Thesis ID: CBB962238632

Meditations in an Emergency: Social Scientists and the Problem of Conflict in Cold War America (2017)

unapi

Through the mode of conceptual history, this dissertation examines some of the forms dissent could take within academic social science in the United States from roughly 1945-1970. The concept in question is "conflict." There are many stories one could tell about this concept and its transformations in postwar American social science, but in this dissertation I focus on one in particular: how certain social scientists sought to frame conflict as a problem of knowledge, by stretching the concept to fit the global proportions of the bipolar world that seemed to have emerged from World War II, and then using that conceptualization to oppose the Cold War. The dissertation first considers a specific moment of conceptual change, when some social scientists sought to redefine "conflict" in the immediate aftermath of World War II, so that it would be capacious enough to describe conflict at all levels of analysis, from the intrapersonal to the international. From there, it follows a cadre of social scientists who used that novel conceptualization to build an intellectual movement around a new journal and research center starting in the mid-1950s. The scholars who participated in that movement, known as "peace research" or "conflict resolution," endeavored to construct a "general theory of conflict," which they would then employ to challenge the notion that the Cold War was inevitable. The language of midcentury social science was the idiom in which they expressed their dissent. Although this was to become an international movement, this dissertation focuses on its American incarnation, which came to fruition at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor beginning around 1957. The dissertation then looks closely at how two of the leading theorists of that movement modeled conflict in the early 1960s, and considers the ethical and political impulses that animated their work, demonstrating that it was possible for some intellectuals to inhabit the dual role of academic social scientist and social critic in the early 1960s. It concludes with a brief set of reflections on the United States Institute of Peace, an independent federal institute established in 1984 to embody the dream of “conflict resolution.” (Copies available exclusively from MIT Libraries, libraries.mit.edu/docs - docs@mit.edu)

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Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB962238632/

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Authors & Contributors
Rohde, Joy
Sáez de Adana, Francisco
Bortolini, Matteo
Kemmis, Gabrielle
Camprubi Bueno, Lino
Wråkberg, Urban
Journals
Western Historical Quarterly
Social Studies of Science
Peace and Change: A Journal of Peace Research
Osiris: A Research Journal Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences
Publishers
University of Washington Press
University of Minnesota Press
University of Chicago Press
Los Libros de la Catarata
Cornell University Press
University of Pennsylvania
Concepts
Cold War
Science and war; science and the military
Social sciences
Science and politics
Government sponsored science
International relations
People
Bruun, Anton F.
Bellah, Robert N.
Time Periods
20th century, late
20th century
Places
United States
Soviet Union
South Dakota (U.S.)
Arctic regions
Nigeria
Greenland
Institutions
Special Operations Research Office
Lincoln Laboratory
RAND Corporation
United States. Central Intelligence Agency
Stanford University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT
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