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Humanity aspires for a world without conflict and war but the planet Earth has its natural
challenges to conflict resolution and peace. This article, therefore, reviews and analyzes the
historical and contemporary evidence of natural challenges to peaceful coexistence and conflict
resolution, and suggests some technological policy responses that should be considered for
adoption internationally to minimize conflicts and to ensure sustainable peace.
Competitive behaviours of organisms for scarce natural resources leading to conflicts,
violent attacks, and wars among living things have existed since the start of life. Individuals
have always been in competition with others over limited resources. Human societies, in
particular, have throughout the existence of life, been fraught with conflicts and wars over
shortages, inadequacies, or absence of their fundamental needs (Bible, 2015), which include
“physiological”, “safety” and “security”, “belonging” and “love”, “esteem”, “self-
actualization”, and “self-transcendence” requirements (Maslow, 1943). Biblical narratives
are full of a world of scarce resources and violent competition for them (Schwartz, 1997 and
Bible, 2015). The situation is worsened by the geometrically growing global population which
is outstripping the arithmetically increasing resources (Malthus, 1798). Since nature operates
on the theory of “the survival of the fittest” (Darwin, 1859) and since the resources for survival
are limited on the planet earth, competitions are bound to persist with consequences of conflicts,
violence, and wars. Based on Darwin’s (1871) theory of “survival of the fittest”, the most
aggressive competitors will continue to survive while the weak will be progressively subjugated
and eventually eliminated as long as there is earthly existence amidst scarcity.
Competitions and conflicts between nonhuman biological organisms are inevitable and should
be left to natural forces including human interventions to create sustainable balance. Humans,
on the other hand, have at least made efforts to address immediate and some root causes
of conflicts among themselves (Bondurant, 1988). They have developed nearly 250 methods
of conflict resolution that were recently enumerated by the Gandhian Centre for Peace and
Conflict Studies (Gangal, 1988). For the existence of a peaceful or conflict-free society, it
is imperative to meet the basic human needs and include among the techniques for resolving
conflict (a) reciprocal defence strategy (Maynard, 1982) to overcome general insecurity and
threats of conflict, (b) agricultural intensification (Abdulkadir, Orach-Meza and Edaku, 2017)
to alleviate nutritional insecurity, and (c) adaptive technology (Boserup, 1965; 1981; Orach-
Meza, 2011; Barredo, 2013; Botkin et.al, 2013; Ipate et al., 2015) to promote sustainable
environmental and socio-economic development. |
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