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Part of the book series: The Conflict Series ((CONFLICT))

Abstract

In the past decade, we have been intimately acquainted with the problems, and suffered some of the growing pains, of two important global movements, what some call the “Alternative Dispute Resolution” movement (or ADR) and what many know as “The Green” movement, or in Germany as “Die Grünen.” Each continues to expand in size and impact. Each is a substantial shift in process. Each has great potential to transform how society is shaped in the future. And each is plagued by a variety of splits amongst its theorists and practitioners, differences in what is conceived to be its ideology and how to best make that ideology work in the “real” world.

Paper presented at the North American Conference on Peacemaking and Conflict Resolution on 3 March 1989 (Montreal).

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Notes and References

  1. Jerold S. Auerbach, Justice Without Law? (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983).

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  2. Brian Tokar, The Green Alternative: Creating an Ecological Future (San Pedro: R. & E. Miles, 1987): 123.

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  3. Christa Daryl Slaton and Theodore L. Becker, “Hawaii’s Community Mediation Service: The University-Based Model of Neighborhood Justice Centers,” paper presented at the American Psychological Association Convention (Los Angeles, California, 1981).

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  4. Charlene Spretnak, The Spiritual Dimension of Green Politics (Santa Fe: Bear & Co., 1986): 78.

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  5. Programme of the German Green Party (East Haven, Conn.: Long River Books, 1985): 9.

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  6. Cara Lamb, “Sexism? In the East Bay Greens?,” East Bay Green Alliance, 4 (4) (1989): 4.

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  7. Betty Zisk, John Resenbrink and Carla Dickstein, “Staying Alive: Local Green Group Maintenance for the Long Haul,” Green Letter, 4 (1): j-1.

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© 1990 John Burton and Frank Dukes

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Slaton, C.D., Becker, T.L. (1990). A Tale of Two Movements: ADR and The Greens. In: Burton, J., Dukes, F. (eds) Conflict: Readings in Management and Resolution. The Conflict Series. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-21003-9_17

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