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Full Description
Using Northern Ireland as a compelling case study, this book offers a critique of peacebuilding approaches with young people in contested societies. In the north of Ireland, the spectre of murderous violence is increasingly distant for peace-agreement generations. However, legacies stemming from the 30 years of protracted conflict are ever-present in young people's segregated lives.
This book presents four distinctive viewpoints that inform contemporary peacebuilding work with young people, revealing divergent purposes and conflicting aspirations. Offering a new model to understand peacebuilding, the authors urge peacebuilding communities around the globe to embrace an increasingly politicising and participative youth peace praxis.
Contents
Foreword by Candice Mama
1. Introduction: A critical approach to youth sector peacebuilding
2. Working with young people in a contested society
3. Power and legitimacy: entering the world of the peacebuilder
4. Prewrapped peacebuilding
5. A peacebuilding typology
6. Morphology: an analytical tool for peacebuilding
7. Four viewpoints on youth sector peacebuilding
8. A new model of youth sector peacebuilding
9. Radicalising youth sector peacebuilding
10. Peace activism with and by young people
11. Conclusion: reclaiming a political practice
Appendix