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Gangs, Violence & Terrorism
Why Do People Fight Wars? by Ali Brownlie β€” book cover

Why Do People Fight Wars?

by Ali Brownlie, Alison Brownlie, Chris Mason
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Synopsis

Explores issues related to war, such as causes, types, results, and peacekeeping efforts, illustrated by examples of armed conflicts throughout history and throughout the ...

School Library Journal

Gr 5-8 These volumes share an ambitious goal: to provide an overview of the causes, history, effects, current status of, and potential solutions to a complex human issue. Brownlie and Mason succeed fairly well, in part because they offer a limited number of supporting examples for each general point. They range worldwide to answer questions such as "Why Do Children Fight?" but concentrate on conflicts from the mid-20th century and later. War crimes, international law, and refugees are among the topics presented in two-page overviews. Books such as Paul Bennett's War (Smart Apple, 1999) and Sybella Wilkes's One Day We Had to Run! (Millbrook, 1995) concentrate on one facet of the problem such as relief efforts or refugees. Senker also ranges broadly to discuss aspects of prejudice, but often she provides so many examples in two pages that the effect is disjointed and overwhelming. Lack of definition leads to problems. For example, she includes statistics on the number of murders committed by "U.S. fascists" but neither names the group(s) nor supplies a source. She falls into other traps such as decrying those who generalize that African Americans are "naturally" good at sports but then suggests athletics as a route to eliminating racism, noting that "black athletes have dominated" sports in the U.S. Each book has full-color photographs or illustrations on almost every spread. Many of the Internet suggestions are disappointing, and one related to war includes a disclaimer that it should not be considered a research source. Wars could serve as a starting point for report writers; Senker's title has too many flaws to merit purchase consideration. -Kathy Piehl, Minnesota State University, Mankato Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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Editorials

School Library Journal

Gr 5-8 These volumes share an ambitious goal: to provide an overview of the causes, history, effects, current status of, and potential solutions to a complex human issue. Brownlie and Mason succeed fairly well, in part because they offer a limited number of supporting examples for each general point. They range worldwide to answer questions such as "Why Do Children Fight?" but concentrate on conflicts from the mid-20th century and later. War crimes, international law, and refugees are among the topics presented in two-page overviews. Books such as Paul Bennett's War (Smart Apple, 1999) and Sybella Wilkes's One Day We Had to Run! (Millbrook, 1995) concentrate on one facet of the problem such as relief efforts or refugees. Senker also ranges broadly to discuss aspects of prejudice, but often she provides so many examples in two pages that the effect is disjointed and overwhelming. Lack of definition leads to problems. For example, she includes statistics on the number of murders committed by "U.S. fascists" but neither names the group(s) nor supplies a source. She falls into other traps such as decrying those who generalize that African Americans are "naturally" good at sports but then suggests athletics as a route to eliminating racism, noting that "black athletes have dominated" sports in the U.S. Each book has full-color photographs or illustrations on almost every spread. Many of the Internet suggestions are disappointing, and one related to war includes a disclaimer that it should not be considered a research source. Wars could serve as a starting point for report writers; Senker's title has too many flaws to merit purchase consideration. -Kathy Piehl, Minnesota State University, Mankato Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
March 1, 2002
Publisher
Raintree Publishers
Pages
48
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780739849613

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