Understanding Violence and Conflict: Greenland as a Theory-Building Case Study

Greenland is a land where unresolved conundrums and fast-paced emerging threats intersect. If not properly addressed, these could worsen the critical rates of suicide (one of the highest in the world and 6-7 times higher than the other Nordic countries), multigenerational trauma, and other forms of...

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Main Author: Guidoboni, Luca
Other Authors: Hynek, Nikola, Kilroy, Walt
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta sociálních věd 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/187362
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spelling ftunivpraha:oai:https://dspace.cuni.cz:20.500.11956/187362 2024-02-04T10:00:44+01:00 Understanding Violence and Conflict: Greenland as a Theory-Building Case Study Porozumění násilí a konfliktu: Grónsko jako případová studie budování teorie Guidoboni, Luca Hynek, Nikola Kilroy, Walt 2023 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/187362 English en_US eng Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta sociálních věd http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/187362 259518 diplomová práce 2023 ftunivpraha https://doi.org/20.500.11956/187362 2024-01-09T00:28:58Z Greenland is a land where unresolved conundrums and fast-paced emerging threats intersect. If not properly addressed, these could worsen the critical rates of suicide (one of the highest in the world and 6-7 times higher than the other Nordic countries), multigenerational trauma, and other forms of abuse. By developing and applying a renewed conceptualization of violent conflicts aimed at unravelling their roots, this study recognises that there are precise violent phenomena and conflictual dimensions that curb Greenlandic development across human security and international relations. The study confirms that the Danish 'benign' colonisation, by constituting a discriminatory relationship, provoked frustration among the Inuit, fostering the psychological push factors to self-destruction and violence against other fragile individuals, while environmental conditions and contextual phenomena limited violence at the micro-level. More broadly, the case study demonstrates that discrimination in its wider sense is the main source of violent conflicts and that the redistribution of the ownership of resources is the main way to prevent large and organised violent phenomena. In fact, Greenland currently needs a multi-agency psychosocial healing programme that addresses households and individual therapy. Department of Security Studies Katedra bezpečnostních studií Faculty of Social Sciences Fakulta sociálních věd Thesis Greenland greenlandic inuit Charles University CU Digital repository Greenland
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language English
description Greenland is a land where unresolved conundrums and fast-paced emerging threats intersect. If not properly addressed, these could worsen the critical rates of suicide (one of the highest in the world and 6-7 times higher than the other Nordic countries), multigenerational trauma, and other forms of abuse. By developing and applying a renewed conceptualization of violent conflicts aimed at unravelling their roots, this study recognises that there are precise violent phenomena and conflictual dimensions that curb Greenlandic development across human security and international relations. The study confirms that the Danish 'benign' colonisation, by constituting a discriminatory relationship, provoked frustration among the Inuit, fostering the psychological push factors to self-destruction and violence against other fragile individuals, while environmental conditions and contextual phenomena limited violence at the micro-level. More broadly, the case study demonstrates that discrimination in its wider sense is the main source of violent conflicts and that the redistribution of the ownership of resources is the main way to prevent large and organised violent phenomena. In fact, Greenland currently needs a multi-agency psychosocial healing programme that addresses households and individual therapy. Department of Security Studies Katedra bezpečnostních studií Faculty of Social Sciences Fakulta sociálních věd
author2 Hynek, Nikola
Kilroy, Walt
format Thesis
author Guidoboni, Luca
spellingShingle Guidoboni, Luca
Understanding Violence and Conflict: Greenland as a Theory-Building Case Study
author_facet Guidoboni, Luca
author_sort Guidoboni, Luca
title Understanding Violence and Conflict: Greenland as a Theory-Building Case Study
title_short Understanding Violence and Conflict: Greenland as a Theory-Building Case Study
title_full Understanding Violence and Conflict: Greenland as a Theory-Building Case Study
title_fullStr Understanding Violence and Conflict: Greenland as a Theory-Building Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Violence and Conflict: Greenland as a Theory-Building Case Study
title_sort understanding violence and conflict: greenland as a theory-building case study
publisher Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta sociálních věd
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/187362
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
greenlandic
inuit
genre_facet Greenland
greenlandic
inuit
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/187362
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op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11956/187362
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