Title: WAR
1WAR
- Bradford VTS
- Group A presentation
- 9th January 2007
2Program
- 2 pm Introduction
- 2.15 pm What is War?
- 2.45 pm Images of War and Impact on Health
- 3.15 pm Break
- 3.30 pm group case discussion
- 4.15 pm wrap up evaluation
3Aims Objectives
- What kind of wars are there?
- What is war?
- Why wars?
- Where is war at the moment?
- Is the world getting a better place?
4What kind of wars are there?
- can be divided into cause and environment
- Cause
- Extortionate
- Agressive
- Colonial
- National liberation
- Religious
- Dynastic
- Trade
- Revolutionary
- Guerrilla
- Civil
- Environment
- Arctic warfare
- Desert warfare
- Jungle warfare
- Mobile warfare
- Naval warfare
- Sub-aquatic warfare
- Mountain warfare
- Urban warfare
- Air warfare
- Space warfare
- Electronic warfare
- Border warfare
- Mine warfare
5What is war?
- War
- A state of open, armed, often prolonged conflict
carried on between nations, states, or parties, - the period of such conflict and the techniques
and procedures of war. - (Encyclopedia britannica)
- Armed conflict
- An armed conflict is a contested incompatibility
which concerns government and/or territory where
the use of armed force between two parties, of
which at least one is the government of a state,
results in at least 25 battle-related deaths. - (Armed Conflict 19892000, Journal of Peace
Research 38(5) 629644)
6Why war?
- Unlimited amount of theories trying to explain
this - Whatever you think, war seems to be a successful
way of dealing with conflict - Ask one of these guys...
7(No Transcript)
8Historical theories
- A. J. P. Taylor
- Wars are like traffic accidents
- There are some conditions and situations that
make them more likely, but there can be no system
for predicting where and when each one will
occur.
9Psychological theories
- John Bowlby
- Human beings, especially men, are inherently
violent. While this violence is repressed in
normal society, it needs the occasional outlet
provided by war. - Sigmund Freud
- Peace does not really exist. Periods that are
seen as peaceful are actually periods of
preparation for a later war or when war is
suppressed by a state of great power, such as the
Pax Britannica.
10Psychological theories
- Konrad Lorenz
- War as an extension of animal behaviour, such as
territoriality and competition. However, while
war has a natural cause, the development of
technology has accelerated human destructiveness
to a level that is irrational and damaging to the
species. We have similar instincts to that of a
chimpanzee but overwhelmingly more power. - George Orwell
- The state of constant war is being used as one of
many ways to distract people. War inspires fear
and hate among the people of a nation, and gives
them a "legitimate" enemy upon whom they can
focus this fear and hate. Thus the people are
prevented from seeing that their true enemy is in
fact their own repressive government. By this
theory war is another opiate of the masses" by
which a state controls its people and prevents
revolution.
11Anthropological theories
- Ashley Montagu
- There are no links between various forms of
violence. Almost all wars are begun not by
popular pressure but by the whims of leaders.
These leaders also work to maintain a system of
ideological justifications for war.
12Sociological theories
- Hans-Ulrich Wehler
- War as the product of domestic conditions, with
only the target of aggression being determined by
international realities. - Carl von Clausewitz
- Decisions of statesmen and the geopolitical
situation that leads to war.
13Demographic therories
- Thomas Malthus
- Wars are caused by expanding populations and
limited resources. Populations always increase
until they are limited by war, disease, or
famine.
14Demographic theories
- Jack Goldstone
- Youth bulge dominates US foreign policy.
- Gunnar Heinsohn
- Proposed the theory in its most generalized form,
a youth bulge occurs when 30 to 40 percent of the
males of a nation belong to the "fighting age"
cohorts from 15 to 29 years of age. - It will follow periods with average birth rates
as high as 4-8 children per woman with a 15-29
year delay. If an average birth rate of 2,1
represents a situation of in which the son will
replace the father, the daughter the mother, 4-8
children per mother imply 2-4 sons. Consequently,
one father has to leave not 1, but 2 to 4 social
positions to give all his sons a perspective for
life, which is usually hard to achieve. Since
respectable positions cannot be increased at the
same speed as food, textbooks and vaccines, many
"angry young men" find themselves in a situation
that tends to escalate their adolescent anger
into violence.
15Demographic theories
- These young man are
- (1) demographically superfluous,(2) might be out
of work or stuck in a mean job, and(3) often
have no access to a legal sex life before a
career can earn them enough to provide for a
family. - The combination of these stress factors according
to Heinsohn usually heads for six different
exits - (1) Emigration ("non violent colonization")(2)
Violent Crime(3) Rebellion or putsch(4) Civil
war and/or revolution(5) Genocide (to take over
the positions of the slaughtered)(6) Conquest
(violent colonization, frequently including
genocide abroad). - Religions and ideologies are seen as secondary
factors that are being used to legitimate
violence, but will not lead to violence by itself
if no youth bulge is present. Consequently, youth
bulge theorists see both past "Christianist"
european colonialism / imperialism and todays
"Islamist" civil unrest / terrorism as results of
high birth rates producing youth bulges. - Youth Bulge theory has been subjected to
statistical analysis by the World Bank. It has
been criticized for promoting racial, gender and
age discrimination.
16Rationalist theories
- Geoffrey Blainey
- Both sides to a potential war are rational, which
is to say that each side wants to get the best
possible outcome for itself for the least
possible loss of life and property to its own
side.
17Economic theories
- War can be seen as an outgrowth of economic
competition in a chaotic and competitive
international system. In this view wars begin as
a pursuit of new markets, of natural resources,
and of wealth.
18Marxist theories
- War grows out of the class war. It sees wars as
imperial ventures to enhance the power of the
ruling class and divide the proletariat of the
world by pitting them against each other for
contrived ideals such as nationalism or religion.
Wars are a natural outgrowth of the free market
and class system, and will not disappear until a
world revolution occurs.
19Political science theories
- Immanuel Kant
- Power transition theory - distributes the world
into a hierarchy and explains major wars as part
of a cycle of hegemons being destabilized by a
great power which does not suppor the hegemons
control. - Democratic peace theory
- theory and related empirical research in
international relations, political science, and
philosophy which holds that democracies never or
almost never go to war with one another.
20Democratic states
21Any thoughts?
22Refugees some numbers
ORIGIN OF MAJOR REFUGEE POPULATIONS 1 JAN 2006Ten largest groups ORIGIN OF MAJOR REFUGEE POPULATIONS 1 JAN 2006Ten largest groups ORIGIN OF MAJOR REFUGEE POPULATIONS 1 JAN 2006Ten largest groups
Origin Main Countries of Asylum Total1
Afghanistan Pakistan / Iran / Germany / Netherlands / UK 1,908,1002
Sudan Chad / Uganda / Kenya / Ethiopia / Central African Rep. 693,300
Burundi Tanzania / DR Congo / Rwanda / South Africa / Zambia 438,700
DR Congo Tanzania / Zambia / Congo / Rwanda / Uganda 430,600
Somalia Kenya / Yemen / UK / USA / Ethiopia 394,800
Viet Nam China / Germany / USA / France / Switzerland 358,200
Palestinians Saudi Arabia / Egypt / Iraq / Libya / Algeria 349,7003
Iraq Iran / Germany / Netherlands / Syria / UK 262,100
Azerbaijan Armenia / Germany / USA / Netherlands / France 233,700
Liberia Sierra Leone / Guinea / Côte d'Ivoire / Ghana / USA 231,100
- UNHCR dropping numbers of refugees worldwide.
- 1993 17.8 million, 2006 8.4 million
23Refugees some more numbers
MAJOR REFUGEE ARRIVALS DURING 2005Ten largest movements MAJOR REFUGEE ARRIVALS DURING 2005Ten largest movements MAJOR REFUGEE ARRIVALS DURING 2005Ten largest movements
Origin Main Countries of Asylum Total
Togo Benin / Ghana 39,100
Sudan Chad / Uganda 34,500
DR Congo Uganda / Rwanda / Burundi 15,600
Somalia Yemen 13,600
Central African Rep. Chad 11,500
Iraq Syria 10,500
Burundi Rwanda / Tanzania / Uganda 6,100
Bhutan Nepal 1,500
Rwanda Uganda 1,500
Russian Federation Azerbaijan 500
UNHCR 2006
24Asylum seekers some numbers
NEW ASYLUM APPLICATIONS SUBMITTED IN SELECTED INDUSTRIALIZED COUNTRIES 1in 2005 NEW ASYLUM APPLICATIONS SUBMITTED IN SELECTED INDUSTRIALIZED COUNTRIES 1in 2005 NEW ASYLUM APPLICATIONS SUBMITTED IN SELECTED INDUSTRIALIZED COUNTRIES 1in 2005
Country of Asylum Asylum applications Main Countries of Origin
France 49,700 Haiti / Serbia Montenegro / Turkey / Russian Fed. / DR Congo
United States2 39,200 China / Haiti / Colombia / El Salvador / Mexico
United Kingdom 30,500 Iran / Pakistan / Somalia / Eritrea / Afghanistan
Germany 28,900 Serbia Montenegro / Turkey / Iraq / Russian Fed. / Viet Nam
Austria 22,500 Serbia Montenegro / Russian Fed. / India / Moldova / Turkey
Canada 20,800 Mexico / China / Colombia / Sri Lanka / India
Sweden 17,500 Serbia Montenegro / Iraq / Russian Fed. / Stateless people / Bulgaria
Belgium 16,000 Russian Fed. / DR Congo / Serbia Montenegro / Iraq / Slovakia
Netherlands 12,300 Iraq / Somalia / Afghanistan / Iran / Burundi
Switzerland 10,100 Serbia Montenegro / Turkey / Somalia / Iraq / Bulgaria
25Long term picture
- Asylum applications in 36 industrialised countries
26Asylum applicants 2000 - 2004
27Asylum applicants 2001 - 2004
28Countries of Origin 2003 - 2004
29Countries of Origin (UK) 2003 - 2004
30Where is war?
31Types of conflict
32War or Conflict
33Types of Conflicts
34Parties
35Intesity
36Secondary Support
37Conflict zones
38Democratic states
39Incompatibility
40Is the world getting better or worse?
- Depends whom you ask
- Uppsala says yes
- Heidelberg Institute for International Conflict
Research says no - Center for Strategic International Studies
(MIT) says dont know - UNHCR hopes it gets better.
- Center for Security Studies (CSS), ETH Zurich,
pretends to know but will not tell you if you do
not pay... - ... so I guess you have to make up your own mind.