Peace operations from the 1990s have increasingly been driven by the assumption that conflict and social unrest can be ‘solved’ through the establishment and support of liberal structures. Known academically as liberal peace, this approach advocates the liberalisation of politics and economics, and the establishment of rule of law and international human rights norms, claiming such liberal structures offer the necessary foundation to lasting peace. This claim has become unquestioned logic for many of the international bodies and individual actors that participate in the peace industry and has led to a standardised approach to post-conflict situations. However, is this “peacebuilding consensus” justified? Does liberal peace foster sustainabl...
Since the end of the Cold War internal conflict has emerged more and more into the foreground of con...
The term liberal peace is employed to explain the absence of fatal conflict between democratic natio...
Defence date: 17 December 2010Examining Board: David Kennedy (Harvard Law School) (in absentia); Fri...
From the mid-1990s, the amalgamation of security, development, and humanitarian imperatives under th...
Peace operations from the 1990s have increasingly been driven by the assumption that conflict and so...
Scholars continue to debate how to best rebuild post-conflict societies. Some argue that the li...
In 1989, so-called ‘actually existing socialism ’ collapsed, and for the next few decades the West s...
This thesis is about the new international paradigm of resilience approaches in peacebuilding in the...
Moving beyond the binary argument between those who buy into the aims of creating liberal democratic...
‘Liberal peace-building’ is a subject of intense debate within contemporary IR. This article contend...
Moving beyond the binary argument between those who buy into the aims of creating liberal democratic...
The liberal peace project has dominated state-building operations since the end of the Cold War, inc...
States undergoing turbulent processes of democratisation frequently use illiberal peace-building met...
The ‘crisis’ of liberal peace has generated considerable debate in International Relations. However,...
Includes bibliographical references and index.A reality check for the critique of the liberal peace ...
Since the end of the Cold War internal conflict has emerged more and more into the foreground of con...
The term liberal peace is employed to explain the absence of fatal conflict between democratic natio...
Defence date: 17 December 2010Examining Board: David Kennedy (Harvard Law School) (in absentia); Fri...
From the mid-1990s, the amalgamation of security, development, and humanitarian imperatives under th...
Peace operations from the 1990s have increasingly been driven by the assumption that conflict and so...
Scholars continue to debate how to best rebuild post-conflict societies. Some argue that the li...
In 1989, so-called ‘actually existing socialism ’ collapsed, and for the next few decades the West s...
This thesis is about the new international paradigm of resilience approaches in peacebuilding in the...
Moving beyond the binary argument between those who buy into the aims of creating liberal democratic...
‘Liberal peace-building’ is a subject of intense debate within contemporary IR. This article contend...
Moving beyond the binary argument between those who buy into the aims of creating liberal democratic...
The liberal peace project has dominated state-building operations since the end of the Cold War, inc...
States undergoing turbulent processes of democratisation frequently use illiberal peace-building met...
The ‘crisis’ of liberal peace has generated considerable debate in International Relations. However,...
Includes bibliographical references and index.A reality check for the critique of the liberal peace ...
Since the end of the Cold War internal conflict has emerged more and more into the foreground of con...
The term liberal peace is employed to explain the absence of fatal conflict between democratic natio...
Defence date: 17 December 2010Examining Board: David Kennedy (Harvard Law School) (in absentia); Fri...