ABSTRACT

This book illustrates the diversity of current geographies, ontologies, engagements, and epistemologies of peace and conflict. It emphasizes how agencies of peace and conflict occur in geographic settings, and how those settings shape processes of peace and conflict.

The essence of the book’s logic is that war and peace are manifestations of the intertwined construction of geographies and politics. Indeed, peace is never completely distinct from war. Each chapter in the book will demonstrate understandings of how the myriad spaces of war and peace are forged by multiple agencies, some possibly contradictory. The goals of these agents vary as peace and war are relational, place-specific processes. The reader will understand the mutual construction of spaces and processes of peace and conflict through engagement with the concepts of agency, the mutual construction of politics and space, geographic scales, multiple geographies, the twin dynamics of empathy/othering and inclusivity/partitioning, and resistance/militarism. The book discusses the intertwined nature of peace and conflict, including reference to the environment, global climate change, borders, technology, and postcolonialism.

This book is valuable for instructors teaching a variety of senior level human geography courses, including graduate-level classes. It will appeal to those working in political geography, historical geography, sociology of geographic knowledge, feminist geography, cultural and economic geography, political science, and international relations.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Making Geographies of Peace and Conflict

chapter 2|25 pages

Geography and war, geographers and peace

Expanding research and political agendas

chapter 3|17 pages

Geographies of peace

chapter 4|19 pages

Spatializing peace and peacebuilding

Where is knowledge about peace and peacebuilding produced?

chapter 8|21 pages

Postcolonial conflict in Southeast Asia

Rethinking the shatterbelt with colonial rupture in Asia's Cold War

chapter 9|16 pages

Feminist geopolitics and empathetic encounters with the unseen

Reconsidering Black Hawk Down twenty years later

chapter 10|18 pages

The spatialities of nonviolent peace activism in the midst of war

From Colombia to Ukraine

chapter 11|17 pages

Peacework

Everyday negative peace across South Asian borderscapes

chapter 12|19 pages

Hybrid networks

Technology, geopolitics and ontology in digital warfare

chapter 14|19 pages

Conflict and cooperation

The adverse effects of climate change

chapter 15|16 pages

Placing peace

The pedagogies of positive peace and environmental justice