Dublin Core
Title
Relational peace practices
Subject
Peace studies & conflict resolution
International relations
Comparative politics
International relations
Comparative politics
Description
This book contributes to scholarly debates about what peace is and how it can be studied by developing a novel framework and tools for studying peace as relational. Drawing primarily on peace and conflict research and sociology, it defines relational peace as entailing non-domination, deliberation, and cooperation between actors in a dyad, that the actors recognize and trust each other, and that they conceive their relationship as one between fellows or friends. The book provides tools for empirical studies of relational peace and applies the framework in several sites: Cyprus, Cambodia, South Africa, Abkhazia, Transnistria/Russia, Colombia, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, and Myanmar. It shows how the framework can be applied across cases, actors, geographical locations, levels of analysis, types of data, and stages of peace processes. The book offers guidance on how to use the framework empirically with a variety of methods. Each case study in the book also makes unique contributions to specific literatures, such as civil
Creator
Jarstad, Anna (editor)
Söderström, Johanna (editor)
Åkebo, Malin (editor)
Söderström, Johanna (editor)
Åkebo, Malin (editor)
Source
https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/63429
Publisher
Manchester University Press
Date
2023
Contributor
Indah Fatma Silvi
Rights
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Format
Pdf
Language
English
Type
Textbooks
Identifier
9781526168979, 9781526168979