Item type | Home library | Class number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Electronic book | Hillingdon Hospitals Library Services (Hillingdon Hospitals NHS Foundation) Online | Link to resource | Available |
Introduction: Let me be fully Human -- Part One: Reimagining Peace from below -- Restoring Peace as if our Life Depends on it (as it does!) -- Iqbalian Liberation Theology: Spiritual Self-Affirmation, Meritocratic Democracy and Non-Hegemonic International Orders -- Part Two: Transformational Resistance to undo Oppression -- The Liberatory Effects of Indigenous Ceremonies in the Aftermath of Mass Trauma -- What do we resist when we resist? Peasants' land rights movement and the emergence of new social life in Pakistani Punjab -- Searching for Liberation in Higher Education: Testimonio from Miami-Dade -- What is Peace for Palestine/inians under Israeli Settler Colonial Occupation? Counterstory Imaginings of Peace through Transformational Resistance to Erasure -- Postcolonial Legacies of Conflict: Educational Language Policies and Resource Exploitation -- Part Three: Problematizing Hegemonic Discourses -- TheJune 1981 coup: The stolen narrative of the Iranian revolution -- Decolonizing Pakistani International Relations -- Beyond Westphalia and Aberystwyth: Decolonial Reflections on the Origins of International Relations Discipline.
This edited volume highlights a type of violence largely overlooked by peace psychologists; it explores 'epistemic violence' which refers to the silencing of the marginalized, racialized and colonized people in the process of knowledge production. This book celebrates the voices and the agency of the subalterns, honoring their visions, testimonies and struggles to push boundaries and create spaces for peace within oppressive environments. "Visions and Praxis from below" refers to peace visions and struggles of the people who live "below the vital ability of shaping the world according to their own vision". It is a challenge to the hegemonic perspective that 'credible' thinking on peace can only be done by the people 'from above'. This perspective will add to the understanding of not only peace psychologists, but all those who work toward social justice. "Peace as Liberation: Visions and Praxis from Below is a welcome intervention in the field of peace psychology, and just what is needed to redress the entrenched Eurocentricity of peace studies. Incisive, confronting and genuine, it is a wonderful collection of essays that centres the voices and agency of subaltern scholars. Highly recommended." --Richard Jackson, University of Otago, New Zealand "After fighting the 20 Years War by demonizing Islam and being defeated, US NATO started a new proxy war by demonizing the former Cold War enemy. Global South is no longer as docile as before. No, its very wisdom sheds light on the path to save innocent people who sacrifice blood in the proxy war." -- Isezaki Kenji, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Japan "We are living through a profoundly significant moment in the history of Decolonisation, even as old Balances are splintering , and old Hegemons are tottering. It is timely, it is relevant, and it adds depth to the burgeoning clamor of critiques, as the 'subalterns' are finding their Voice. freed from the muzzles of their erstwhile masters." -- Rajani Kanth , ex-Harvard University, United States "This groundbreaking book breaks barriers in peace studies, giving voice to marginalized perspectives and challenging epistemic violence. A transformative must-read." -- Zahid Shahab Ahmed, Deakin University, Australia.
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