ABSTRACT

This book analyzes the everyday emotions of international peacebuilding practitioners as practices that hinder – and potentially help – them to listen more receptively to their local partners. It develops ‘‘emotional practices’’ as an analytical concept by integrating critical feminist perspectives insights into practice approaches.

Effective peacebuilding requires international actors to listen to local partners. This sounds simple enough but often fails in practice. Examining how everyday emotions help or hinder internationals’ receptivity to local perspectives, the book challenges the conventional wisdom that emotions do not matter – at least not those of internationals who are the privileged party in peacebuilding partnerships. The book is based on interviews with peacebuilding practitioners, donors and researchers working in the Balkans and East Africa, as well as in the UK, the US and Sweden, and gives a detailed and no-nonsense description of daily dilemmas regarding listening and partnerships. Johansson provides concrete recommendations of how internationals can practice personally, organizationally, and geopolitically to build emotional capacity that will help them listen better to local actors.

Drawing on the author’s expertise in political science and peace and conflict research, this volume speaks to scholars in international relations, political theory, sociology, cultural studies, development studies, critical theory, and anthropology.

chapter 1|32 pages

The listening puzzle

Why are internationals in peacebuilding so bad at listening to local partners, even though they want to and know they should?

chapter 2|26 pages

Emotions matter

Tense, stressed, and anxious internationals playing contradictory games

chapter 3|37 pages

Orienting emotions

Proud, achieving, and responsible internationals listening within limits

chapter 4|29 pages

The invisibility cloak

Hiding politics – hindering partnership

chapter 5|20 pages

How can the Subject learn to listen?

Practicing purposeful failure and dealing with feelings

chapter |14 pages

Conclusion

Emotional practices – privilege – hope for peacebuilding (and) scholarship