This is a mirror of the ECAS 4 conference website on http://www.nai.uu.se/

Search result

Nothing to search for

No hits

Type one or more search terms into the search box and click on the search button.

The search engine does not distinguish between lowercase and uppercase letters.

A results page will be produced: a list of web pages related to your search terms, with the most relevant page appearing first, then the next, and so on.

Boolean operators
The operator AND is set as default between words. You can combine several words or phrases by using the logical operators ‘OR’ and ‘AND’.

You can also use plus or minus marks for including or excluding words (see below).

Ranking
The more of the words that are present in the page, the higher is the score.

If words appear in the same order as in your query, and close to each other, the score of the document gets high.

Phrase Search
Use quotation marks to compound phrases. If you wish to search for a phrase, you write text inside “…”quotation marks.

Eg. "African studies"

Truncation
Use * for truncation of search terms. A search term does not always have to be entered in its complete form. Search terms may be truncated from left or right.

Eg. Tanza* or even *anza*

Prioritizing Words
Plus marks a word as necessary. By preceding a word or a phrase with a plus sign, you tell the search engine that you are only looking for documents that contain that word/phrase.

Eg. +policy +activities

Word Exclusion
Minus marks a word as not wanted. By preceding a word or phrase with a minus sign, you tell the search engine to exclude that word/phrase and only to look for documents that match the rest of the query.

Eg. nordic -africa –institute

Panel 20: Protection versus Stabilisation? Addressing Tensions within the Liberal Intervention Paradigm

Panel organisers: Linnéa Gelot and Jan Bachmann (Gothenburg Centre of Globalisation and Development, Sweden)

Contact: linnea.bergholm@gmail.com

‘Human security’ and the ‘responsibility to protect’ have been praised as progressive concepts that concentrate on the security of the individual rather than the state, thus contesting and challenging the traditional principle of state sovereignty. This discourse of protection and its emphasis on the moral obligation to act on behalf of insecure populations has enabled new peace, development and security interventions in the global South which in many cases, however, focus on strengthening the state. At the same time, such hegemonic practices have been met by an increasing commitment and claim to autonomy of African actors to address insecurities on the continent.

The panel explores the multidimensional tensions inherent in the current liberal intervention paradigm guided by (civilian) protection on the one hand and (state) stabilisation on the other. Papers are invited to discuss rationales, challenges and effects of power in these interventions and to particularly enquire on whose terms the security engagements are defined and carried out. They may focus on:

· new actors, alliances and partnerships (whole-of-government approaches, the entanglement of millitary and civilian engagement);

· the genesis of current norms and policy-guiding concepts (e.g. legitimisation of and challenges to human security, stabilisation, counterinsurgency);

· possibilities and limits of African agency (ownership, challenges to hegemonic logics and practices and their possible transformation in order to have partnerships work for their own objectives);

· social and spatial effects that challenge common analytical categories for the study of North-South relations (state/non-state or transnational dynamics).

Accepted Abstracts

From Armed Protector to Peace Manager: Unfolding the Diplomatic Leading Role towards African Belligerent Parties

Protection versus Stabilisation? US Africa Command as a Laboratory for Future US Military Activities

The Politics of SSR

Bridging the Disconnect: Integrating Local Perspectives in Peace Processes

United Nations, Procurement and War

Search Help