--- Since the listing of publications of the Seville Statement in the previous newsletter, the following additions have been pointed out (in addition to The UNESCO Courier mentioned above): * Steps to Peace Psychology in Japan, by Japanese Psychologists for Peace. Kyoto, Hosei Publishing. 1990 (English and Japanese) * Oxford Project for Peace Studies Papers: The nature and control of aggression. Paul Brain. Oxford. U.K. 1939 * Peace Review, Sociologists on war as a social problem, by Sam Marullo and Jen Hlavacek, Fall, 1992 The article in Peace Review also includes the Sociological Statement on War and Violence that was included in the April 1992 Newsletter. Also, Marullo has used excerpts from the Statement in a text chapter for Social Problems, published by McGraw-Hill. He and Hlavacek are trying to have these materials reprinted in introductory sociology texts and social problems texts. --- The Seville Statement will soon be published in the 1993 issue of Peace Progress Journal, according to the enclosed letter from Dr. Surya Nath Prasad, International President of the International Association of Educators for World Peace. Dr. Prasad, who writes to us from Maharashtra, India, considers the Statement "the best tool to conscientize peoples towards peace world around." --- Also in Asia, resource contacts Keith Suter and Samir-Kumar Ghosh continue their promoting of the message of Seville. An article by Suter summarizing the Statement in the magazine of the Australian National Commission for UNESCO is enclosed here. He continues to use it in his teaching, which includes a course in Peace Studies at the University of Sydney. And Professor Ghosh, a Seville signatory, has conducted seminars on the Statement at the University of Calcutta Department of Anthropology and at the Indian Statistical Institute with "very satisfactory results." --- In Africa (University of Yaounde, Cameroon), Professor Thierno Bah has been distributing documents from this newsletter among scholars and students, not only in Cameroon, but also in Senegal and Tchad. --- Also in Africa. psychologist Michael O'Brien, National Chairman of Health for Africa, has informed us of a colloquium on violence and its alternatives. to be held in Capetown, August 27-29, which will presumably include the Seville Statement on Violence. The European organizer of the colloquium is Seville signatory J. Martin Ramirez. --- In Europe, Piet Dijkstra writes from the Netherlands that in addition to his work with the Seville Statement he is helping establish a school for nonviolence in the U.K. and is helping with a program of Peace Brigades International for about 35 young people from East Europe coming in June to the Netherlands for an educational/action program on problem solving. From Naples, Italy, Dr. Cosimo Varriale writes that he is promoting the message of Seville among University students, in private psychological counseling, and in the Italian Democratic Left. He concludes. "one has to multiply efforts to build peace and justice so that the present economic and value crisis, both in the developed and underdeveloped world, does not produce monsters and the silence of reason." Peace, David Adams