The End of Peacekeeping
Gender, Race, and the Martial Politics of Intervention
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Pennsylvania Press
Published:12th Mar '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
In The End of Peacekeeping, Marsha Henry shows how contemporary peacekeeping produces gender and racial inequalities through increasingly militarized strategies. Revealing that peacekeeping is not the benign, apolitical project it is often purported to be, this book encourages readers to imagine and enact alternative futures to peacekeeping.
In The End of Peacekeeping, Marsha Henry makes use of feminist, postcolonial, and anti-militarist frameworks to expose peacekeeping as an epistemic power project in need of abolition. Drawing on critical concepts from Black feminist thought, and from postcolonial and critical race theories, Henry shows how contemporary peacekeeping produces gender and racial inequalities through increasingly militarized strategies.
The book’s intersectional analysis of peacekeeping is based on data amassed through more than fifteen years of ethnographic fieldwork on peacekeeping missions and training centers around the world, including interviews with UN peacekeepers, humanitarian aid personnel, and local populations. Henry demonstrates how focus on the policy and practice of peacekeeping has obscured the geopolitical knowledge project at peacekeeping’s root, allowing its harms to persist unquestioned by mainstream scholarship. Arguing that we must recover critical theoretical contributions that have been sidelined within the field, she brings the insights of feminist and postcolonial scholarship to bear on peacekeeping studies, whose production of empirical data and evidence continues to provide the justification and foundation for policy and global governance actions.
Revealing that peacekeeping is not the benign, apolitical project it is often purported to be, this book encourages readers to imagine and enact alternative futures to peacekeeping.
"An important, timely, and courageous book that invites us to think differently about the future of peace. Marsha Henry challenges dominant assumptions about peacekeeping as a peaceful response to war, and urges readers to imagine the prospect of an end to peacekeeping and its legacies of colonialism, militarism, and patriarchy." * Maria Eriksson Baaz, Uppsala University *
ISBN: 9781512825237
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
208 pages