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Deconstructing Peace : The Contested Politics of Post-Conflict Northern Ireland and Bosnia and Herzegovina - Patrick Pinkerton

Deconstructing Peace

The Contested Politics of Post-Conflict Northern Ireland and Bosnia and Herzegovina

By: Patrick Pinkerton

Hardcover | 1 April 2021

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This book interrogates the peace process by developing and applying concepts from the philosophy of Jacques Derrida, applying this novel analysis of the contested post-conflict political situations. The approach will both examine how this political context has developed, and provide a means of moving beyond it, through a 'deconstructive conclusion' which targets historical narratives of the conflicts, while simultaneously disrupting their contemporary political consequences. This provides a fresh interpretation of how the entrenchment of division in Northern Ireland and Bosnia and Herzegovina transpires, an examination of the ways in which this reification of division fails, and a means of moving beyond the dysfunction produced by this failure.
This study provides a key contribution to both peacebuilding and Derridean scholarship within IR, through bringing a new critical perspective to the peacebuilding literature, and by demonstrating the utility of Derrida's key ideas through their application to fresh empirical terrain. This theoretical approach will demonstrate how Derridean concepts can be utilised to provide deep understandings of the real-world events under discussion, as well as allowing political interventions to be made into these processes.

Industry Reviews

Deconstructing Peace offers a fresh look at apparently intractable conflicts, drawing on Derridean thought. This sophisticated book powerfully argues that the dysfunctional politics that continue to reinscribe division cannot be overcome without fundamentally challenging established narratives of conflict. Importantly, it is driven by the ambition not just to analyze but also to show how novel interventions might be made.

--Maja Zehfuss, University of Copenhagen

In this loosely constructed but tightly argued comparative study of post-conflict Northern Ireland and Bosnia and Herzegovina, Pinkerton critically interrogates the dysfunctionalities associated with mediated peace settlements that tend to harden rather than heal political divisions. Drawing on the work of Jacques Derrida, often cited as the "father of deconstruction," Pinkerton explores the unstable and therefore contingent nature of supposedly entrenched communal and political divisions. His contribution to the peacemaking and peacebuilding literature is to view such dysfunction not as inevitable or immutable but as an expression of a dialectic process between the forces of entrenchment and those that counteract and contradict them. In short, Pinkerton views the formal structures of peace arrangements as coexisting and interacting with informal political domains such as cultural, artistic, judicial, and protest movements. In Derridean terms, Pinkerton envisions a "deconstructive conclusion" that reframes the politics of past and present to enhance the possibilities of transformation going forward. Scholars and practitioners in many fields will benefit from reading this penetrating, provocative book. Well researched, thoroughly documented, and critically presented, it is a groundbreaking resource for university libraries and collections specializing in war, peace, security studies, and international affairs. Essential. Upper-division undergraduates. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals. General readers.

-- "Choice Reviews"

The contemporary struggles of Bosnian and Northern Irish politics emerge when peace is not the opposite of conflict but a different and deferred version ofthat same conflict. This central contention of Pinkerton's masterful book is, by turns, devastating and hopeful in its implications. It makes for crucial reading in the fields of peacebuilding, conflict studies, and poststructural politics or for anyone interested in troubling our understandings of 'ethnic' and 'communal' violence and peace.

--Dan Bulley, Oxford Brookes University

Theoretically sophisticated but highly readable, this book deftly dissects the Northern Irish and Bosnian peace processes. Analysing the contradictory understandings of conflict embedded in both the Dayton and Good Friday Agreements and the problematic ways in which these understandings are seemingly reconciled, Pinkerton provides a persuasive account of how the dysfunctional politics of both places might be transformed.

--Laurence Cooley, Lecturer in the Department of International Development, University of Birmingham

Deconstructing Peace offers a fresh look at apparently intractable conflicts, drawing on Derridean thought. This sophisticated book powerfully argues that the dysfunctional politics that continue to reinscribe division cannot be overcome without fundamentally challenging established narratives of conflict. Importantly, it is driven by the ambition not just to analyze but also to show how novel interventions might be made.


In this loosely constructed but tightly argued comparative study of post-conflict Northern Ireland and Bosnia and Herzegovina, Pinkerton critically interrogates the dysfunctionalities associated with mediated peace settlements that tend to harden rather than heal political divisions. Drawing on the work of Jacques Derrida, often cited as the "father of deconstruction," Pinkerton explores the unstable and therefore contingent nature of supposedly entrenched communal and political divisions. His contribution to the peacemaking and peacebuilding literature is to view such dysfunction not as inevitable or immutable but as an expression of a dialectic process between the forces of entrenchment and those that counteract and contradict them. In short, Pinkerton views the formal structures of peace arrangements as coexisting and interacting with informal political domains such as cultural, artistic, judicial, and protest movements. In Derridean terms, Pinkerton envisions a "deconstructive conclusion" that reframes the politics of past and present to enhance the possibilities of transformation going forward. Scholars and practitioners in many fields will benefit from reading this penetrating, provocative book. Well researched, thoroughly documented, and critically presented, it is a groundbreaking resource for university libraries and collections specializing in war, peace, security studies, and international affairs. Essential. Upper-division undergraduates. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals. General readers.


The contemporary struggles of Bosnian and Northern Irish politics emerge when peace is not the opposite of conflict but a different and deferred version ofthat same conflict. This central contention of Pinkerton's masterful book is, by turns, devastating and hopeful in its implications. It makes for crucial reading in the fields of peacebuilding, conflict studies, and poststructural politics or for anyone interested in troubling our understandings of 'ethnic' and 'communal' violence and peace.


Theoretically sophisticated but highly readable, this book deftly dissects the Northern Irish and Bosnian peace processes. Analysing the contradictory understandings of conflict embedded in both the Dayton and Good Friday Agreements and the problematic ways in which these understandings are seemingly reconciled, Pinkerton provides a persuasive account of how the dysfunctional politics of both places might be transformed.

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