IntroductionSudeshna RoyPart 1: Theory Development1. Communicative Contact and Divided GroupsDonald Ellis2. Conflict, Global Inequalities, and Structural Oppressions: A Culture-Centered ApproachMohan Dutta3. The Crossroads of Retribution and Restoration: A Story of JusticeIan M. Bortan and Gregory D. Paul4. Social Responsibility, Journalistic Values, and Ethics of Conflict Coverage: A Critical Analysis of the Coverage of the Mumbai Attacks in Indian and Pakistani Elite PressAzmat Rasul5. Authentic Peace and Innovative Justice: Discourses of Accountability and Legitimacy in NGO Peacebuilding and Transitional Justice PartnershipsCourtney E. ColePart 2: Method Development6. Applicability of Narrative for Peace and Conflict CommunicationNatasha Azarian-Ceccato7. The Weaponization of Reporting: Using Nightmares to Sell War and ConflictChristian Vukasovich and Tamara Dejanovic-Vukasovich8. Personal Narratives in the Service of PeacebuildingJulia Chaitin9. Discourse Analysis Applied to Communication about Violent ConfictJohn Oddo10. Strategic Listening in the Middle East as a Guide on the Pathway to Collaboration and PeaceAnnie Rappeport and Andrew Wolvin11. A Roma Heritage Pilgrimage: Peacebuilding and Reaffirmation of Identity through Visual Storytelling in a Hungarian Roma VillageMaria SubertPart 3: Traditional/Digital Media and Peace and Conflict12. (Mis)representing Terrorism in Global MediaDaya K. Thussu13. Importance of Influence of Post-Conflict Societies in Conceptualizing Conflict and PeaceKasun Ubaysiri14. Peace Journalism in the New Millennium: New Challenges with the Changing Face of ConflictJake Lynch15. Internet User-Generated Content as "Citizen Peace Journalism"? Lessons from the Initial Empirical DataMarta N. Lukacovic and Andrew Teye16. Fighting ISIS: How Al Jazeera Arabic Framed the Fight against ISIS in Raqqa and MoselHala Guta17 Conflict Reporting in #280Characters: How Indian and Pakistani News Organizations Framed a 2019 Border Conflict on TwitterDhiman Chattopadhyay and Awais SaleemPart 4: Case Studies18. Victimization versus Protagonism: An Analysis of the Process of Asylum Seekers' Interview in Institutions of Brazilian Civil SocietySofia C. Zanforlin19. Are Nigerians in Cameroon Perceived as a Threat? An Analysis of Cameroonian-Nigerian Inter-Group ConflictElvis Nshom, Immaculate Kelighai, and Shomaila Sadaf20. When Campaigning Goes Wrong: Female Genital Mutilation in Human Rights and Peace and Conflict CommunicationLisen Dellenborg and Maria F. Malmström21. Applying Image Restoration Theory to Understand the Provisional Irish Republican Army's (PIRA) Image Repair StrategiesDylan Silverglate and Jonathan Matusitz22. Intercultural Empathy between Palestinians and Israelis: A Qualitative AnalysisKelsea Jackson and Stephen Croucher23. Rethinking Pukhtoonwali as a Culture of Peace: The Role of Jirga in Peacebuilding in the Tribal Areas of PakistanNizar Ahmad, Syed Rashid Ali, and Sana Ullah24. Conflict Management, Ambivalent Sexism, and Latin Gender RolesNathalie Desrayaud, Gabriela R. Martin, and Fernando Olano VazquezPart 5: Innovative Approaches to Peace and Conflict25. The Importance of Identifying Islamophobia in Societies to Help Sustain Global Peace CommunicationMuhammad J. Yusha'u26. Everybody Loves an Innocent Victim: Communicating Terror and Managing Conflict through the Victims' PerspectiveVipul Mudgal27. Role of Narratives in Reducing Bias toward Muslim Immigrants: A Step toward Peace and ToleranceXiaodi Yan, Mary Bresnahan, Yi Zhu, and Syed Ali Hussain28. "A Way of Knowing:" Violence, Precarity, and the Critical Potential of PoetryTimothy A. Lavis
Sudeshna Roy, PhD, is Professor in the Communication Studies Program at Stephen F. Austin State University. Her research is focused on media representation of minorities, the politics of ethnic and racial identities, the cultural politics of immigrants, migrants, and diaspora populations, and peace and conflict communication in the global South.