• ECDE | Knowledge Hub
  • ECDE Data Collections
  • Research report/ journal article, book/ proceeding chapter,
  • Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ecde.aau.edu.et/jspui/handle/123456789/537
    Title: “Peace Is Not a Free Gift”: Indigenous Conceptions of Peace among the Guji-Oromo in Southern Ethiopia
    Authors: Dr. Tadesse Jaleta Jirata, Asebe Regassa Debelo
    Keywords: Research Report
    Issue Date: 2018
    Publisher: Michigan State University Press
    Abstract: This article analyzes the broader conceptualization of peace and peace building among the Guji-Oromo in southern Ethiopia.
    Description: Indigenous African knowledge of building and maintaining peace is not well known and has not been much used in the dominant modern mechanisms of conflict resolution. With the aim of addressing this limitation, this article analyzes the broader conceptualization of peace and peace building among the Guji-Oromo in southern Ethiopia. The Guji-Oromo are keenly aware that their existence as a society depends on the maintenance of peace (nagaa) among them as a community and between them and God as well as between them and their natural and human environments. They believe that peace is not a free gift, because maintaining it requires continuous and earnest negotiation, social actions, and cooperation among many stakeholders who possess political, cultural, and spiritual powers. The article further argues that the Guji-Oromo conceptualize peace beyond the conventional understandings that position it as the absence of conflict or warfare. Rather, for the Guji, peace is broadly understood as a continuous flow of relationships between the people and their human and nonhuman environments. The article shows that Guji’s conceptions of peace are not static; rather, they are subject to internal and external influences that shape how different members of the society conceptualize it and the way it is maintained.
    URI: http://ecde.aau.edu.et/jspui/handle/123456789/537
    Appears in Collections:Research report/ journal article, book/ proceeding chapter,

    Files in This Item:
    File Description SizeFormat 
    TJ 02.pdf420.25 kBAdobe PDFView/Open


    Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.