ABSTRACT

The 1990s saw a constant increase in international peace missions, predominantly led by the United Nations, whose mandates were more and more extended to implement societal and political transformations in post-conflict societies. However, in many cases these missions did not meet the high expectations and did not acquire a sufficient legitimacy on the local level. Written by leading experts in the field, this edited volume brings together ‘liberal’ and ‘post-liberal’ approaches to peacebuilding. Besides challenging dominant peacebuilding paradigms, the book scrutinizes how far key concepts of post-liberal peacebuilding offer sound categories and new perspectives to reframe peacebuilding research. It thus moves beyond the ‘liberal’–‘post-liberal’ divide and systematically integrates further perspectives, paving the way for a new era in peacebuilding research which is theory-guided, but also substantiated in the empirical analysis of peacebuilding practices.

This book will be essential reading for postgraduate students and scholar-practitioners working in the field of peacebuilding. By embedding the subject area into different research perspectives, the book will also be relevant for scholars who come from related backgrounds, such as democracy promotion, transitional justice, statebuilding, conflict and development research and international relations in general.

chapter 1|20 pages

Peacebuilding in crisis?

Debating peacebuilding paradigms and practices

part I|50 pages

Reflecting peacebuilding paradigms

chapter 2|18 pages

Peacebuilding and paternalism

chapter 3|15 pages

The future of peacebuilding

chapter 4|15 pages

Relational peacebuilding

Promise beyond crisis

part II|120 pages

Revisiting peacebuilding practices

chapter 5|18 pages

Peacebuilding and democracy promotion

What current challenges to the latter might tell us for rethinking the former

chapter 6|19 pages

Adapted instead of imported

Peacebuilding by power-sharing 1

chapter 7|27 pages

Transitional justice after violent conflict

The need for accountability, restorative justice and gender-sensitive approaches

chapter 8|18 pages

Truth commissions, human rights and gender

Normative changes in transitional moments

chapter 9|20 pages

Reforming the security sector and rule of law

The hidden transcripts of local resistance

chapter 10|16 pages

Corporate peace

Crisis in economic peacebuilding 1

part III|66 pages

Rethinking promises and pitfalls of ‘the local’

chapter 11|17 pages

What do we mean when we use the term ‘local’?

Imagining and framing the local and the international in relation to peace and order

chapter 12|17 pages

Peacebuilding goes local and the local goes peacebuilding

Conceptual discourses and empirical realities of the local turn in peacebuilding

chapter 13|13 pages

False promise

‘Local ownership’ and the denial of self-government

chapter 14|17 pages

Rethinking the local in peacebuilding

Moving away from the liberal/post-liberal divide