Description

Book Synopsis

This book unfolds an exploratory journey intended to scrutinise the suitability of entanglements and relations as a mode of thinking and seeing peacebuilding events. Through a reflection upon the UN’s limited results in the endeavour towards securing lasting peace in war-torn scenarios, Torrent critically engages with three relevant debates in contemporary peacebuilding literature, including the inclusion of ‘the locals’, the achievement of organisational system-wide coherence and the increasingly questioned agential condition of peacebuilding actors. Inattentive to the relational vulnerability of involved stakeholders, it is suggested that the UN seeks to secure a totalising modern distory, defined in the book as a story that undoes other stories. Whilst affirming the entangled ontogenesis of actors and processes in the conflict-affected configuration, Entangled Peace also delves into a cautionary argument about what the author refers to as entanglement fetishism, namely the celebratory, normative, deterministic and exclusionary projection of a relational world. Inspired by Alfred North Whitehead, Entangled Peace is an invitation to speculate over the peacebuilding milieu, and by extension the broader theatre of the real, as radical openness, in which events emanate from the collision of an infinite multiplicity of possible worlds.



Trade Review

Entangled Peace puts forth a compelling approach to the way that the UN’s agency unfolds in the spaces of its interventions and how the logic of her involvement contributes to erasing and flattening the conflict realities and other agencies of these spaces.

-- Inanna Hamati-Ataya, Principal Research Associate at CRASSH, University of Cambridge

Table of Contents

Introduction

Chapter 1. Failing to Know and Engage ‘the Locals’ in Peacebuilding

Chapter 2. System-Wide Coherence and the Problems of Linearity in Peacebuilding

Chapter 3. Rethinking Agency in Complexity-Sensitive Peacebuilding

Chapter 4. Entangled Peace and its Limits

Chapter 5. Peacebuilding Distories and the Ethics of Entangled Peace

Conclusion

Interviews

Entangled Peace: UN Peacebuilding and the Limits

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Thu 25 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Ignasi Torrent

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      View other formats and editions of Entangled Peace: UN Peacebuilding and the Limits by Ignasi Torrent

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 03/04/2023
      ISBN13: 9781538150788, 978-1538150788
      ISBN10: 1538150786

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book unfolds an exploratory journey intended to scrutinise the suitability of entanglements and relations as a mode of thinking and seeing peacebuilding events. Through a reflection upon the UN’s limited results in the endeavour towards securing lasting peace in war-torn scenarios, Torrent critically engages with three relevant debates in contemporary peacebuilding literature, including the inclusion of ‘the locals’, the achievement of organisational system-wide coherence and the increasingly questioned agential condition of peacebuilding actors. Inattentive to the relational vulnerability of involved stakeholders, it is suggested that the UN seeks to secure a totalising modern distory, defined in the book as a story that undoes other stories. Whilst affirming the entangled ontogenesis of actors and processes in the conflict-affected configuration, Entangled Peace also delves into a cautionary argument about what the author refers to as entanglement fetishism, namely the celebratory, normative, deterministic and exclusionary projection of a relational world. Inspired by Alfred North Whitehead, Entangled Peace is an invitation to speculate over the peacebuilding milieu, and by extension the broader theatre of the real, as radical openness, in which events emanate from the collision of an infinite multiplicity of possible worlds.



      Trade Review

      Entangled Peace puts forth a compelling approach to the way that the UN’s agency unfolds in the spaces of its interventions and how the logic of her involvement contributes to erasing and flattening the conflict realities and other agencies of these spaces.

      -- Inanna Hamati-Ataya, Principal Research Associate at CRASSH, University of Cambridge

      Table of Contents

      Introduction

      Chapter 1. Failing to Know and Engage ‘the Locals’ in Peacebuilding

      Chapter 2. System-Wide Coherence and the Problems of Linearity in Peacebuilding

      Chapter 3. Rethinking Agency in Complexity-Sensitive Peacebuilding

      Chapter 4. Entangled Peace and its Limits

      Chapter 5. Peacebuilding Distories and the Ethics of Entangled Peace

      Conclusion

      Interviews

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