This article highlights the semantic and socio-political meaning of the ‘field’ as it is used in both academic research and policy practices: as a geographic and material space related to forms of intervention in International Relations (IR), and not as a disciplinary space. We argue that the notion of the ‘field’ carries colonial baggage in terms of denoting ‘backwardness’ and conflictual practices, as well as legitimising the need for intervention by peacebuilding, statebuilding, and development actors located outside the field. We also show how academic practices have tended to create a semiotic frame in which the inhabitants of the research and intervention space are kept at a distance from the researcher, and discursively stripped of t...
I am lead editor of a special issue of the Review of International Studies, which is the house journ...
This contribution makes the point that we have entered an era of post-legitimisation whereby interve...
This article is concerned with addressing the following hypothesis, originally presented in Millenni...
Research on fieldwork methods in Peace and Conflict Studies has often tended to examine the tools th...
This article analyses intervention and statebuilding as shifting towards a posthuman discursive regi...
This article explores how analysis of material objects offers insights into international interventi...
The peacebuilding and academic communities are divided over the issue of local ownership between pro...
Much of the peace and conflict literature sustains the claim that, whilst intervention during war ma...
Over the last two centuries or so sovereignty has proved to be an enigmatic institution, at once con...
The international community has long been criticized for its lack of social legitimacy in Bosnia-Her...
This article has a twofold aim. First, it discusses the contributions to the scholarly field of conf...
In this contribution to the forum, I draw attention to the persistent inadequacy of existing categor...
This article explores the practice and political significance of politicians’ journeys to conflict z...
This short intervention argues that Eve Tuck and Wayne Yang's notion of an ethic of incommensurabili...
In this article, I analyse the theory and practice of interventions in foreign civil wars to assist ...
I am lead editor of a special issue of the Review of International Studies, which is the house journ...
This contribution makes the point that we have entered an era of post-legitimisation whereby interve...
This article is concerned with addressing the following hypothesis, originally presented in Millenni...
Research on fieldwork methods in Peace and Conflict Studies has often tended to examine the tools th...
This article analyses intervention and statebuilding as shifting towards a posthuman discursive regi...
This article explores how analysis of material objects offers insights into international interventi...
The peacebuilding and academic communities are divided over the issue of local ownership between pro...
Much of the peace and conflict literature sustains the claim that, whilst intervention during war ma...
Over the last two centuries or so sovereignty has proved to be an enigmatic institution, at once con...
The international community has long been criticized for its lack of social legitimacy in Bosnia-Her...
This article has a twofold aim. First, it discusses the contributions to the scholarly field of conf...
In this contribution to the forum, I draw attention to the persistent inadequacy of existing categor...
This article explores the practice and political significance of politicians’ journeys to conflict z...
This short intervention argues that Eve Tuck and Wayne Yang's notion of an ethic of incommensurabili...
In this article, I analyse the theory and practice of interventions in foreign civil wars to assist ...
I am lead editor of a special issue of the Review of International Studies, which is the house journ...
This contribution makes the point that we have entered an era of post-legitimisation whereby interve...
This article is concerned with addressing the following hypothesis, originally presented in Millenni...