Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series editors’ preface
- List of figures and tables
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Everyday peace as a community development approach
- 3 Peacebuilding with youth: experience in Cúcuta, Colombia
- 4 Dialogues to develop civil movements in the Caucasus
- 5 Working for social justice through community development in Nigeria
- 6 Memory, truth and hope: long journeys of justice in Eastern Sri Lanka
- 7 Brazil: public security as a human right in the favelas
- 8 Nepal: working with community-based women to influence inclusion and peacebuilding
- 9 Palestinian storytelling: authoring their own lives
- 10 Community-based action in Northern Ireland: activism in a violently contested society
- 11 Everyday peace: after ethnic cleansing in Myanmar’s Rohingya conflict
- 12 Conclusion: Drawing the threads together
- Index
1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 June 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series editors’ preface
- List of figures and tables
- Notes on contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Everyday peace as a community development approach
- 3 Peacebuilding with youth: experience in Cúcuta, Colombia
- 4 Dialogues to develop civil movements in the Caucasus
- 5 Working for social justice through community development in Nigeria
- 6 Memory, truth and hope: long journeys of justice in Eastern Sri Lanka
- 7 Brazil: public security as a human right in the favelas
- 8 Nepal: working with community-based women to influence inclusion and peacebuilding
- 9 Palestinian storytelling: authoring their own lives
- 10 Community-based action in Northern Ireland: activism in a violently contested society
- 11 Everyday peace: after ethnic cleansing in Myanmar’s Rohingya conflict
- 12 Conclusion: Drawing the threads together
- Index
Summary
Summary
This book is a contribution to understanding the potential role of community development in societies impacted by violent conflict. As an introduction to a number of practitioner case studies, it is important to unpack the key concepts of peacebuilding, conflict and community development. Given this, the chapter will focus on community development and peacebuilding. Much has been written about both these approaches, but in the interests of space and time the authors will concentrate on how peacebuilding and community development can interact in circumstances of organised, severe and often protracted violent conflict.
What is violence?
Clearly there are a multiplicity of communities that are impacted by violent conflict in a wide variety of circumstances and conditions. While ‘war’ is conventionally seen as being pursued for political purposes and ‘organised crime’ for economic purposes, the two can often overlap and both invariably entail considerable levels of violence. Political violence is often funded by criminal activity. Criminal violence is often protected by political interests. Who labels a conflict, and how, is a major issue. The designation of ‘terrorist’ is a labelling likely to be conferred by people holding official power. Terminology is important, as are values, when considering both the understanding and practice of community development and peacebuilding in conditions of persistent violent conflict.
The Uppsala Conflict Data Programme (Uppsala Conflict Data Programme, nd) offers a nuanced definition of conflict, setting ‘organised violence’ in the context of a combination of state-based armed conflict, nonstate armed conflict and one-sided violence. With a baseline of a minimum of 25 fatalities (combatants and civilians) in a calendar year, data is presented in terms of inter-state conflict (which is low); intra-state conflict (which at 54 in 2019 was the highest number in the post-1946 period); intrastate conflict that has been internationalised by external intervention (the United States being most involved as the secondary warring partner); and non-state conflict (between non-state armed groups, with Syrian fatalities being surpassed by deaths in Mexico in 2019). Fatalities as a result of civil protests are not included in the Uppsala datasets (Pettersson and Öberg, 2020). Many of the conflicts recorded are localised and regional. This has clear implications for locally based peacebuilding and the community-based strategies involved.
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- Peacebuilding, Conflict and Community Development , pp. 1 - 24Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2022