ABSTRACT

This book examines how the violence of conflict is transformed in the post-conflict period.

Post-conflict studies seek to illuminate, theorise, and narrate the processes by which societies transition from periods of overt and violent conflict to periods of relative stability and peace. Most of the research carried out on post-conflict societies has taken place within disciplinary bounds. In contrast, this volume breaches those boundaries; though each author is grounded in a particular discipline, the chapters have been written in a spirit of interdisciplinarity.

The focus of the volume is how the violence of conflict is transformed in the post-conflict period into processes that the editors have categorised as criminalisation, medicalisation and missionisation. Comprised of essays written by a diverse group of scholars and activists from anthropology, political science, international relations, law, education, religion, and military history, each section of the book looks at the concept of post-conflict in a way that problematises its common usage and highlights the importance of strongly interdisciplinary research into post-conflict societies.

This book will be of interest to students of war and conflict studies, peace studies, security studies and IR in general.

part |39 pages

The post-conflict concept

part |62 pages

Recasting mission

chapter |4 pages

Introduction to Part II

Recasting mission

chapter |19 pages

Accompaniment as mission

A successful model from Colombia

part |36 pages

Criminalization

chapter |4 pages

Introduction to Part III

Criminalization

chapter |17 pages

Post-conflict justice enclaves

The development of a war crimes justice model following the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina

chapter |13 pages

Unknowing the other

A short essay on criminalization through narrative in postwar El Salvador

part |69 pages

Reflections on post-conflict as practice

chapter |4 pages

Introduction to Part IV

Reflections on post-conflict as practice

chapter |21 pages

Post-colonial subjectivities in the post-conflict aid triangle

The drama of educational missionization in the Thai–Burma borderlands

chapter |16 pages

The sum of tiny things

Civil society, democracy promotion and The Ugly American in Macedonia, 1994–2005

chapter |15 pages

Social scientists in post-war contexts

Bridging the gap between reflection and action

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion

Toward a field of post-conflict studies