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The limits of hybridity and the crisis of liberal peace
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 April 2014
Abstract
Hybridity has emerged recently as a key response in International Relations and peace studies to the crisis of liberal peace. Attributing the failures of liberal peacebuilding to a lack of legitimacy deriving from uncompromising efforts to impose a rigid market democratic state model on diverse populations emerging from conflict, the hybrid peace approach locates the possibility of a ‘radical’, post-liberal, and emancipatory peace in the agency of the local and the everyday and ‘hybrid’ formations of international/liberal and local/non-liberal institutions, practices, and values. However, this article argues, hybrid peace, emerging as an attempt to resolve a problem of difference and alterity specific to the context in which the crisis of liberal peacebuilding manifests, is a problem-solving tool for the encompassment and folding into globalising liberal order of cultural, political, and social orders perceived as radically different and obstructionist to its expansion. Deployed at the very point this expansion is beset by resistance and crisis, hybrid peace reproduces the liberal peace's logics of inclusion and exclusion, and through a reconfiguration of the international interface with resistant ‘local’ orders, intensifies the governmental and biopolitical reach of liberal peace for their containment, transformation, and assimilation.
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References
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55 Ibid., p. 22; Mac Ginty, ‘Hybrid peace’; Richmond, Post-Liberal Peace, pp. 18–19.
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59 Ibid.
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69 We say broadly rationalist as, despite the emphasis on interests, for some scholars there is recognition of the structural, systemic, and ideological dimensions of liberal peace. See, for example, Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, p. 45; Richmond, Post-Liberal Peace, pp. 8–9.
70 Richmond, Post-Liberal peace, p. 3; Boege et al., ‘Building Peace’, p. 604; Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, pp. 41–2, 56.
71 Ibid., pp. 13–19, 102; Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, p. 10; Roberts, ‘Beyond the metropolis?’, p. 2541. However, Mitchell (‘Quality/Control’) defines the everyday as constituted by sets of ‘world building’ experiences, practices and interpretations involving both ‘international’ and ‘local’ actors.
72 Sabaratnam, ‘Avatars’, p. 267, emphasis in original; See relatedly, Charbonneau, Bruno, ‘War and Peace in Côte d'Ivoire: Violence, Agency, and the Local/International Line’, International Peacekeeping, 19:4 (2012), pp. 508–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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75 Ibid., p. 17; Belloni, ‘Hybrid Peace Governance’, p. 24.
76 Ibid., pp. 9, 92–102; Mac Ginty, ‘Hybrid Peace’, p. 403.
77 See discussion in Sabaratnam, ‘Avatars’, pp. 266–8.
78 Ibid., pp. 268–9.
79 Boege et al., ‘Building Peace’, p. 606; Richmond, Post-Liberal Peace, pp. 18, 36; Roberts, ‘Beyond the metropolis?’, pp. 2542–6.
80 Ibid., pp. 611–12; Richmond, ‘Eirenism’, pp. 564, 567–8; Roberts, ‘Beyond the metropolis?’, p. 2543.
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82 Richmond, ‘Eirenism’, p. 566; Boege et al., ‘Building Peace’, p. 600.
83 For Richmond, the envisaged ‘indigenous peace’ is one that ‘includes a version of human rights, rule of law, a representative political process that reflects the local groupings and their ability to create consensus, as well as broader international expectations for peace (but not alien “national” interests)’. Richmond, ‘Eirenism’, p. 579; emphasis added.
84 Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, pp. 17–18; Richmond, Post-Liberal Peace, pp. 141, 204.
85 Sabaratnam, ‘Avatars’, p. 259.
86 Chandler, ‘Peacebuilding’, p. 27; Jabri, ‘Peacebuilding’, p. 11; Peterson, ‘Conceptual Unpacking’, pp. 14–15.
87 Cooper et al., ‘The end of history’, p. 12; Mohan and Stokke, ‘Participatory development’, pp. 258–9.
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89 Hale, ‘Does Multiculturalism menace?’, p. 488; see also Mohan and Stokke, ‘Participatory development’, p. 255.
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96 Ibid., p. 490.
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103 Charbonneau, ‘War and Peace’.
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107 Ibid., pp. 154, 185–7.
108 The orientalising thrust here is obviated by contrasting the categorical treatment of these projects with similar ones on behalf of, for example, Scots, Quebecois, and Catalans.
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110 Chandler, ‘Peacebuilding’, p. 17.
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114 Rose, Powers, pp. 158–60.
115 Peterson, ‘Conceptual Unpacking’, p. 17.
116 Belloni, ‘Hybrid Peace Governance’, p. 27; Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, pp. 141, 187; Richmond, ‘Peace Formation’.
117 Richmond, Post-Liberal Peace, p. 51; Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, 187.
118 Belloni, ‘Hybrid peace governance’, p. 23; Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, pp. 71–5.
119 Boege et al., ‘Building peace’, p. 601.
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121 Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, pp. 135–57.
122 For example, while Mac Ginty argues political leaders ‘prioritised a single unifying identification (socialism) and sought to delegitimise other, “lesser” identifications such as religion or nationalism’, Jovic argues ‘the ideological narrative of Yugoslav communism in practice shielded and promoted nationalism in its constitutive nations’. Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, p. 146; Jovic, Dejan, ‘The Disintegration of Yugoslavia A Critical Review of Explanatory Approaches’, European Journal of Social Theory, 4:1 (2001), p. 105CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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124 See, for example, Godina, Vesna V., ‘The outbreak of nationalism on former Yugoslav territory: a historical perspective on the problem of supranational identity’, Nations and Nationalism, 4:3 (1998), pp. 409–22CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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126 See, for example, Rampton, ‘“Deeper hegemony”’; Herring, Ronald J., ‘Making Ethnic Conflict: the Civil War in Sri Lanka’, in Esman, Milton J. and Herring, Ronald J. (eds), Carrots, Sticks and Ethnic Conflict: Rethinking Development Assistance (University of Michigan Press, 2001), pp. 140–74Google Scholar; Krishna, Postcolonial Insecurities; Scott, Refashioning Futures.
127 On donor-state assemblages and demographic engineering, see Herring, ‘Making Ethnic Conflict’; on international-state security assemblages in Sri Lanka's own ‘War on Terror’, see Laffey and Nadarajah, ‘Hybridity of liberal peace’.
128 See critiques in Mitchell, ‘Quality/Control’; and Sabaratnam ‘Avatars’.
129 Belloni, ‘Hybrid Peace Governance’, p. 33; Mac Ginty, International Peacebuilding, pp. 51–3, 209; Richmond, Post-Liberal Peace, p. 183.
130 Mitchell, ‘Quality/Control’, pp. 1628–30.
131 In this sense and in contrast to views that governmentality is purely occidental (for example, Joseph, Jonathan, ‘The limits of governmentality: Social theory and the international’, European Journal of International Relations, 16:2 (2010), pp. 223–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sabaratnam, ‘Avatars’), colonial and, later, nationalist governmentality is part and parcel of the transnational co-constitution of the identity-related dynamics of societal conflict and the unitary, territorial, centralised state that becomes the crucible for violence and bloodletting. See also, Death, Carl, ‘Governmentality at the limits of the international: African politics and Foucauldian theory’, Review of International Studies, 39:3 (2013), pp. 763–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
132 Rampton, ‘“Deeper hegemony”’, pp. 262–7; Kapferer, Legends, p. 84; Watts, ‘Resource Curse?’
133 See, for example, Fuglerud, Oivind, ‘Local Communities and State Ambitions in Eastern Sri Lanka’, in Mayer, Markus, Rajasingham-Senanayake, Darini, and Thangarajah, Yuvi (eds), Building Local Capacities for Peace: Rethinking Conflict and Development in Sri Lanka (New Delhi: Macmillan, 2003)Google Scholar.
134 Rampton, ‘“Deeper hegemony”’; Krishna, Postcolonial Insecurities.
135 For example, in recent years international practices and frameworks of accountability for mass atrocities have become interwoven with and co-constitutive of emergent practices (both in the island and the diaspora) of Tamil resistance against Sinhala majoritarianism and state repression. See, for example, Laffey and Nadarajah, ‘Hybridity of liberal peace’, p. 415.
136 See, for example, Watt's (‘Resource Curse?’) excellent discussion of international-national-local dynamics in Nigeria's Niger Delta.
137 Krishna, Postcolonial Insecurities.
138 Kapferer, Legends, p. 93.
139 Ibid., p. 94.
140 Ibid., p. 95.
141 Boege et al., ‘Building Peace’, p. 601; Richmond, Post-Liberal Peace, p. 94; Roberts, ‘Beyond the metropolis?’, p. 2546.
142 Dirlik, ‘The Postcolonial Aura’, p. 337; Watts, ‘Resource Curse?’, pp. 72–5; see also, Calhoun, Craig, ‘The Class Consciousness of Frequent Travellers: Toward a Critique of Actually Existing Cosmopolitanism’, The South Atlantic Quarterly, 101:4 (2002), pp. 869–97CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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146 Richmond, Post-Liberal Peace, p. 12.
147 We are grateful to an anonymous reviewer for this point.
148 Clark, Phil, ‘Hybridity, Holism, and Traditional Justice: The Case of the Gacaca Courts in Post-Genocide Rwanda’, George Washington International Law Review, 39:4 (2007), pp. 765–838Google Scholar; See relatedly, Bruch, ‘Hybrid Courts’.
149 See discussion in Peterson, ‘Creating space’.
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153 Hall, ‘When was “the post-colonial”?’, p. 249, emphasis in original.
154 Drichel, ‘The time of hybridity’, pp. 594–5, emphasis added.
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