Abstract

Few human tragedies stir sympathy and public concern more deeply than seeing children suffer during war. The increasingly frequent epidemics of domestic and community violence around the world stimulate similar concerns. Normal humanitarian impulses lead even the most callous people to spontaneous feelings of wanting to help because such suffering among children seems morally wrong. A common consensus that children should not suffer because of adult inability to live in peace has become part of global commitment to human rights. New insights offer hope for building peace by preventing generational cycles of ethnic hatred resulting from psychological trauma to children.

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