ABSTRACT

Whilst classical approaches linked development with peace, security has become central to understandings of both war and peacetime. This book uniquely reflects on how to deal with the convergence of war and peace in the context of global economic and geo-political development. It addresses methodological challenges in contemporary approaches to conflict, violence, security peace and development.

Two dominant contemporary approaches are selected for debate on methodologies and ethical choices: rational choice and identity-based theorizing. The chapters are arranged as dialogues around contending approaches, to better understand how the inter-locking fields of violent conflict, peace, development and security can be researched and understood. The book considers how theoretical and methodological approaches relate to different ethical and political choices, including around engagement and intervention in the four interwoven fields. Theoretical, methodological and ethical issues emerge from the critical reviews of academic discourses and case-study based chapters from across the world, including Sri Lanka, Ghana, Colombia and Rwanda.

This book is an invaluable resource for postgraduate students and researchers in Development Studies, Conflict Studies, Peace Studies and Security Studies.

part |21 pages

Introduction

chapter |19 pages

Conflict, Peace, Security And Development

Theories and methodologies

part |43 pages

The state of the fields

part |48 pages

Economies for war and peace

chapter |16 pages

Offshore Oil in Ghana

Potentials for conflict and development

chapter |15 pages

Spaces of Memory and Intervention

Post-conflict reconstruction in El Salado, Colombia

part |70 pages

Identity politics of conflicts

chapter |16 pages

Identity Politics of Wars

Theorising, policy and intervention

chapter |17 pages

‘As if there were two Rwandas'

Polarised research agendas in post-genocide Rwanda

chapter |17 pages

Crafting Symbolic Geographies in Modern Turkey

Kurdish assimilation and the politics of (re)naming

chapter |18 pages

Law as an Instrument of Justice?

Victim reparations at the International Criminal Court

part |47 pages

Methods and methodologies

chapter |15 pages

Sri Lanka's Civil War

What kind of methodologies for identity conflict?

chapter |14 pages

Mathematical Modelling and ‘Ethnic Conflict' in Colombia

The impact of the unit and the level of analysis

chapter |16 pages

Comparing Data Sets

Understanding conceptual differences in quantitative conflict studies

part |14 pages

Conclusion