Abstract

ABSTRACT This article is an encouragement to examine the relationship between human rights, economic, and democratic development from a theoretical and policy perspective. The authors argue that sustainable, long-term democracies are characterized by an absence of ideological extremism in which political and economic discourse is dominated by the “middle road”. They posit that almost all societies have conflict resolution models but that they have been upset through processes extraneous to those societies. The challenge of the international community is not to try to impose upon those societies new types of conflict of resolution, but to discover what has worked in the past and to remove the obstacles to their effective performance in the future.

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