"I didn't want to just give a list of policies, because i don't think we know the right policies," he says. "The first commandment is to sort of be aware that this isn’t an innate bias... Nd so, in some sense, let's try to make that mistake less." The book comes out on September 25th and will be available for pre-order online at http://www.amazon.com/Peace-Conversation-Ten-Commandments-Thou Shalt-Judge-the-Wicked?utm_source=mailonline.com%20exposure%20EXCLUSIVE%. For confidential support call the Samar
Shermer and Blattman discuss: Putin, Russia, and Ukraine • game theory and violent conflict • 5 Reasons for conflict and war • common elements of conflict in Medellin, Chicago, Sudan, Somalia, etc. • U.S. foreign policy in Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine, and elsewhere, and its consequences • human nature and conflict: are we wired to fight or do environments push us into conflicts? • cooperation vs. competition / selfish genes vs. collection action problems • inner demons and better angels • violence and wars in our paleolithic ancestors • why violence has declined over the centuries • Chicago as a test case for theories of conflict and peace • why gangs, groups, and even nations mostly avoid conflict and war because of its consequences • and whether international aid and economic development attenuate violence.
Dr. Christopher Blattman is the Ramalee E. Pearson Professor of Global Conflict Studies (University of Chicago), where he coleads the Development Economics Center and directs the Obama Foundation Scholars program. His work on violence, crime, and poverty has been widely covered by the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Forbes, Slate, Vox, and NPR.