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What attachment to peace? Exploring the normative and material dimensions of local ownership in peacebuilding

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2016

Nicolas Lemay-Hébert*
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer, International Development Department, University of Birmingham
Stefanie Kappler*
Affiliation:
Lecturer in Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding, Durham University
*
*Correspondence to: Dr Nicolas Lemay-Hébert, Senior Lecturer, International Development Department, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK. Author’s email: n.lemayhebert@bham.ac.uk
For Dr Stefanie Kappler: Lecturer in Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding, Durham University, School of Government and International Affairs, Al-Qasimi Building, Elvet Hill Road, Durham DH1 3TU, UK. Author’s email: stefanie.kappler@durham.ac.uk

Abstract

The peacebuilding and academic communities are divided over the issue of local ownership between problem-solvers who believe that local ownership can ‘save liberal peacebuilding’ and critical voices claiming that local ownership is purely a rhetorical device to hide the same dynamics of intervention used in more ‘assertive’ interventions. The article challenges these two sets of assumptions to suggest that one has to combine an analysis of the material and normative components of ownership to understand the complex ways in which societies relate to the peace that is being created. Building on the recent scholarship on ‘attachment’, we claim that different modalities of peacebuilding lead to different types of social ‘attachment’ – social-normative and social-material – to the peace being created on the part of its subjects.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© British International Studies Association 2016 

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References

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