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Building: C - Hollar, Floor: 2, Room: 115
Wednesday 10:45 - 12:30 CEST (06/09/2023)
This panel explores questions related to different stages of conflicts, and transitions between them. How can public diplomacy be seen as another form of rivalry and competition rather than mitigation of conflict and threat, in the case of China and Taiwan or elsewhere? How does humanitarian assistance unravels in different cases, stages and intensity of conflict? How negotiations processes for humanitarian access could either support or undermine local conflict resolution processes at specific localities (e.g. in South Sudan), and how international humanitarian assistance is spatially configured through everyday practices, negotiations, and violence in civil war (e.g. Syria)? More broadly, the panel also includes reflections on how rebel governance unravels during and after conflict based on strategic alliances, ideologies and peace agreements.
Title | Details |
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Former secessionist groups and postwar politics: What happens to sovereignty claims after the end of secessionist wars? | View Paper Details |
Does public diplomacy function as a conflict resolution in East Asia? - Comparing the case of China and Taiwan in 21st Century | View Paper Details |
(Un)- intended contributions to peace or conflict? An analytical framework for examining the relationship between humanitarian access negotiations and conflict resolution in intra-state conflicts | View Paper Details |
Alliance formation and rebel co-governance in North-East Syria: the case of the PYD and the Syriac Union Party | View Paper Details |
Performing sovereign aspirations: Tamil insurgency and postwar transition in Sri Lanka | View Paper Details |