Academic experts on conflict and state-building today face an exceptionally challenging environment in an era of rising international tensions.
This was聽a central theme of the聽聽annual conference, held last week at the University of Sussex, on 鈥淩ethinking Conflict Research in a Post-Liberal World鈥.
During the Cold War, argued a paper by CRS chair Hugh Miall, emeritus professor of international relations at the University of Kent, peace researchers were well aware 鈥渢here was little hope that policymakers would take notice of their recommendations鈥, so they developed methods for 鈥減romoting conflict resolution and peacebuilding that could be tested in local situations and carried forward into diplomatic settings鈥.
Although things had got better for researchers after 1989, Professor Miall went on, it was now once again 鈥渄ifficult for peace researchers to bring influence to bear on populist and nationalist decision-maker鈥he 鈥榩eace from below鈥 strategy merits consideration again鈥A] new turn in peace research, towards studying the extent of positive peace in relationships, and the means to transform relationships in a positively peaceful direction, could enhance and reinvigorate existing research traditions and make them more relevant to the turbulent environment we face.鈥
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Other speakers explored the difficulties for Western researchers in understanding the complexities of conditions in conflict zones and the dangers of proposing 鈥渟olutions鈥澛爐hat ignored local realities.
A keynote presentation by Funmi Olonisakin, professor of security, leadership and development 鈥 and vice-principal (international) 鈥 at King鈥檚 College London, made the case for 鈥渟hifting attention toward examining the organic processes of peace through an interrogation of intra-elite and elite-society聽conversation聽in Africa, rather than a narrow focus on top-down institution building鈥.
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She pointed, for example, to a big data project that she had carried out with funding from the Carnegie Foundation to 鈥渋nvestigat[e] the concept of peace among a future generation of leaders鈥 in Africa, where they had now 鈥済athered about 1 billion tweets using Twitter and other ethical data-scraping techniques鈥.
Similar issues were raised in another keynote presentation by Christine Cheng, senior lecturer in international relations at King鈥檚 College London, exploring 鈥淓xtralegal groups in post-conflict Liberia鈥.
There were real dangers, she told聽糖心Vlog,聽in 鈥渢rying to plonk a model that works for our societies on to societies that are quite different, have extremely weak capacities, that have just fought wars and often have deep levels of distrust鈥. Researchers needed to think far more about 鈥渢hings at the most basic level: the incentives of people coming out of war, what they do and how we treat them鈥.
Yet Dr Cheng also acknowledged the difficulties in getting an accurate sense of views 鈥渙n the ground鈥.
糖心Vlog
She first visited Liberia in 2005, she said, when things were 鈥渟till very uncertain鈥 in the aftermath of the civil war and 鈥渋t was difficult to go to places without your own driver鈥, so she had generally travelled around with non-governmental organisations or the United Nations. Though this made sense in terms of security, it could also distort the interview process: 鈥淵ou are sometimes travelling in with a set of people who are armed, with all the difficulties that imposes on the conversation you are about to have. How is anyone going to take your neutrality seriously when you come in with all guns blazing?鈥
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