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Johan Galtung: Pioneer of Peace Research
Johan Galtung: Pioneer of Peace Research
Johan Galtung: Pioneer of Peace Research
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Johan Galtung: Pioneer of Peace Research

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This is the first ever anthology of key articles by Johan Galtung, widely regarded as the founder of the academic discipline of peace studies. It covers such concepts as direct, structural and cultural violence; theories of conflict, development, civilization and peace; peaceful conflict transformation; peace education; mediation; reconciliation; a life-sustaining economy; macro-history; deep culture and deep structure; and social science methodology. Galtung has contributed original research, concepts and theories to more than 20 social science disciplines, including sociology, international relations and future studies, and has also applied his new insights in practice. The book is a valuable resource for researchers and practitioners, and can serve as a supplemental textbook for graduate and upper undergraduate courses in peace studies and related fields.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherSpringer
Release dateMay 29, 2013
ISBN9783642324819
Johan Galtung: Pioneer of Peace Research

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    Johan Galtung - Johan Galtung

    Part 1

    On Johan Galtung

    Johan Galtung and Dietrich FischerSpringerBriefs on Pioneers in Science and PracticeJohan Galtung2013Pioneer of Peace Research10.1007/978-3-642-32481-9_1© The Author(s) 2013

    1. Johan Galtung, the Father of Peace Studies

    Johan Galtung¹, ²   and Dietrich Fischer³  

    (1)

    rue du cret de la neige 7, 01210 Versonnex, France

    (2)

    Galtung Institute for Peace Theory and Practice, Markgrafenstrasse 42a, 79639 Grenzach-Wyhlen, Germany

    (3)

    Magnolienpark 18, 4052 Basel, Switzerland

    Johan Galtung (Corresponding author)

    Email: galtung@transcend.org

    Dietrich Fischer

    Email: dietrich.fischer@gmail.com

    Abstract

    This brief overview of Johan Galtung’s life and work begins with some of his childhood experiences (such as his father being imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp) that shaped his determination to work for peace. It surveys some of his main new concepts and theories (such as direct, structural and cultural violence, negative and positive peace, rank discordance as a factor of genocide, and peaceful conflict transformation, among many others). It summarizes his contributions in mediating in over one hundred international conflicts, founding peace institutes around the world, publishing over 160 books and over 1,600 articles, teaching thousands of people around the world in conflict resolution and peace building, and inspiring many to devote their lives to peace.

    1.1 Introduction

    Johan Galtung’s parents and ancestors were mainly medical doctors and nurses for several generations. So when Johan was born on 24 October 1930, an uncle congratulated his parents saying, Today a new doctor is born! Johan indeed became a kind of doctor, but rather than treating individuals, his patients are entire societies with their pathologies, for which he developed diagnosis, prognosis and therapy, using the terms he heard repeatedly at the dinner table.

    On 9 April 1940, when Johan Galtung was nine years old, the German warship Blücher, with over 2,000 soldiers and sailors on board, led a flotilla into Oslo Fjord to conquer Oslo and occupy Norway. An old torpedo hit the ship, and it burst into flames and sank. Many of the soldiers could swim ashore, but suffered from burns in their throats. Johan’s father, an ear-nose-throat surgeon, feverishly operated day and night to save the lives of as many of those soldiers as possible. Johan asked his father, Were you not sometimes tempted to let your scalpel slip a little? His father answered, Absolutely not! The most essential duty of a physician is to save lives, anyone’s life, without distinction. This left a deep impression on little Johan.

    In 1944, Johan’s father was taken with other prominent Norwegians to a Nazi concentration camp in Norway. Every day, his family feared to hear on the radio the news, In retaliation for English bombing, Dr. Galtung was executed today. But fortunately, on month before the end of the war, his father returned home unharmed. This reinforced Johan’s determination to work for the prevention of war.

    In 1951, Johan Galtung studied in Helsinki with a scholarship. He asked the librarian for books about peace research. She did not have any, and wrote to the Central Library in Sweden, which had a much larger collection. The answer came, There are no such books. Johan found this strange. There were thousands of books about war and military strategy research, why should there be no books about research for peace? This was a missing discipline, and he decided that this was his life’s calling. He has contributed original research and insights to many areas of intellectual inquiry, having so far published over 160 books and over 1,600 book chapters and articles in scholarly and popular journals. 40 of his books have been translated into 34 languages, for a total of 134 book translations, making him the so far most cited author in the field of peace studies.¹

    Thanks in large part to his tireless efforts, there are today peace studies programmes at universities throughout the world, and a growing number of schools teach children how to handle conflicts constructively. In the United States alone, there are over 500 peace studies programmes at colleges and universities.

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    Photo 1.1

    Johan Galtung. Photo in personal possession of the author

    School children are enthusiastically practicing the TRANSCEND² method of finding mutually acceptable solutions to challenging personal conflicts, and numerous professionals around the world are learning and applying the method. The main focus of the TRANSCEND method³ is not to merely identify who is guilty and punish those, the traditional legal approach, but to create an attractive new reality acceptable to all those involved. A new organization, Lawyers for Dialogue, is propagating this new approach among their colleagues.

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    Photo 1.2

    Johan Galtung at the TRANSCEND meeting in Grenzach-Wyhlen, Germany, 15 August 2012. Photo by Stacy Hughes, USA

    Galtung has also helped mediate in over one hundred international conflicts, often successfully, and in this way helped prevent wars and saved many lives. He is sought by Presidents and Prime Ministers, because he does not necessarily tell them what they like to hear, nor the opposite, but creative insights they do not hear elsewhere. He focuses on positive proposals, not merely criticism of what is wrong. He has also been a frequent consultant to various United Nations agencies.

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    Photo 1.3

    Johan Galtung. Photo by Fernando Montiel, Mexico

    Galtung has held numerous visiting professorships all over the world. He fluently speaks and lectures in eight languages (Norwegian, English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Danish and Swedish), all learned the hard way after age 20. He never reads his lectures, but speaks freely from memory, in well-structured, logical and original ways that are easy to remember. Then he writes up his speeches after he has given them. He is often invited to give the keynote address at international conferences.

    Anita Kemp (1985) conducted a survey among 133 peace researchers, many of them members of the International Peace Research Association, which Johan Galtung had helped found in 1964. To the question, Which person, dead or alive, has influenced your thinking the most, many names were given, but nearly half (44 per cent) mentioned Johan Galtung, with the next runnerup receiving 12 per cent. He has inspired a generation of dedicated peace workers around the world.

    Johan Galtung was a conscientious objector. He served twelve months as cook and in geographic surveys, the same period as those who did military service. Those opting for a civilian alternative were required to serve an additional six months. Johan agreed to do so, but only if he could work for peace during that time. That was refused by the government, and he was put in jail with murderers and other dangerous criminals for six months. While in jail, he completed his first book, Gandhi’s Political Ethics, together with his mentor, Arne Naess, a deep ecologist. As assistant of Naess, Galtung searched through Gandhi’s voluminous writings and extracted, among many other ideas, 68 norms for behaviour in conflict.

    After completing two PhD equivalents, in Mathematics (1956) and Sociology (1957), he was invited to teach mathematical sociology at Columbia University in New York. Before his first class he cleaned the blackboard. One of his students, most of whom were older than he, came to him and said, You better sit down, the professor may come in any moment. Johan had to explain to him that he was the professor.

    While at Columbia University, he mediated his first conflict, over desegregation in the school system in the southern states. Through his senior colleague, Professor Otto Klineberg, he got in contact with people in Charlottesville, Virginia, Thomas Jefferson’s town. The Ku Klux Klan had already burned a cross, and people were afraid of violence. Three groups were pitted against each other, the white integrationists, the white segregationists, and the blacks. The integrationists tended to be immigrants, but also included Sarah Patton Boyle, a member of the ‘First Families of Virginia’. The cross had been burning outside of her window, as a ‘traitor of her class’. After some thousand interviews it became clear to Galtung that even if most people were afraid of violence, very few were ready to commit any and that solutions that could be relatively acceptable to everybody were there for everybody to discover. The segregationists feared revenge from the blacks, whom they had mistreated, but it turned out that the blacks only really wanted equal rights of opportunity for access to the American Dream, which they finally achieved to a large extent.

    Instead of writing a book about the conflict, what researchers had typically done up to now, Galtung felt it was his responsibility to mediate, to contribute to a peaceful solution of the conflict and to help prevent future violence. He did so successfully.

    In 1960, Galtung was offered tenure at Columbia University, but he preferred to return to Europe to build up peace studies there.

    On 1 January 1959, Johan Galtung and his then wife Ingrid Eide founded the International Peace Research Institute in Oslo (PRIO), the world’s first research institute with the word peace in its name. Since then, Galtung has helped found numerous peace institutes around the world, which are thriving today. Without his initiative and constant intellectual support and encouragement, many of them would not exist. In 1964, he founded the Journal of Peace Research, which remains one of the leading journals in this field.

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    Photo 1.4

    Johan Galtung. Photo in the personal possession of the author

    Galtung and his colleagues at PRIO published their research findings in a series of working papers and sent them to about 400 social science institutes around the world, including the Institute for World Economy and International Relations (IMEMO) in Moscow. They received acknowledgements from many quarters, but never heard anything from IMEMO. It was as if the papers disappeared in a black hole in the universe. In 1982, when Galtung attended a conference at IMEMO, the librarian showed him a locked file cabinet in the basement of the library. Here was the entire collection of papers that he and his colleagues had been sending over the years. Surprisingly, the papers seemed to have passed through many hands, with numerous notes in the margins. In 1991, Vladimir Petrovsky, then Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister, visited Johan Galtung in Oslo, thanking him for sending those papers. He explained that during the Brezhnev era, he was part of a group of young scholars who met frequently to discuss new ideas, being aware that their system needed reform. These papers on alternative approaches to peace, security and development provided them with valuable new concepts and concrete ideas how to proceed. Sowing seeds can have unforeseen long term consequences.

    In 1966, Johan Galtung was asked by the Council of Europe to do a study of how countries in the Cold War viewed the future. Since they had only a small budget for the study, the method chosen was not a traditional public opinion survey, but a dialogue about predictions and possibilities of cooperation, with only one person in each country: the head of the political department in the Foreign Office, in 19 countries in Europe and North America, during the summer of 1967.

    In Washington, the dialogue was with Zbigniew Brzezinski, in Moscow with Jurij Vorontsov. The most interesting answers came from the Warsaw Treaty Organization countries outside the Soviet Union. They had done a lot of thinking about the future; they knew that they wanted peace, independence and cooperation. Galtung never argued, he only asked questions, to understand their world from the inside, not to have a verbal duel in order to try to convince them of anything. In other words, a true dialogue, not a debate. He probably got better information that way than the CIA, because they mainly listen secretly, without asking questions.

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    Photo 1.5

    Johan Galtung in discussion with peace researchers during an excursion prior to the IPRA Conference in Sydney in July 2010. Photo in possession of Hans Günter Brauch

    Arising from these dialogues during the Cold War came an idea: a United Nations’ Security Commission for Europe, where all parties could sit together and discuss the problems rather than planning nuclear mass destruction. In May 1968 the final report was discussed at the parliamentary gathering of the Council of Europe. The spokesman for the committee, a conservative Frenchman, said,

    A Mr. Galtung suggests that we should sit together with Communists and discuss the problems. Anybody who suggests… that is himself a Communist! The chairman obviously did not understand what Nelson Mandela and Yasser Arafat later aptly expressed, Peace is something you make with your adversaries, not with your friends.

    The report had been sent to all nineteen countries that had participated in the study. This paved the way for invitations from foreign offices in some countries. In Prague, Galtung presented the content of the report to about seventy foreign office people and others, particularly emphasizing the Security Commission. The Foreign Minister said that the idea was excellent, but that the time was not ripe. But Gandhi argued that the time is always ripe, that the place is here and the time is now.

    Twenty-five years later, in 1993, there was a conference in Luxembourg about the world after the Cold War. Galtung’s task was as usual to present some solution proposals. Afterwards, Jaroslav Sidevy, ambassador of the Czech Republic to France, approached him and said, You don’t know me, Professor Galtung, but many years ago you gave a talk at the Foreign Office in Prague, I was a young assistant at the time, seated way back in the room. You presented a proposal for a UN Security Commission in Europe and the Foreign Minister said that the time was not ripe. After that came the spring of Prague 1968, I was a dissident and after the Soviet invasion was sent to the countryside, like Dubcek. I was a teacher, and that lasted until the end of the Cold War in 1989. At that time I was called to the foreign office as deputy minister. Our main problem was to get the Soviet troops out of the country. So we wrote a letter to Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze, asking him to please withdraw the Soviet troops from our country. The answer was disappointing: No, we want to modernize the Warsaw Treaty, the Soviet Union will become less dominant, there will be more dialogue, more democracy. We had a crisis meeting and I said: Maybe the time is ripe for the Galtung plan from 1967? We sent the plan to Shevardnadze and got as an answer: The plan is excellent, I am coming next week. Shevardnadze said that what mattered to him was a ‘successor system’ to the Cold War, not military alliances, to discuss problems and make decisions together. We agreed that he should pull out his troops and that this ‘successor plan’ could be a common position in the Paris negotiations in fall of 1990, the negotiations that would mark an end to the Cold War. The troops were withdrawn, and the communiqué went in that direction. You, Professor Galtung, were the father of the idea, and I was its executor, he said.

    To be there when the time is ripe one evidently has to be there ahead of time. As Schopenhauer said, every new idea will first be ridiculed, then violently opposed, and finally taken as self-evident. But maybe Schopenhauer omitted a phase before all this: the big silence. Countless proposals are dying by being silenced to death; that is why we need peace journalism.

    In A structural theory of imperialism, one of his most cited articles, Galtung (1971) showed how the centre of the Centre, in collusion with the centre of the Periphery and the periphery of the Centre, exploits the poorest people, the periphery of the Periphery.⁴ One of Galtung’s many new concepts and theories is the classification of violence into three types: direct, structural and cultural violence. Direct violence is intentional, directed against a specific group or person, and involves hurting or killing people, but it also includes verbal violence.

    Early in 1969, Galtung was working at a Centre for Gandhian Studies in Varanasi, India. One evening, he sat on the flat roof of the building observing homeless people sleeping in the street, children crying from hunger, and sick people waiting to die, with nobody caring for them. It struck him that this is a form of violence as much as violent crime or war, even if nobody walks around with a stick or gun intentionally hitting or shooting people. They suffer a slow death from hunger, preventable and curable diseases and other agonies caused by neglect, inaction, gross inequality and unjust structures of society, including from lack of freedom and democracy that enables people to help shape their lives. He created the term ‘structural violence’ (Galtung 1969) for such phenomena, in contrast to ‘direct violence’. Direct violence is an act of commission whereas structural violence is based on numerous acts of omission and escape attention in cultures, like Western and Christian weak on attention to acts of omission, according to Galtung.

    Later Galtung (1990) added the concept of ‘cultural violence’––the intellectual justification for direct and structural violence through nationalism, racism, sexism and other forms of discrimination and prejudice in education, the media, literature, films, the arts, street names, monuments celebrating war ‘heroes’, etc.

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    Photo 1.6

    Johan Galtung during a plenary discussion at the IPRA Conference in Sydney in July 2010. Photo was taken and permission was granted by Hans Günter Brauch

    Köhler and Alcock (1976) sought to estimate the relative size of direct and structural violence. They observed a positive correlation between per capita income and life expectancy across countries, which increases rapidly at first, and then makes only small gains as income increases further. It is clear that increasing the annual per capita income from 100 to 200 dollars extends life expectancy considerably more than increasing it from 20,000 to 20,100 dollars. If per capita income had been equally distributed across all countries, 14 million lives could have been saved during the year 1965. They did not have data on income inequality within countries, so this is a low, conservative estimate of the extent of structural violence. During the same year, about 140,000 people died in all international and civil wars. Therefore, structural violence is at least one hundred times greater than direct violence. Zimmerman and Leitenberg (1979) pointed out that structural violence is equivalent to 236 Hiroshima bombs being dropped on the children of the world each year. But because the suffering is diffuse, not concentrated in one place at one time, it is ignored by the media.

    Galtung (2010b, 2012) has promoted a living economy, with its main focus on the satisfaction of basic human needs of those most in need, as opposed to today’s killing economy, which causes the avoidable death of over 100,000 people every day, many of them children, from hunger and preventable or curable diseases. Negative peace consists of the absence of those three forms of violence, and positive peace includes mutually beneficial cooperation on an equal basis and mutual learning to heal past violence and prevent future violence.

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    Photo 1.7

    Johan Galtung teaching at the World Peace Academy in Basel in March 2012. Photo was taken and permission was granted by Bikash Subedi, Nepal

    Peace studies, like health studies (medicine) are clearly value-oriented: to save and promote life for all, to meet the basic needs for security, well-being, freedom, identity and a liveable environment (the opposites of death, misery, oppression, alienation and environmental degradation). Some have argued that peace studies are not a science, because they are not ‘valuefree’. With the same argument, one would conclude that a doctor is unscientific if she or he seeks to protect people’s health, or an engineer is unscientific if he wishes to design a bridge that will not collapse. This is obviously wrong. There is a definite need for applied valueoriented sciences that seek to promote desirable goals. Yet they must strictly follow scientific principles of seeking truth. A doctor who falsified medical test results would not help his patients.

    The goal of peace studies is to train not only theorists, but also practitioners who can apply what they have learned. Galtung has characterized ‘value-free’ science as follows. You don’t feel well and go to see a doctor. He examines you and says, You have a very interesting disease, I will describe it in my next scientific publication. You ask, But don’t you have a cure for me? He protests, Oh no! I am value-free. I do not intervene.

    One particular endeavour of peace professionals, besides conciliation (healing the effects of past violence) and peace building (preventing future violence), is conflict transformation. A conflict involves attitudes (‘enemy images’ and ‘friend images’), behaviour (violent or nonviolent, verbal or physical) and contradictions (incompatible goals), the ABC triangle. Conflicts can rarely be completely ‘resolved’ so that they simply disappear, but they can and must be transformed from being fought with violent means to being conducted by peaceful means, e.g. through dialogue. In this way, conflicts can have a constructive function by helping bring about desirable change. In analogy to medical terminology, conflicts are analyzed in terms of diagnosis (sources of a conflict), prognosis (likely trends without intervention), therapy (proposed interventions to prevent or reduce violence) and also therapy of the past, or ‘counter-factual history’ (what could have been done differently in the past, by whom, to prevent or reduce violence). This can provide valuable lessons for the future.

    Through many years of research and practice, Galtung (1998, 2000, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2010a) has developed the TRANSCEND method of peaceful conflict transformation. He has observed that bringing the conflict parties to the table for direct negotiations, as most mediators try to do, can be counterproductive, because it tends to lead to a stream of mutual accusations and a shouting match, and can often exacerbate a conflict instead of resolving it. He has found that it is more effective to apply a three-step approach, the TRANSCEND method:

    (1)

    Through individual dialogues with all the many parties involved directly and indirectly in a conflict, also those the mediator may dislike, seek to understand their goals, fears and concerns and win their confidence.

    (2)

    Distinguish between legitimate goals, which affirm human needs, and illegitimate goals, which violate human needs. Whatever we demand from other parties, we must be willing to grant to others. For example, self-determination is a legitimate goal, ruling over others is not.

    (3)

    Bridge the gap between all legitimate but seemingly contradictory goals through mutually acceptable, desirable solutions sustainable into the future, which embody creativity, empathy and nonviolence,

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