face of so many depressing obstacles. A history of his dynamic relationship with his Palestinian counterpart Abu Ala, a former Palestinian Authority prime minister who has become Savir's close friend since their first meeting in Norway 15 years ago, would provide fodder for another, less theoretical book about putting peace first. (Sept.)

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About the Author, Uri Savir

A hugely popular Israeli consul general in New York from 1988 to 1992 and now the head of the Peres Institute for Peace.

Peres was born in Poland and emigrated to Israel in 1934. He was prime minister from 1984-86 and again from 1995-96. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1994 for his part in crafting the Oslo peace accords.

Dennis Ross, Middle East envoy for George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton, is now a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "Foreign Affairs "called his first book, "The Missing Peace," "a major contribution to the diplomatic history of the twentieth century."

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Book Details

Published
October 1, 2008
Publisher
BBC Audiobooks America
Format
MP3 Book
ISBN
9780792759263

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