Skip to content
John Braithwaite Logo
  • Home
  • Bio
    • About John Braithwaite
    • About research
    • CV
  • Publications
    • Publications by year
    • Publications by subject
      • Corporate crime
      • Criminological theory
      • Other criminology
      • Gender
      • Peacebuilding
      • Regulatory theory
      • Empirical regulatory studies
      • Intellectual property
      • Nursing homes
      • OHS
      • Pharmaceuticals
      • Tax
      • Republicanism
      • Responsive regulation
      • Restorative justice
    • Monographs
  • Research themes
    • About research
    • Responsive regulation
    • Regulatory capitalism
    • Peacebuilding compared
    • Inequality and domination
    • Networked governance
    • Restorative justice
    • Shame and pride management
    • School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet)
  • Blog

Cascades of Violence: War, Crime and Peacebuilding Across South Asia

Cascades of Violence: War, Crime and Peacebuilding Across South AsiaCamille McMahon2018-05-04T14:10:02+10:00
Download for free
Buy print ($80.00)

Cascades of Violence: War, Crime and Peacebuilding Across South Asia

Authored by:
  • John Braithwaite | orcid
  • Bina D’Costa
ISBN (print): 9781760461898
ISBN (online): 9781760461904
Publication date: February 2018
Imprint: ANU Press
DOI:
http://doi.org/10.22459/CV.02.2018
Series:
Peacebuilding Compared
Disciplines:
  • Arts, humanities and social science

War and crime are cascade phenomena. War cascades across space and time to more war; crime to more crime; crime cascades to war; and war to crime. As a result, war and crime become complex phenomena. That does not mean we cannot understand how to prevent crime and war simultaneously. This book shows, for example, how a cascade analysis leads to an understanding of how refugee camps are nodes of both targeted attack and targeted recruitment into violence. Hence, humanitarian prevention also must target such nodes of risk. This book shows how nonviolence and nondomination can also be made to cascade, shunting cascades of violence into reverse. Complexity theory implies a conclusion that the pursuit of strategies for preventing crime and war is less important than understanding meta strategies. These are meta strategies for how to sequence and escalate many redundant prevention strategies. These themes were explored across seven South Asian societies during eight years of fieldwork.

John Braithwaite

This website hosts John Braithwaite’s research and blog on war, crime and regulation. John Braithwaite leads the ‘Peacebuilding Compared’ project and is the founder of the School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet) at the Australian National University.

Please note that John’s old website at ANU is no longer being updated and hasn’t been done so for over 2 years.

RSS feed SUBSCRIBE

Publications

  • Publications by year
  • Publications by subject
  • Monographs

Research themes

  • About research
  • Peacebuilding compared
  • Regulatory capitalism
  • Inequality and domination
  • Networked governance
  • Restorative justice
Website developed by Kim Suree Williamson. Content edited and managed by Camille McMahon. Copyright 2016 John Braithwaite | All rights reserved.
Page load link
Go to Top