Division, Reconstruction, Reconciliation: what ... - LSE Research Online [PDF]

May 30, 2017 - Bill Kissane, 'A Nation Once Again: The Reconstruction of National Identity after the Irish Civil War 192

0 downloads 4 Views 676KB Size

Recommend Stories


LSE Research Online
Every block of stone has a statue inside it and it is the task of the sculptor to discover it. Mich

LSE Research Online
If your life's work can be accomplished in your lifetime, you're not thinking big enough. Wes Jacks

LSE Research Online
Happiness doesn't result from what we get, but from what we give. Ben Carson

LSE Research Online
Forget safety. Live where you fear to live. Destroy your reputation. Be notorious. Rumi

public holidays would boost national wellbeing - LSE Research Online [PDF]
Dec 22, 2016 - Becchetti, Daniel Benjamin, Esteban Calvo, Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, Jan ... Mariano Calvo, Shigehiro Oishi and Heinz Welsch mention the ...

[Online PDF] Marketing Research
Don't count the days, make the days count. Muhammad Ali

PDF Online Marketing Research
Knock, And He'll open the door. Vanish, And He'll make you shine like the sun. Fall, And He'll raise

Durham Research Online [PDF]
Dec 2, 2014 - (2012) 'Youth, mobility and mobile phones in Africa : findings from a ... personal research or study, educational, or not-for-pro t purposes ... and usage rates suggest that, in many countries, mobile phone use, ... and a symbol of succ

Online PDF What Alice Forgot
Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right. Isaac Asimov

What was Reconstruction?
You have survived, EVERY SINGLE bad day so far. Anonymous

Idea Transcript


5/30/2017

LSE Government – Division, Reconstruction, Reconciliation: what happens to identity after civil war?

Division, Reconstruction, Reconciliation: what happens to identity after civil war?

Photograph of Newborn monument in Pristina, Kosovo. (Credit: Andreas Welch) In  March  2011,  Dr  Bill  Kissane  organised  an  international  workshop  on  the  topic  of reconstructing identity after civil wars.  The book which followed, After Civil War: Division, Reconstruction  and  Reconciliation  in  Contemporary  Europe,  1918­2011,  was  published  in November  2014.  Edited  by  Bill  Kissane,  the  book  explores  both  the  theoretical  and  the practical,  using  case  studies  on  Bosnia,  Cyprus,  Finland,  Greece,  the  Irish  Free  State, Spain, Kosovo, Northern Ireland, and Turkey to compare reconstruction projects. Three of these  case  studies  were  written  by  members  of  the  Government  Department’s  Conflict Research Group; Jim Hughes, ‘Reconstruction without Reconciliation: is Northern Ireland a Model?’  Bill  Kissane,  ‘A  Nation  Once  Again:  The  Reconstruction  of  National  Identity  after the  Irish  Civil  War  1922­1938’and  Denisa  Kostovicova  and  Vesna  Bojicic­  Dzelilovic, ‘Ethnicity  Pays:  The  Political  Economy  of  Post­Conflict  Nationalism  in  Bosnia­ Herzegovina.’  Here,  Bill  Kissane  considers  the  book’s  findings  further,  asking  what  the relationships  between  reconstruction,  nationalism  and  reconciliation  are  in  post­conflict societies. Many words creep into the social science vocabulary from the real world without sufficient critical analysis.  ‘Reconstruction’  is  one  of  them.  Commonly  used  with  reference  to  places,  events,  and objects  of  art,  its  place  within  the  social  science  lexicon  is  very  specific.  It  denotes  large­scale projects  of  social  and  political  engineering  after  the  experience  of  war  and/or  natural  disaster, events that are of such magnitude that either the state or international organisations play a major role  in  restoring  the  status  quo  ante.  The  first  such  experiment  was  the  Reconstruction  era following the American Civil  War (1861­1865). Within political science, the state is normally seen as the main agent of reconstruction. When the social  science  literature  began  to  write  about  this  type  of  reconstruction  in  the  1990s,  the  focus was on state­building, and the earlier literature on nation­building was largely forgotten about. The success or failure of reconstruction was seen in terms of capacity­building. Others, more steeped in  the  older  nation­building  literature,  continued  to  see  the  viability  of  states  entirely  in  terms  of ethnicity  and  nationalism.  Some  participants  in  this  project  were  uneasy  with  (a)  the  amount  of  http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/government/2015/06/05/division­reconstruction­reconciliation­what­happens­to­identity­after­civil­war/

1/3

5/30/2017

LSE Government – Division, Reconstruction, Reconciliation: what happens to identity after civil war?

social engineering implicit in the term and (b) the assumption that the reconstruction of the state should  also  involve  the  reconstruction  of  national  identity.  Nonetheless,  civil  wars  inflict  a  deep wound on a society’s sense of themselves, and this wound remains the most sensitive part of its body politic. It  is  not  possible  to  understand  this  legacy  without  reference  to nationalism.  As  shown  by  Riki  von  Boeschoten’s  paper  on Greece, the focus on reconstructing identity allows one to link the different  arenas  within  which  reconstruction  takes  place: reconstruction  of  the  physical  environment  (the  roads  and  the economy  for  example),  reconstruction  of  institutions, reconstruction  of  social  relations  within  communities,  and  also the reconstruction of national identity itself. One logic of the case selection was to compare ethnic with non­ ethnic  conflicts.  The  comparison  poses  the  question  of  whether reconstruction  benefits  from  the  relative  homogeneity  of  society in ethnic terms. The conclusion was that the relationship between institution­building  and  identity­formation  has  been  no  less complicated  in  the  older  cases,  was  counter­intuitive.  All the  cases  showed  reconstruction  to  be  something  other  than  a one­off  exercise  in  social  engineering,  but  an  iterative  process, involving  reconstructions  across  the  decades.  Reconstruction  has  of  course specific  and  desirable  policy  aims:  disarmament,  demobilisation,  physical  rebuilding, political integration, judicial reform etc., which form part of peace­building. Yet institution­building is only  the  first  phase,  and  longer­term  psychological  and  cultural  reconstructions  usually  follow. Generally, the pattern has been for the polity to be reconstructed first, but the trauma of civil war (and the needs for closure, commemoration, and reconciliation) is addressed over the long durée. Ultimately,  all  reconstruction  projects  have  to  be  evaluated  with  reference  to  the  goal  of reconciliation.  Yet  there  is  no  automatic  connection  between  shared  national  identity  and  the willingness to reconcile. Perhaps societies can only come to terms with their divided past if social change places them in a context where civil war divisions cease to be central, and where different circumstances allow a re­evaluation. Indeed the evidence is that it is not the state which dictates the  terms  of  reconstructions  in  the  long­  run,  but  rather  social  transformation  and  indeed globalisation.  Hence  this  was  an  inter­disciplinary  book:  it  included  an  anthropologist,  a  social geographer, historians, political scientists, and two sociologists. Recent reconstructions have taken place in contexts where international institutions have become more  important,  where  democracy  has  become  a  central  aim,  where  changes  in  foreign  policy goals affect attitudes to domestic oppositions, and where global processes like immigration allow the nation to be recycled, for good or bad. These changes allow for a perspective in which the civil war trauma does not dominate public life, and enables new values to guide new interpretations of the civil war past. Bill Kissane’s workshop on restructuring identity after civil wars was supported by the LSE Annual  Fund  and  the  Department  of  Government  small  conference  and  workshop  fund. After Civil War: Division, Reconstruction and Reconciliation in Contemporary Europe, 1918­ 2011 was published in 2014 by the University of Pennsylvania Press website. Bill Kissane is an  Associate  Professor  in  Politics  and  member  of  the  Conflict  Research  Group  in  the Department of Government at the LSE.

June 5th, 2015 | Book Review, Conflict, Europe, Research, Staff | 0 Comments

 http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/government/2015/06/05/division­reconstruction­reconciliation­what­happens­to­identity­after­civil­war/

2/3

5/30/2017

LSE Government – Division, Reconstruction, Reconciliation: what happens to identity after civil war?

 http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/government/2015/06/05/division­reconstruction­reconciliation­what­happens­to­identity­after­civil­war/

3/3

Smile Life

When life gives you a hundred reasons to cry, show life that you have a thousand reasons to smile

Get in touch

© Copyright 2015 - 2024 PDFFOX.COM - All rights reserved.