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Governing Ethnic Conflict - Consociation, Identity and the Price of Peace (Paperback)
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Governing Ethnic Conflict - Consociation, Identity and the Price of Peace (Paperback)
Series: Routledge Studies in Peace and Conflict Resolution
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book offers an intellectual history of an emerging technology
of peace and explains how the liberal state has come to endorse
illiberal subjects and practices. The idea that conflicts are
problems that have causes and therefore solutions rather than
winners and losers has gained momentum since the end of the Cold
War, and it has become more common for third party mediators acting
in the name of liberal internationalism to promote the resolution
of intra-state conflicts. These third-party peace makers appear to
share lessons and expertise so that it is possible to speak of an
emergent common technology of peace based around a controversial
form of power-sharing known as consociation. In this common
technology of peace, the cause of conflict is understood to be
competing ethno-national identities and the solution is to
recognize these identities, and make them useful to government
through power-sharing. Drawing on an analysis of the peace process
in Ireland and the Dayton Accords in Bosnia Herzegovina, the book
argues that the problem with consociational arrangements is not
simply that they institutionalise ethnic division and privilege
particular identities or groups, but, more importantly, that they
close down the space for other ways of being. By specifying
identity categories, consociational regimes create a residual, sink
category, designated 'other'. These 'others' not only offer a
challenge to prevailing ideas about identity but also stand in
reproach to conventional wisdom regarding the management of
conflict. This book will be of much interest to students of
conflict resolution, ethnic conflict, identity, and war and
conflict studies in general. Andrew Finlay is Lecturer in Sociology
at Trinity College Dublin.
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