Website:
http://www.peacetalksradio.com
Additional Credits and Funding:
Support also comes from the McCune Charitable Foundation of New Mexico, The Oppenheimer Brothers Foundation, the Peace Tales CD Project and KUNM at the University of New Mexico. Our theme music was written and performed by Ali Adelman.
Timely on:
April 22: Earth Day or anytime
Tones:
Engaging,
Intriguing,
Thoughtful
Description:
PEACE TALKS RADIO: THE SERIES ON PEACEMAKING AND NONVIOLENT CONFLICT RESOLUTION
On this edition of Peace Talks Radio: a conversation about the 2007 winners of the Nobel Peace Prize - Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore and the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
By awarding the prize to Gore and the IPCC, the Nobel committee seemed interested in promoting the link between climate change and the threat to peace. Could the unchecked effects of climate change lead to conflicts and civil war within nations, or war between nations? Could a collective effort to save the planet from the harmful consequences of climate change actually promote peaceful cooperation within and between nations?
Peace Talks Radio host Carol Boss talks with two scholars who have studied the possible links between climate change and conflict. First, Dan Smith, Secretary General of International-Alert, an independent peace building organization that works in over 20 countries to promote lasting peace and security in communities affected by violent conflict. He's the author of the report "A Climate of Conflict: The Links Between Climate Change, Peace and War." Later in the program, we'll talk with Dr. Thomas Homer-Dixon (Ph.D.), who overseas the Peace and Conflict Studies Department at the University of Toronto.
This program is made available here in both a full 59 minute version as well as a news-cast friendly, 54 minute version. A 29 minute version is available here at PRX. Follow this link: http://www.prx.org/pieces/24704
More about the Series:
Peace Talks Radio, the series on peacemaking and nonviolent conflict resolution explores the art and science of peacemaking. The programs consider examples of effective peacemaking in our history, and feature people with ideas about how to make peace in our daily lives - within ourselves and in our circles of common experience - our families, our neighborhoods, our schools, our workplaces. Some episodes also look at ways to address challenges to peace between nations around the globe.