Peacebuilding Legacy: Programming for Change and Young People's Attitudes to Peace
Autor Sukanya Podderen Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 sep 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780192863980
ISBN-10: 0192863983
Pagini: 334
Dimensiuni: 164 x 241 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0192863983
Pagini: 334
Dimensiuni: 164 x 241 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
It is a book which will make us think again about the potential for transformative peace that resides at the heart of technocratic peacebuilding.
This book is packed with razor-sharp insights that are sensitive to the tension between what institutionalized peacebuilding has to offer, and what communities coming out of conflict require. It has a wonderful authenticity that stems from deep fieldwork engagements. It is highly recommended and will have traction with both the academy and the policy world.
This fascinating book explores the contested legacies of international peacebuilding in post-conflict and conflict-prone societies. It provides a persuasive analysis of why quick-fix, externally defined peacebuilding can be problematic in terms of impact and ethics. The book presents a novel and compelling theoretical lens for understanding the long-term legacies of intervention. It makes an excellent contribution to the field and genuinely moves the debate forward.
This important study provides deeply researched and closely argued, comparative insights into how dependent peacebuilding is on the dynamism and knowledge of young people. Yet they are often forgotten in both international politics and peace scholarship. This substantial contribution effectively offers an intergenerational perspective of sustainable peace and justice, one which aligns with cutting edge scholarship and praxis across several fields. The study illustrates how work on peacebuilding from different methodological traditions may be converging, to some degree, on how to understand and respond to the legacies, and to the failures of technocratic forms of peacebuilding.
Peacebuilding Legacy is a truly innovative book that will guide international non-governmental organisations, multilateral and other government agencies as they work with locals to build stable peace. It makes a very convincing case for long-term rather than short-term peacebuilding; draws attention to the centrality of coordination and peaceful strategizing, and the crucial importance of being guided by the locals as they resolve their own conflicts. Sukanya also focuses attention on the central role of youth in the design and implementation of peaceful processes. This book is essential reading for all who wish to enhance the effectiveness of peacebuilding initiatives.
What happens in post-war countries after they no longer make international news headlines, donors lose interest, and the humanitarian sector has relocated to the next conflict hotspot? Peacebuilding Legacy dives deep into the long-term effects of post-war peacebuilding on young people based on an in-depth analysis of current debates on liberal peacebuilding and a mixture of extensive academic field research and meta-synthetic approaches. Podder has written an important book that is essential for both the scholarly and practitioner communities.
This is a timely and important book. Drawing on case studies in Macedonia and Sierra Leone, this thoughtful and insightful book compels us to rethink peacebuilding in both theory and practice. Offering innovative strategies for sustainable, intergenerational, and transformative peace, Sukanya Podder honours the role of youth as partners, activists, and agents of change in peacebuilding. A must have for any collection on war and peace
Meticulously presented and compellingly argued, this is a fundamentally important book. Peacebuilding Legacy is bound to change the way we think about liberal peacebuilding, its legacy and the accountability of donors, and international agencies to both global audiences and local communities. Sukanya Podder should be congratulated for shining such a clear analytical lens upon the centrality of work with children and young people for transformative peace and sustainable post-conflict futures.
This book is packed with razor-sharp insights that are sensitive to the tension between what institutionalized peacebuilding has to offer, and what communities coming out of conflict require. It has a wonderful authenticity that stems from deep fieldwork engagements. It is highly recommended and will have traction with both the academy and the policy world.
This fascinating book explores the contested legacies of international peacebuilding in post-conflict and conflict-prone societies. It provides a persuasive analysis of why quick-fix, externally defined peacebuilding can be problematic in terms of impact and ethics. The book presents a novel and compelling theoretical lens for understanding the long-term legacies of intervention. It makes an excellent contribution to the field and genuinely moves the debate forward.
This important study provides deeply researched and closely argued, comparative insights into how dependent peacebuilding is on the dynamism and knowledge of young people. Yet they are often forgotten in both international politics and peace scholarship. This substantial contribution effectively offers an intergenerational perspective of sustainable peace and justice, one which aligns with cutting edge scholarship and praxis across several fields. The study illustrates how work on peacebuilding from different methodological traditions may be converging, to some degree, on how to understand and respond to the legacies, and to the failures of technocratic forms of peacebuilding.
Peacebuilding Legacy is a truly innovative book that will guide international non-governmental organisations, multilateral and other government agencies as they work with locals to build stable peace. It makes a very convincing case for long-term rather than short-term peacebuilding; draws attention to the centrality of coordination and peaceful strategizing, and the crucial importance of being guided by the locals as they resolve their own conflicts. Sukanya also focuses attention on the central role of youth in the design and implementation of peaceful processes. This book is essential reading for all who wish to enhance the effectiveness of peacebuilding initiatives.
What happens in post-war countries after they no longer make international news headlines, donors lose interest, and the humanitarian sector has relocated to the next conflict hotspot? Peacebuilding Legacy dives deep into the long-term effects of post-war peacebuilding on young people based on an in-depth analysis of current debates on liberal peacebuilding and a mixture of extensive academic field research and meta-synthetic approaches. Podder has written an important book that is essential for both the scholarly and practitioner communities.
This is a timely and important book. Drawing on case studies in Macedonia and Sierra Leone, this thoughtful and insightful book compels us to rethink peacebuilding in both theory and practice. Offering innovative strategies for sustainable, intergenerational, and transformative peace, Sukanya Podder honours the role of youth as partners, activists, and agents of change in peacebuilding. A must have for any collection on war and peace
Meticulously presented and compellingly argued, this is a fundamentally important book. Peacebuilding Legacy is bound to change the way we think about liberal peacebuilding, its legacy and the accountability of donors, and international agencies to both global audiences and local communities. Sukanya Podder should be congratulated for shining such a clear analytical lens upon the centrality of work with children and young people for transformative peace and sustainable post-conflict futures.
Notă biografică
Sukanya Podder specializes in research and consultancy across various conflict-affected settings. Her research focuses on conflict actors, and conflict-affected populations including rebel groups, child soldiers, military peacekeepers, ex-combatants, and stateless populations. She has raised funding and conducted multi-country research projects, and developed courses on International Interventions for Peace and Statebuilding, Security Sector Reform (SSR), and Defence Engagement. She has consulted and advised INGOs; the UN and NATO in Liberia, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Nepal. She has conducted capacity-building training for military partners on behalf of the UK Ministry of Defence in Namibia, Ethiopia, Sudan, South Sudan, Bahrain, Malawi, and Egypt.