Book(electronic)2023

Martialling peace: how the peacekeeping myth legitimises warfare

In: Advances in critical military studies

init.form.title.accessOptions

init.form.helpText.accessOptions

Checking availability at your location

Abstract

The peacekeeper—impartial, disciplined, helpful and restrained in their lethal capacity—is a powerful trope. This book examines the mythology of international peacekeeping and focuses on Canada as a case study of a "peacekeeper par excellence" (Jockel, 1994) and the ways the peacekeeping myth both challenged and condoned combat activities in Afghanistan between 2001 and 2014. While Afghanistan was explicitly not a peacekeeping mission, peacekeeping mythology circulated throughout discourse about the War. The book examines the salience of the peacekeeping myth throughout twelve years of Canadian combat activities in Afghanistan as a means to illustrate the adaptability and political utility of this (inter)national myth. It examines how gender, militarism, and nationalism operated in political discourse through the War in Afghanistan to justify military force and violence in the name of peace. The book draws on the Canadian case to address a broader set of questions related to how militarism, gender, and national myths are co-constitutive in condoning military violence of so-called "peaceful" liberal nations

Other Versions:

Checking availability at your location

Book(electronic)#22023

Martialling peace: how the peacekeeping myth legitimises warfare

In: Advances in critical military studies

init.form.title.accessOptions

init.form.helpText.accessOptions

Checking availability at your location

Book(print)#32023

Martialling peace: how the peacekeeping myth legitimises warfare

In: Advances in critical military studies

Checking availability at your location

World Affairs Online

Report Issue

If you have problems with the access to a found title, you can use this form to contact us. You can also use this form to write to us if you have noticed any errors in the title display.