It's Ok To Coddiwomple: Anthropology, Peacebuilding and (Em)Bracing the Vague
Publicado en línea: 26 jun 2024
Páginas: 3 - 23
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/seeur-2024-0003
Palabras clave
© 2024 Charles O. Warner et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This white paper takes the unknown and the vague and movement towards/in those realms – as frames for a discussion of present practice and emergent potentiality of anthropological engagement with peace (building) studies. Arguably, embracing the unknown or vague as generative constants as well as fundamental elements of non-linear peacebuilding further open collaborative, communicative spaces of possibility. Aspects of this discussion are drawn from broader conceptual/methodological considerations in both peacebuilding and social anthropology so as to contribute to an interdisciplinary alignment. Furthermore, the positions and persuasions in this work are (in)formed by extensive, on-going examinations of research and narratives active in Southeast Europe today. By looking to emergent concepts in peace studies via anthropology while moving with regional-specific ethnographies that speak back against North Atlantic hegemonies, there is offered a discussion that brings local realities into transnational (socio-academic) deliberations.