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Full Description
This is a not a book about peacekeeping practices. This is a book about storytelling, fantasies, and the ways that people connect emotionally to myths about peacekeeping. The celebration of peacekeeping as a legitimate and desirable use of military force is expressed through the unproblematized acceptance of militarism. Introducing a novel framework martial peace the book offers an in-depth examination of the Canadian Armed Forces missions to Afghanistan and the use of police violence against Indigenous protests in Canada as case examples where military violence has been justified in the name of peace. It critically investigates the peacekeeper myth and challenges the academic, government, and popular beliefs that martial violence is required to sustain peace.
Contents
Introduction: Martialling Peace: How the Peacekeeping Myth Legitimizes WarfareChapter 1: Putting the 'Peace' in Peacekeeping: Martial Peace, Martial Politics, and the Objects of Our Peacekeeping DesiresChapter 2: Myths, Peacekeeping and the Peacekeeping MythChapter 3: Cultural nostalgia and the political construction of the Canadian peacekeeping mythChapter 4: The Peacekeeping Myth and the War in AfghanistanChapter 5: Creating Martial Peace: Martial politics and militarized "peace" enforcement in CanadaConclusion: Myths, Militarism, and Martial(ed) Peace



