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The oldest known surviving peace treaty in the world, the Egyptian–Hittite peace treaty preserved at the Temple of Amun in Karnak. This list of treaties contains known agreements, pacts, peaces, and major contracts between states, armies, governments, and tribal groups.
Peace economics is a branch of conflict economics [1] and focuses on the design of the sociosphere's political, economic, and cultural institutions and their interacting policies and actions with the goal of preventing, mitigating, or resolving violent conflict within and between societies.
1991 Paris Peace Agreements; Pax Alexii Callergi; Peace of Acilisene; Peace of Baden (1412) Peace of Passau; Peace of Philocrates; Peace of Tournai; Peace plans proposed before and during the Bosnian War; Peace treaty between China and Tibet (783) Perpetual Accord; Treaty of Phoenice; Treaty of Portsmouth (1713) Peace of Prague (1635) Pretoria ...
The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919) is a book written and published by the British economist John Maynard Keynes. [1] After the First World War , Keynes attended the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 as a delegate of the British Treasury .
1991–2004 Kurdish–Turkish peace initiatives; 1993 Kurdistan Workers' Party ceasefire; 2009–2010 Kurdistan Workers' Party ceasefire; 2013–2015 PKK–Turkey peace process; Northern Ireland peace process, efforts from ca. 1993 to end "the Troubles" Guatemalan Peace Process 1994-1996, successful process that ended the Guatemalan Civil War ...
The word "pax" together with the Latin name of an empire or nation is used to refer to a period of peace or at least stability, enforced by a hegemon, a so-called Pax imperia ("Imperial peace"). The following is a list of periods of regional peace, sorted by alphabetical order. The corresponding hegemon is stated in parentheses.
Most Chapter VII resolutions (1) determine the existence of a threat to the peace, a breach of the peace, or an act of aggression in accordance with Article 39, and (2) make a decision explicitly under Chapter VII. However, not all resolutions are that explicit, there is disagreement about the Chapter VII status of a small number of resolutions.
In his book The Economic Consequences of the Peace, John Maynard Keynes referred to the Treaty of Versailles as a "Carthaginian peace", a misguided attempt to destroy Germany on behalf of French revanchism, rather than to follow the fairer principles for a lasting peace set out in Wilson's Fourteen Points, which Germany had accepted at the ...