4.2 Article

A Divided Discipline? Mapping Peace and Conflict Studies

Journal

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES PERSPECTIVES
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages 128-147

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/isp/ekx009

Keywords

peace and conflict studies; security studies; peace research

Funding

  1. VOX-Pol project - European Union's 7th Framework Programme [312827]

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Scholars in the field of peace and conflict studies have long worried that their discipline is divided - between studies of war and war making, and studies of peace and peacemaking. However, empirical research into the existence, extent, and nature of such a division is scarce. We remedy this by addressing two questions: 1) how is work in the field of peace and conflict studies distributed between its two nominal pillars: peace and (violent) conflict? and 2) to what extent is there communication and exchange between the two sets of studies? Making use of a unique combination of methods, we find that studies of violence hold a dominant position in the field, although there is also a sizable body of work that explores topics of peace, understood as conflict prevention and/or response. That said, we find limited evidence of intellectual exchange between studies of war/making and peace/making. We also find evidence of gendered, regional, and methodological divides. We argue that such schisms may be preventing scholars of peace and conflict from collectively realizing the founding ontological goal of their discipline, which was to understand the causes of war in order to contribute to an understanding of how conflict can be managed peacefully.

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