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This book takes the emerging practice of Unarmed Civilian Protection (UCP) as a case study of nonviolence to interrogate the roles of violence and nonviolence in conflict knowledge production. By focusing on nonviolent actors using UCP, it decentres violence, which is often so prominent in peace research. This approach creates space to fundamentally reimagine how the world might be when imagined and enacted through nonviolence.Drawing together feminist theorising from critical military studies, peace and conflict studies and international relations, Nonviolent Encounters argues that decentring violence in conflict knowledge production upsets the simple binaries of protector/protected and war/peace, underpinned by the ‘one-world’ onto-epistemology of much Western conflict knowledge. Instead, space is created to reconsider nonviolence, not as the binary opposite of violence, but as a way of knowing, doing and being – as a way of producing alternative ontological worlds.
Louise Ridden is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Tampere University, Finland.
AcknowledgementsIntroduction: Decentring Violence in Peace and Conflict1. Nonviolence as a Relational Worlding Process2. Unarmed Civilian Protection in Principle and Practice3. Affective Embodiment4. Emplacing Space5. Temporal Disruptions6. Embodied Space-Time: Synthesising Relational WorldsConclusion: Undoing Binaries, Embracing the PluriverseBibliography
This book is an outstanding contribution to the literature on nonviolence. It is theoretically innovative and empirically grounded in the practice of unarmed civilian protection (UCP). It offers a new way of understanding embodied, spatial and temporal dimensions of nonviolent practice and shows how UCP operates productively within violence in ways that disrupt violent knowing, being and doing.