NoThis introduction presents how views on ‘the local turn’ in peacebuilding has evolved into a significant discourse. Currently, it has ‘its moment’ and is widely used by theorists and practitioners alike, by normative localists as well as by liberal policy-makers, albeit for different reasons and with differing intensions. We suggest that international interventions for the purpose of peacebuilding cannot be justified a priori, but requires resonance at the ‘receiving end’, which the local dimension potentially offers. It is however an elusive and contested concept that requires thorough scrutiny and critical assessment. Here a collection of conceptual and empirical articles is contextualised and introduced, painting a broad state-of-the-a...
Despite efforts to better understand and address the root causes of conflict, violence continues to ...
Critics of the liberal peace paradigm call for the consideration of local realities in order to come...
The key feature of the dominant liberal approach to peacebuilding is the neoliberal marketisation of...
In this article, we revisit the 'local turn' debate in the peacebuilding literature, and explore its...
Der "local turn" in der Peacebuilding-Forschung zielt explizit darauf, sowohl die Forschung zu als a...
The literature on peacebuilding has increasingly emphasized the importance of the local level – a tr...
In recent years, the difficulties and failures of national level peace processes have prompted incre...
Recent scholarship on civil war has identified that conflict is waged on multiple levels. What if we...
There is an emerging literature on state-building that identifies the significant limits of external...
Recent research has revealed the need to include and understand local actors in order to improve the...
This article introduces a Peacebuilding special issue on local agreements in intractable conflicts. ...
Contains fulltext : 230153pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Both politic...
Recent research has revealed the need to include and understand local actors in order to improve the...
Funding This work was supported by a Faculty Fieldwork Grant from the Faculty of Management at Radbo...
Over the last decade there has been increasing attention within peace and conflict studies on the so...
Despite efforts to better understand and address the root causes of conflict, violence continues to ...
Critics of the liberal peace paradigm call for the consideration of local realities in order to come...
The key feature of the dominant liberal approach to peacebuilding is the neoliberal marketisation of...
In this article, we revisit the 'local turn' debate in the peacebuilding literature, and explore its...
Der "local turn" in der Peacebuilding-Forschung zielt explizit darauf, sowohl die Forschung zu als a...
The literature on peacebuilding has increasingly emphasized the importance of the local level – a tr...
In recent years, the difficulties and failures of national level peace processes have prompted incre...
Recent scholarship on civil war has identified that conflict is waged on multiple levels. What if we...
There is an emerging literature on state-building that identifies the significant limits of external...
Recent research has revealed the need to include and understand local actors in order to improve the...
This article introduces a Peacebuilding special issue on local agreements in intractable conflicts. ...
Contains fulltext : 230153pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Both politic...
Recent research has revealed the need to include and understand local actors in order to improve the...
Funding This work was supported by a Faculty Fieldwork Grant from the Faculty of Management at Radbo...
Over the last decade there has been increasing attention within peace and conflict studies on the so...
Despite efforts to better understand and address the root causes of conflict, violence continues to ...
Critics of the liberal peace paradigm call for the consideration of local realities in order to come...
The key feature of the dominant liberal approach to peacebuilding is the neoliberal marketisation of...