|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
Local Peacebuilding and National Peace is a collection of essays
that examines the effects of local peacebuilding efforts on
national peace initiatives. The book looks at violent and
protracted struggles in which local people have sought to make
their own peace with local combatants in a variety of ways, and how
such initiatives have affected and have been affected by national
level strategies. Chapters on theories of local and national
peacemaking are combined with chapters on recent efforts to carry
out such processes in warn torn societies such as Africa, Asia, and
South America, with essays contributed by experts who were actually
actively involved in the peacemaking process. With its unique focus
on the interaction of peacemaking at local and national levels, the
book will fill a gap in the literature. It will be of interest to
students and researchers in such fields as peace studies, conflict
resolution, international relations, postwar recovery and
development.
This volume of Research in Social Movements, Conflicts and Change
is divided into two parts. Part I presents a series of cases that
tie together narratives of being, knowing and contestation
surrounding the claiming of identity for the self or the
categorization of the other. It does this by exploring narratives
to claim identities and assert agency; showing us the dialectic
between dominant forces and those who would challenge existing
narratives about place, identity or space. Part II continues
RSMCC's tradition of cutting edge research in social movement
formation, conflict and change. These chapters focus on a wide
range of social organizations from immigrant movements, to the
occupy struggle, to the narratives around the framing and
counter-framing of the radical environmental movement. The volume
concludes with two chapters focusing on more recent developments in
data gathering and analysis to examine changes in how researchers
collect and analyze data. Each of the nine chapters engages with
notions of identity, whether in the examination of the subject or
in the reference to the researcher him or herself.
Most recent works about the efforts of local communities caught up
in a civil war have focused on their efforts to remain places of
security and safety from the violence that surrounds them-neutral
peace communities or zones. This book, in contrast, focuses on
local peace communities facing new challenges and opportunities
once a peace agreement has been signed at the national level, such
as those in South Africa, the Philippines, Burundi, East Timor,
Sierra Leone, and the present peace process in Colombia between the
FARC and the Colombian Government. The communities' task is to make
a stable and durable peace in the aftermath of a violent civil war
and a deal on which local people have usually had little or no
influence. Such agreements seek to involve them in both short and
longer term peace-building, and expect local communities to cope
with problems of armed ex-combatants, IDPs and refugees, law and
order in the absence of much state presence, high unemployment and
the need for widespread and massive reconstruction of physical
infrastructure damaged or destroyed during the war. How local
communities have coped with the demands of "peace" is thus the
theme that runs through each of these individual chapters, written
by authors with direct experience of grassroots communities
struggling with such "problems of peace."
This volume searches for pragmatic answers to the problems that
continue to beset peacebuilding efforts at all levels of society,
with a singular focus on the role of legitimacy. Many peacebuilding
efforts are hampered by their inability to gain the support of
those they are trying to help at the local level, or those at
regional, national or international levels; whose support is
necessary either for success at the local level or to translate
local successes to wider arenas. There is no one agreed-upon reason
for the difficulty in translating peacebuilding from one arena of
action to another, but among those elements that have been studied,
one that appears understudied or assumed to be unimportant, is the
role of legitimacy. Many questions can be asked about legitimacy as
a concept, and this volume addresses these questions through
multiple case studies which examine legitimacy at local, regional,
national and international levels, as well as looking at how
legitimacy at one level either translates or fails to translate at
other levels, in order to correlate the level of legitimacy with
the success or failure of peacebuilding projects and programs The
value of this work lies both in the breadth of the cases and the
singular focus on the role of legitimacy in peacebuilding. By
focusing on this concept this volume represents an attempt to build
beyond the critical peacebuilding approach of deconstructing the
liberal peacebuilding paradigm to a search for pragmatic answers to
the problems that continue to plague peacebuilding efforts at all
levels of society. This book will be of much interest to students
of peacebuilding, conflict resolution, development studies,
security studies and International Relations.
This volume searches for pragmatic answers to the problems that
continue to beset peacebuilding efforts at all levels of society,
with a singular focus on the role of legitimacy. Many peacebuilding
efforts are hampered by their inability to gain the support of
those they are trying to help at the local level, or those at
regional, national or international levels; whose support is
necessary either for success at the local level or to translate
local successes to wider arenas. There is no one agreed-upon reason
for the difficulty in translating peacebuilding from one arena of
action to another, but among those elements that have been studied,
one that appears understudied or assumed to be unimportant, is the
role of legitimacy. Many questions can be asked about legitimacy as
a concept, and this volume addresses these questions through
multiple case studies which examine legitimacy at local, regional,
national and international levels, as well as looking at how
legitimacy at one level either translates or fails to translate at
other levels, in order to correlate the level of legitimacy with
the success or failure of peacebuilding projects and programs The
value of this work lies both in the breadth of the cases and the
singular focus on the role of legitimacy in peacebuilding. By
focusing on this concept this volume represents an attempt to build
beyond the critical peacebuilding approach of deconstructing the
liberal peacebuilding paradigm to a search for pragmatic answers to
the problems that continue to plague peacebuilding efforts at all
levels of society. This book will be of much interest to students
of peacebuilding, conflict resolution, development studies,
security studies and International Relations.
Most recent works about the efforts of local communities caught up
in a civil war have focused on their efforts to remain places of
security and safety from the violence that surrounds them-neutral
peace communities or zones. This book, in contrast, focuses on
local peace communities facing new challenges and opportunities
once a peace agreement has been signed at the national level, such
as those in South Africa, the Philippines, Burundi, East Timor,
Sierra Leone, and the present peace process in Colombia between the
FARC and the Colombian Government. The communities' task is to make
a stable and durable peace in the aftermath of a violent civil war
and a deal on which local people have usually had little or no
influence. Such agreements seek to involve them in both short and
longer term peace-building, and expect local communities to cope
with problems of armed ex-combatants, IDPs and refugees, law and
order in the absence of much state presence, high unemployment and
the need for widespread and massive reconstruction of physical
infrastructure damaged or destroyed during the war. How local
communities have coped with the demands of "peace" is thus the
theme that runs through each of these individual chapters, written
by authors with direct experience of grassroots communities
struggling with such "problems of peace."
Local Peacebuilding and National Peace is a collection of essays
that examines the effects of local peacebuilding efforts on
national peace initiatives. The book looks at violent and
protracted struggles in which local people have sought to make
their own peace with local combatants in a variety of ways, and how
such initiatives have affected and have been affected by national
level strategies. Chapters on theories of local and national
peacemaking are combined with chapters on recent efforts to carry
out such processes in warn torn societies such as Africa, Asia, and
South America, with essays contributed by experts who were actually
actively involved in the peacemaking process. With its unique focus
on the interaction of peacemaking at local and national levels, the
book will fill a gap in the literature. It will be of interest to
students and researchers in such fields as peace studies, conflict
resolution, international relations, postwar recovery and
development.
|
You may like...
The Wedding Video
Lucy Punch, Miriam Margolyes, …
Blu-ray disc
(1)
R511
R42
Discovery Miles 420
Higher Truth
Chris Cornell
CD
(1)
R162
Discovery Miles 1 620
|