Contains fulltext : 140120.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Current peacebuilding debates centre around the idea that international and local activities need to be better aligned. However, the distinction between ‘local’ and ‘international’ actors and processes obscures both power and interest differentials among actors and the various interconnections between international, national and local actors and discourses. This article proposes stakeholder analysis as a way to help understand power relations among various actors. This approach is applied to an empirical sample of land conflicts in Cambodia, in which local residents saw their livelihoods threatened by collusion between international private investors and ...
Defence date: 4 June 2012Examining Board: Professor Pascal Vennesson, European University Institute ...
After the 1991 Paris Peace Agreement, Cambodia set about the difficult process of state-building. De...
The local turn debate sometimes falls into the trap of romanticising the local, while vilifying inte...
Current peacebuilding debates centre around the idea that international and local activities need to...
Concessions granted to investors in Cambodia have generated a deep sense of insecurity in rural fore...
Violent political conflict in Cambodia has persisted for over thirty years despite a 1991 UN-brokere...
This thesis investigates how peace operations work. It contributes to the larger study of peace oper...
This thesis investigates how peace operations work. It contributes to the larger study of peace oper...
This is one of the earliest overviews of global peacebuilding and local resistance and agency, and o...
As global tensions over the rapid increase of large scale land acquisitions reached a fever pitch in...
This explorative thesis asks how theories and practices regarding conflict processes might be applic...
Perceptions of peace and conflict differ among various actors. Exploring them can enhance our unders...
Perceptions of peace and conflict differ among various actors. Exploring them can enhance our unders...
This paper examines how domestic interest of political actors in particular country may spark confli...
This open access book explores common critiques in the literature of hybrid peacebuilding, especiall...
Defence date: 4 June 2012Examining Board: Professor Pascal Vennesson, European University Institute ...
After the 1991 Paris Peace Agreement, Cambodia set about the difficult process of state-building. De...
The local turn debate sometimes falls into the trap of romanticising the local, while vilifying inte...
Current peacebuilding debates centre around the idea that international and local activities need to...
Concessions granted to investors in Cambodia have generated a deep sense of insecurity in rural fore...
Violent political conflict in Cambodia has persisted for over thirty years despite a 1991 UN-brokere...
This thesis investigates how peace operations work. It contributes to the larger study of peace oper...
This thesis investigates how peace operations work. It contributes to the larger study of peace oper...
This is one of the earliest overviews of global peacebuilding and local resistance and agency, and o...
As global tensions over the rapid increase of large scale land acquisitions reached a fever pitch in...
This explorative thesis asks how theories and practices regarding conflict processes might be applic...
Perceptions of peace and conflict differ among various actors. Exploring them can enhance our unders...
Perceptions of peace and conflict differ among various actors. Exploring them can enhance our unders...
This paper examines how domestic interest of political actors in particular country may spark confli...
This open access book explores common critiques in the literature of hybrid peacebuilding, especiall...
Defence date: 4 June 2012Examining Board: Professor Pascal Vennesson, European University Institute ...
After the 1991 Paris Peace Agreement, Cambodia set about the difficult process of state-building. De...
The local turn debate sometimes falls into the trap of romanticising the local, while vilifying inte...