Efforts to bring hostile parties to agreement by peaceful means such as mediation and negotiation.
the diplomatic process or military actions to gain an end to disputes.
or bringing hostile parties together to resolve conflict without warfare is one of the most important roles that the UN plays in maintaining world peace and security. Through the use of diplomacy, mediation, arbitration and other conflict resolution techniques, a neutral third party such as the UN helps the contentious parties arrive at a peaceful resolution of their differences.
Peacemaking is essentially negotiation of an agreement formally ending a particular dispute. This is then followed by peacebuilding which implements the agreement and brings the parties back together in some sort of "normal" relationship.
Peacemaking is the term often used to refer to the process of negotiating the resolution of a conflict between people, groups, or nations. It goes beyond peacekeeping to actually deal with the issues in dispute, but falls short of peace-building, which aims toward reconciliation and normalization of relations between ordinary people, beyond the formal resolution which is written on paper.
A process of diplomacy, mediation, negotiation, or other forms of peaceful settlement that arranges ends to disputes and resolve issues that led to conflict
Diplomatic action to bring hostile parties to a negotiated agreement through such peaceful means as those foreseen under chapter VI of the United Nations Charter.
Using diplomatic means to persuade groups or countries that are in conflict to stop fighting and agree on a peaceful settlement of their disagreements. See peace-building and peacekeeping.
Military support for diplomatic efforts by third parties to try to end a conflict, such as disarming combatants and creating buffer zones to separate warring parties.
Peacemaking is a form of conflict resolution which focuses on establishing equal power relationships that will be robust enough to forestall future conflict, and establishing some means of agreeing on ethical decisions within a community that has previously had conflict. When applied in criminal justice matters it is usually called transformative justice. When applied to matters that do not disrupt the community as a whole, it may be called mindful mediation.