The ungovernance of peace: transitional processes in contemporary conflictscapes

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Abstract

Resolving armed conflict by forging an inclusive political settlement is the contemporary paradigm of international peacebuilding. War-to-peace transitions are envisioned as a sequenced process, cumulating in a signed comprehensive peace agreement as the central cornerstone on the pathway to normal politics. However, the reality of peace processes appears ungoverned. While peace negotiations may succeed in formalising political unsettlement at play and to tame violence, they regularly fail in resolving the radical disagreement at the heart of the conflict. Liberal peace governance, resting on the pillars of settlement, resolution, and relation, is unlikely to deliver its promised outcomes. The irresolvable discrepancy between the promise of liberal peace and its inability to deliver is the background against which peace ungovernance emerges. It operates under the premise of non-closure in enduring transitions, where time, space, and relationality are not subject to an agreed common understanding, but elements of strategy and politics.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)329-352
Number of pages24
JournalTransnational Legal Theory
Volume11
Issue number3
Early online date18 Sept 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2020
Externally publishedYes

Funder

This work was supported by the UK Department for International Development under Grant PO 6663 (Political Settlements Research Programme).

Keywords

  • Ungovernance
  • formalised political unsettlement
  • pea ce governance
  • peacebuilding
  • political settlements

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