The plurality and subjectivity of peace means that transitions from war are contested – i.e. permeated by conflicts between previously warring antagonists who want to (re)order postwar society according to competing peace(s). But while there always will exist mutually excluding peace(s), such outliers do not foreclose middle grounds where multiple peace(s) can coexist. In this article, I argue that the postwar city can generate coexistence between peace(s) of varying divergence through the creativity, accommodation, and fragmentation of city spaces. These arguments are illustrated through examples from postwar Belfast, Mitrovica, and Mostar. I term this conceptualization urban peace.
This chapter shows that war-making and peace-making “take place” and that sometimes the legacy of co...
This chapter shows that war-making and peace-making “take place” and that sometimes the legacy of co...
The cycle of conflict can repeat itself through a city’s rebuilding. In the most extreme cases where...
The plurality and subjectivity of peace means that transitions from war are contested – i.e. permeat...
Postwar cities demonstrate the most persistent continuities of war in peace. This effectively forces...
Cities divided by violent conflict, such as Mostar, Beirut and Nicosia, have proved remarkably resis...
This chapter theorises the postwar city in order to enable its study. It first theorises the postwar...
While previous research has focused on the conflicts and division in Mitrovica, Kosovo, the present ...
This conclusion combines insights from the analysed of urban conflicts over peace(s) to answer the p...
As major flashpoints of contemporary conflict, contested cities are intensely resistant towards effo...
This article explores the EU’s efforts to reunify and reconstruct Mostar through the seminal experim...
Urban peacebuilding has proved particularly challenging in cities contested on grounds of state legi...
Through the concept of friction, this article critically examines how the liberal peace travels acro...
This chapter first argues that urban conflicts over peace(s) in the postwar city should be studied t...
This article explores the EU’s efforts to reunify and reconstruct Mostar through the seminal experim...
This chapter shows that war-making and peace-making “take place” and that sometimes the legacy of co...
This chapter shows that war-making and peace-making “take place” and that sometimes the legacy of co...
The cycle of conflict can repeat itself through a city’s rebuilding. In the most extreme cases where...
The plurality and subjectivity of peace means that transitions from war are contested – i.e. permeat...
Postwar cities demonstrate the most persistent continuities of war in peace. This effectively forces...
Cities divided by violent conflict, such as Mostar, Beirut and Nicosia, have proved remarkably resis...
This chapter theorises the postwar city in order to enable its study. It first theorises the postwar...
While previous research has focused on the conflicts and division in Mitrovica, Kosovo, the present ...
This conclusion combines insights from the analysed of urban conflicts over peace(s) to answer the p...
As major flashpoints of contemporary conflict, contested cities are intensely resistant towards effo...
This article explores the EU’s efforts to reunify and reconstruct Mostar through the seminal experim...
Urban peacebuilding has proved particularly challenging in cities contested on grounds of state legi...
Through the concept of friction, this article critically examines how the liberal peace travels acro...
This chapter first argues that urban conflicts over peace(s) in the postwar city should be studied t...
This article explores the EU’s efforts to reunify and reconstruct Mostar through the seminal experim...
This chapter shows that war-making and peace-making “take place” and that sometimes the legacy of co...
This chapter shows that war-making and peace-making “take place” and that sometimes the legacy of co...
The cycle of conflict can repeat itself through a city’s rebuilding. In the most extreme cases where...