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Journal Article

Citation

McMullin JR. Confl. Secur. Dev. 2022; 22(5): 517-541.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Kings College, Center for Defence Studies, Publisher Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/14678802.2022.2122698

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This article deploys the language, narratives and proposed solutions of research participants to conceptualise peace research as a representational and relational process of recognition. To do so, it draws from a multi-year research project on the economic livelihood and social integration strategies of conflict-affected youth in Liberia's commercial motorcycling sector. Its starting point is reflexive engagement with participants' own frequent question: 'What is the benefit of this project?' It advocates for participatory approaches to the time-spaces that ex-combatant and conflict-affected youth actually inhabit (rather than those scripted or desired for them by more traditional forms of peace research). It applies critical peace-building insights about time to contribute to conceptualisations of post-conflict 'reintegration trajectories' that question ideas about who builds peace, and how. It argues that participatory research brings issues of social stigma, objectification and marginalisation to the fore. And, it explores the methodological implications of participatory research, identifying the ways in which sited ethnography, relational interviewing and narrative approaches can centre research-as-recognition. Participatory approaches make peace researchable not just to collect lived experiences (treating research as transactional data collection) but to implement participants' own ideas about peace-building strategies and solutions (treating peace research as relational recognition and something that is mutually beneficial).


Language: en

Keywords

conflict-affected youth; DDR; ex-combatant reintegration; participatory action research; Peace-building

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