Suchergebnisse
Filter
23 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
The spatial turn, reification and relational epistemologies in 'knowing about' security and peace
In: Cooperation and conflict: journal of the Nordic International Studies Association, Band 55, Heft 4, S. 421-441
ISSN: 1460-3691
How we approach knowing conflict and security makes a difference. This article first considers how reification, instrumental subject/object relations and the drive for certainty and control undermine effective knowledge and practice in questions of conflict and peace. It then turns to what the spatial turn and notions of emplaced security might offer to working against violence. As with any theoretical perspective, the spatial turn can itself be reified, repeating epistemological relations entrenched in much security analysis. The spatial turn and emplaced security explicitly highlight alternative, more relational knowledge practices, however. A relational epistemology approaches knowledge not only as information about a subject out there, but also as a form of practice with others which changes conditions of possibility for co-existence. If pursued, such approaches could help loosen the grip of narrow constructions of security, insecurity, the person, power and agency which dominate security analysis and obstruct understanding and the generation of alternatives in situations of entrenched conflict. An orientation to place could not only enable more nuanced accounts of peace and conflict, but support mutual recognition and exchange across division, assisting an ethic of attention and concrete peace and conflict resolution efforts.
The Body in the Emergence of Trust
In: Ethnopolitics, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 209-227
ISSN: 1744-9065
Hybridity and dialogue – approaches to the hybrid turn
In: Third world thematics: a TWQ journal, Band 2, Heft 4, S. 446-463
ISSN: 2379-9978
State Formation and Political Community in Timor-Leste – The Centrality of the Local*
In: RCCS Annual Review: a selection from the Portuguese journal Revista Crítica de Ciências Sociais, Heft 7
ISSN: 1647-3175
Security, development and the nation-building agenda—East Timor: Analysis
In: Conflict, security & development: CSD, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 141-164
ISSN: 1478-1174
Conclusion
In: Human Rights and the Borders of Suffering, S. 198-211
The pursuit of grounds
In: Human Rights and the Borders of Suffering, S. 55-87
The status of Indigenous Australians
In: Human Rights and the Borders of Suffering, S. 162-196
China – the Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989
In: Human Rights and the Borders of Suffering, S. 93-127
Opening up conceptions of rights
In: Human Rights and the Borders of Suffering, S. 3-18
East Timor
In: Human Rights and the Borders of Suffering, S. 128-161
The construction of human rights: dominant approaches
In: Human Rights and the Borders of Suffering, S. 19-53
Anthropology and peacebuilding
In: Routledge Handbook of Peacebuilding
Human Rights and the Borders of Suffering: The Promotion of Human Rights in International Politics
In: New Approaches to Conflict Analysis
This electronic version has been made available under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-ND) open access license. This study of human rights argues for a greater openness in the ways we approach human rights and international rights promotion. Starting with the realities of abuse rather than the liberal architectures of rights, it casts human rights as a language for probing the political dimensions of suffering, and shows Western rights models as substantial but problematic. Brown shows that rather than a message from "us" to "them", rights promotion is a long and difficult conversation about the relationship between political organisation and suffering. Three case studies are explored - the Tiananmen Square massacre, East Timor and the circumstances of indigenous Australians