ID | 172164 |
Title Proper | International peacebuilding as a case of structural injustice |
Language | ENG |
Author | Pingeot, Lou |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In the face of the repeated failure of international peacebuilding to build peace, one strand of the literature argues that failure can only be understood by ‘zooming in’ – by focusing on peacebuilders, the local populations they purport to help, and the relationship between them. This article draws on the insights of this literature to argue that international peacebuilding should be understood as an instance of structural injustice. Studies of the encounter between international interveners and local populations tend to focus on the differences between these groups and their problematic relationship. I argue that ‘zooming in’ reveals much more than the differences between interveners and locals: it uncovers how their relationship presents parallels and similarities with others, such as the relation between colonizers and colonized. The relationship between internationals and locals is problematic not because of each group’s characteristics and their difference, but because of the social positions they relate from. These hierarchical social positions give some groups the power to intervene in the lives of others. The article argues that the encounter between internationals and locals should be ‘de-exoticized’ and that hierarchy, rather than difference, should be at the centre of the critical peacebuilding literature. |
`In' analytical Note | International Peacekeeping Vol. 27, No.2; Apr 2020: p.263-288 |
Journal Source | International Peacekeeping Vol: 27 No 2 |
Key Words | Peacekeeping ; Peacebuilding ; Hierarchy ; Difference ; Structural Injustice |