Abstract
This chapter reviews the findings of the volume. It shows how peace psychology emerged from the parent discipline of psychology, and attention is drawn to the scientific and ethical limitations of accepting the disciplinary boundaries. Future developments in peace psychology may occur as part of interdisciplinary peace research. Extending research to wider and more diverse populations will necessitate using a variety of methods, including postcolonial approaches, participatory and workshop methods, using the arts and technological innovation. Through the use of workshop methods and negotiation skills in research, the relationship between research and practice can be tightened. Recommendations from the chapter authors include using integrated designs to study systems, collecting macrosystem level data (both quantitative and qualitative) as well as individual and group data, strengthening the role of peace psychology in the international realm and writing with impact in diverse forums. The need to develop more complex statistical models to measure cycles of violence, conflict and peace and the complexities of social interaction are discussed.
The volume challenges the assumption of peace as being passive and simply the absence of violence, not only in the conception of peace, but also in the methodology of inquiry. The authors demonstrate that peace research can be active, courageous and creative. The different contributors to the book show how the values of peace and the principles of sound scholarship can be combined in research. Peaceful research can produce results that contribute to peacebuilding in the future and also model peaceful processes in the present, bringing direct benefit to participants. Peace research is participatory and emancipatory, changing the research relationship so researchers and participants work together to create new knowledge and find news ways to build peace. The conclusion emphasises that peacebuilding is a collective endeavour, integrating the efforts of researchers from different disciplines, working in teams, and treating participants as equals, who can be partners in creating knowledge. Peacebuilding is about building human constructive relationships in the individual, group, community, society and international level and so respect for others will permeate each stage of the research process to create peace research by peaceful means.
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Bretherton, D., Fang Law, S. (2015). Conclusion: Peaceful Research by Peaceful Means. In: Bretherton, D., Law, S. (eds) Methodologies in Peace Psychology. Peace Psychology Book Series, vol 26. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-18395-4_22
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