Fr. 130.00

Practicing Peace - Conflict Management in Southeast Asia and South America

English · Hardback

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Description

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In Practicing Peace, Aarie Glas offers a comparative regional perspective on conflict management and diplomacy in the Global South. Drawing on novel research methods and detailed interviews with regional practitioners, the book challenges existing scholarly claims of peace in Southeast Asia and South America. Instead, Glas argues that officials successfully manage pervasive conflict short of war in both regions. He provides an in-depth look into how diplomacy unfolds and peace is practiced within diplomatic communities, from government actors to organizational officials, as they attempt to respond to and resolve territorial disputes.

List of contents

  • List of Figures and Tables

  • Abbreviations

  • Chapter 1. Introduction

  • Chapter 2. Habitual Dispositions and Conflict Management

  • Chapter 3. Uncovering Meaning and Practice in Regional Diplomacy

  • Chapter 4. Practicing Peace in Southeast Asia

  • Chapter 5. Practicing Peace in South America

  • Chapter 6. Comparisons, Contributions, and Conclusions

  • References

  • Index

About the author

Aarie Glas is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and faculty associate in the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at Northern Illinois University. His research examines norms and practices of conflict management and governance within regional organizations in the Global South, with a particular focus on ASEAN, alongside social IR theory and interpretive research methods. His work has been published in the European Journal of International Relations, International Affairs, Journal of Global Security Studies, and PS: Political Science and Politics, among other outlets.

Summary

Southeast Asia and South America are regions made up of largely illiberal states lacking stabilizing great powers or collective identities. But despite persistent territorial disputes, regime instability, and interstate rivalries, both regions have avoided large-scale war for decades. What accounts for the lack of war in these regions, and importantly, how are conflicts managed?

In Practicing Peace, Aarie Glas offers a comparative regional perspective on conflict management and diplomacy in Southeast Asia and South America. Glas finds that regional interstate relations are shaped by particular habitual dispositions--discrete sets of processual and substantive qualities of relations understood and enacted by diplomatic communities of practice. Different habitual dispositions in each case shape conflict management and regionalism in important ways, and lead to a tolerance of limited regional violence. Glas expands on new developments in social International Relations theory to develop a practice-oriented and interpretive account of regional relations and explores the existence of habitual dispositions across crucial cases of regional conflict management, including the Southeast Asian response to the Preah Vihear dispute in 2011 and the South American response to the Cenepa conflict in 1995.

Drawing on novel research methods and detailed interviews with regional practitioners, Practicing Peace challenges existing scholarly claims of peace in Southeast Asia and South America. Instead, Glas argues that officials successfully manage pervasive conflict short of war in both regions. He provides an in-depth look into how diplomacy unfolds and peace is practiced within diplomatic communities, from government actors to organizational officials, as they attempt to respond to and resolve territorial disputes.

Additional text

Glas has written an impressive contribution to practice theory. Scholars and practitioners working in either [Southeast Asia or South America] will find the book's explanation of the 'long peace' phenomenon convincing.

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