While international relations scholars make many claims about violence, they rarely define the concept. This article develops a typology of three distinct kinds of violence: direct, indirect, and pacification. Direct violence occurs when a person or agent inflicts harm on another. Indirect violence manifests through the structures of society. We propose a third understanding of violence: pacification. Using a phenomenological methodology, and drawing on anarchist and postcolonial thought, we show that the violence of pacification is diffuse, inconspicuous, intersubjective, and structured into the fabric of society. This understanding of violence matters for the study of international relations in general and research on the liberal peace in...
This synthesis provides an overview of academic findings on the sources of violence in post-war envi...
Militant Liberalism and Its Discontents tells a story about the reinvention of liberalism during the...
Can International Relations (IR) be studied without reproducing its violence? This is the central qu...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
While international relations scholars make many claims about violence, they rarely define the conce...
While international relations scholars make many claims about violence, they rarely define the conce...
This thesis argues that orthodox social constructionist and culturalist explanations of the mutation...
This collection highlights the diverse and complicated ways that violence becomes axiomatic, namely ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from CUP via the DOI in this ...
The liberal worldview is founded on two interlinked promises: the inherent capacity of markets to de...
“They cry Peace, Peace, but there is no peace.” Jeremiah’s complaint resounds loudly in a period in ...
This article seeks to problematise the dominant understandings of the relationship between politics ...
This paper explores why new ways of “knowing” and acting on violence could lead to a reconsideration...
This article seeks to problematise the dominant understandings of the relationship between politics ...
The current global political atmosphere is steeped in fear of, and intense rhetoric about, political...
This synthesis provides an overview of academic findings on the sources of violence in post-war envi...
Militant Liberalism and Its Discontents tells a story about the reinvention of liberalism during the...
Can International Relations (IR) be studied without reproducing its violence? This is the central qu...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this...
While international relations scholars make many claims about violence, they rarely define the conce...
While international relations scholars make many claims about violence, they rarely define the conce...
This thesis argues that orthodox social constructionist and culturalist explanations of the mutation...
This collection highlights the diverse and complicated ways that violence becomes axiomatic, namely ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from CUP via the DOI in this ...
The liberal worldview is founded on two interlinked promises: the inherent capacity of markets to de...
“They cry Peace, Peace, but there is no peace.” Jeremiah’s complaint resounds loudly in a period in ...
This article seeks to problematise the dominant understandings of the relationship between politics ...
This paper explores why new ways of “knowing” and acting on violence could lead to a reconsideration...
This article seeks to problematise the dominant understandings of the relationship between politics ...
The current global political atmosphere is steeped in fear of, and intense rhetoric about, political...
This synthesis provides an overview of academic findings on the sources of violence in post-war envi...
Militant Liberalism and Its Discontents tells a story about the reinvention of liberalism during the...
Can International Relations (IR) be studied without reproducing its violence? This is the central qu...