Baron, Ilan Zvi and Kamola, Isaac A. and Havercroft, Jonathan and Murphy, Justin and Koomen, Jonneke and Pritchard, Alex (2019) 'Liberal pacification and the phenomenology of violence.', International studies quarterly., 63 (1). pp. 199-212.
Abstract
While international relations scholars make many claims about violence, they rarely define the concept. This article develops a typology of three distinct kinds of violence: direct, indirect, and pacification. Direct violence occurs when a person or agent inflicts harm on another. Indirect violence manifests through the structures of society. We propose a third understanding of violence: pacification. Using a phenomenological methodology, and drawing on anarchist and postcolonial thought, we show that the violence of pacification is diffuse, inconspicuous, intersubjective, and structured into the fabric of society. This understanding of violence matters for the study of international relations in general and research on the liberal peace in particular. We argue that the spread of liberal institutions does not necessarily decrease violence but instead transforms it. Our phenomenological analysis captures empirical trends in human domination and suffering that liberal peace theories cannot account for. It reveals how a decline in direct violence may coincide with the transformation of violence in ways that are concealed, monopolized, and structured into the liberal order. We call this process liberal pacification.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Full text: | Publisher-imposed embargo (AM) Accepted Manuscript File format - PDF (714Kb) |
Full text: | (VoR) Version of Record Available under License - Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial. Download PDF (Advance online version) (788Kb) |
Full text: | (VoR) Version of Record Available under License - Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial. Download PDF (788Kb) |
Status: | Peer-reviewed |
Publisher Web site: | https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqy060 |
Publisher statement: | © The Author(s) (2019). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Studies Association. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com |
Date accepted: | 19 April 2018 |
Date deposited: | 23 April 2018 |
Date of first online publication: | 18 March 2019 |
Date first made open access: | 26 February 2019 |
Save or Share this output
Export: | |
Look up in GoogleScholar |