1. Derek Sweetman – Business, Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding

Business, Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding examines the actions currently being taken by businesses in areas of violent conflict around the world, and explores how they can make a significant contribution to the resolution of violent conflicts through business-based peacebuilding.

2. Richard E. Rubenstein – Reasons to Kill

“Reasons to Kill is a vital book with an urgent message deserving of a wide readership and much discussion. Better than anyone else, Rubenstein probes America’s past and present to question the rush to war post-9/11, and does so judiciously, in a highly readable style enriched by scholarly mastery.”—Richard Falk

3. Johan Galtung – The Fall of the US Empire – And Then What?

THE FALL OF THE US EMPIRE – AND THEN WHAT? Successors, Regionalization or Globalization? US Fascism or US Blossoming? This book explores a global phenomenon now taking place for the eyes of the world: The Fall of the US Empire. Nothing extraordinary about that, all empires so far have had life cycles, and the US Empire is no exception. In no way should that be confused with any fall of the USA; just to the contrary, the fall of the US Empire may lead to the blossoming of the US Republic. And in no way should the book be seen as “anti-American”; just to the contrary. Part I, The Present, explores the why, what, how, when and where of the present decline and fall of the US Empire, based on a theory used in 1980 to predict the fall of the Soviet empire. Part II, The Future, And Then What? explores the world as a whole with three global scenarios, successors, regionalization or globalization, mainly the latter, and the US Republic with two domestic scenarios, US fascism and US blossoming, mainly the latter. Part III, The Past, is dedicated to a study from 1979 comparing the Western Roman Empire processes with Western imperialism millennia later.

4. Otto F von Feigenblatt – Human Security in the Asia Pacific Region

This book is a compendium of socio-political studies of the Asia Pacific Region following the Human Security paradigm.