Franke Wilmer - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Franke Wilmer
Foreign Affairs, 2003
Preface Chapter 1. IR Theory and the Problem of Violence Chapter 2. What Happened in Yugoslavia C... more Preface Chapter 1. IR Theory and the Problem of Violence Chapter 2. What Happened in Yugoslavia Chapter 3. The Social Construction of Man: Identity, the Self and Social Theory Chapter 4. Identity and (Ethnic) Conflict in the former Yugoslavia: In Their Own Words Chapter 5. The Social Construction of the State: State-Building and State Destroying as Social Action Chapter 6. The Social Construction of War Chapter 7. Causes of War: A Constructivist Account Chapter 8. The Other Wars: The War Against Women and the War Against War Chapter 9. Identity, Conflict, and Violence
SAGE Publications, Inc. eBooks, 1993
... Imprimer la notice. The indigenous voice in world politics. Auteur : WILMER F. Prix indicatif... more ... Imprimer la notice. The indigenous voice in world politics. Auteur : WILMER F. Prix indicatif 84,96 € Ajouter au panier le livre de WILMER F. Date de parution : 11-1993 Langue : ANGLAIS Hardback Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 20 jours). © 2000-2011. ...
Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science, Jul 1, 1997
SAGE Publications, Inc. eBooks, Mar 7, 2014
The Indigenous Voice in World Politics: Since Time Immemorial
Routledge eBooks, Jul 19, 2022
The Indigenous Voice in World Politics: Since Time Immemorial
The Indigenous Voice in World Politics: Since Time Immemorial
As a legacy of colonialism, ethnic chauvinist leaders led virulent chauvinistic ethnonationalist ... more As a legacy of colonialism, ethnic chauvinist leaders led virulent chauvinistic ethnonationalist movements within a segmented cultural milieu to manufacture boundaries amongst ethnic groups and intensify polarization, competition, and violence (Anastasiou, 2010; Sandole, 2003). The recent re-emergence and escalation of protracted ethnopolitical conflicts in places like Kordofan and Darfur-South Sudan, Molo and Mount Elgon-Kenya, West Papua-Indonesia, Kivu-DRC, Ossetian-Georgia, Republika Srpska-Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kurds-Turkey and Syria, Oromos and Somalis-Ethiopia, Kashmir-India and Pakistan, Catalonia-Spain, Houthis-Yemen, the Crimea-Ukraine, Israel and Palestine, Cyprus, the Sahel, Afghanistan, Roningya-Myanmar, Indigenous peoples and ethnic refugees in North America and Europe, and Biharis-Bangladesh, among others, remain major threats to international peace and security. The urgency and complexity of these conflicts have brought increased interest in exploring the issues anew within critical and emancipatory peacebuilding. Analyzing these conflicts and resolving them tend to move along separate paths. Consequently, this panel explores the role of economic aid, ethnographies of peacebuilding, civil society and digital space, measurements of positive peace, and UN intervention in critical peace and emancipatory peacebuilding. This panel is part of a series of chapters in the forthcoming Handbook of Peacebuilding and Ethnic Conflict
This comprehensive introduction to the study of human rights in international politics blends con... more This comprehensive introduction to the study of human rights in international politics blends concrete developments with theoretical inquiry, illuminating both in the process. Franke Wilmer presents the nuts and bolts of human rights concepts, actors, and implementation before grappling with issues ranging from war and genocide to social and economic needs to racial and religious discrimination. Two themes - the tension between values and interests, and the role of the state as both a protector of human rights and a perpetrator of human rights violations - are reflected throughout the text. The result is a clear, accessible exposition of the evolution of international human rights, as well as the challenges that those rights pose, in the context of the state system.
Encyclopedia of Violence, Peace, & Conflict, 2008
Page 216. Indigenous Peoples' Responses to Conquest Franke Wilmer Montana State University I... more Page 216. Indigenous Peoples' Responses to Conquest Franke Wilmer Montana State University I. Introduction II. Who Are Indigenous Peoples? III. Indigenous Peoples and Conquest IV. Indigenous Peoples' Responses in Settler ...
As a legacy of colonialism, ethnic chauvinist leaders led virulent chauvinistic ethnonationalist ... more As a legacy of colonialism, ethnic chauvinist leaders led virulent chauvinistic ethnonationalist movements within a segmented cultural milieu to manufacture boundaries amongst ethnic groups and intensify polarization, competition, and violence (Anastasiou, 2010; Sandole, 2003). The recent re-emergence and escalation of protracted ethnopolitical conflicts in places like Kordofan and Darfur-South Sudan, Molo and Mount Elgon-Kenya, West Papua-Indonesia, Kivu-DRC, Ossetian-Georgia, Republika Srpska-Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kurds-Turkey and Syria, Oromos and Somalis-Ethiopia, Kashmir-India and Pakistan, Catalonia-Spain, Houthis-Yemen, the Crimea-Ukraine, Israel and Palestine, Cyprus, the Sahel, Afghanistan, Roningya-Myanmar, Indigenous peoples and ethnic refugees in North America and Europe, and Biharis-Bangladesh, among others, remain major threats to international peace and security. The urgency and complexity of these conflicts have brought increased interest in exploring the issues anew w...
The Indigenous Voice in World Politics: Since Time Immemorial
conWEB – webpapers on Constitutionalism and Governance beyond the State www.bath.ac.uk/esml/conWEB
The connection between “nation ” and “state ” is far from settled, and though naturalized in ordi... more The connection between “nation ” and “state ” is far from settled, and though naturalized in ordinary political discourse, it is often regarded with circumspection by many social scientists. Can Charles Tilly’s application of Nettl’s idea of stateness to European state formation illuminate the nation/state relationship and if so, what does this reveal about the tension between national majorities and national minorities that produces civil strife, conflict, and even violence within states? This article explores the implications of the interplay between the international normative framework produced by European state formation that inevitably creates “minorities ” in states on the one hand, and Tilly’s notion of “stateness, ” on the other. How does the existence of minorities and the de facto privileging of national majorities within the state affect its ability to develop and sustain politically stable authoritative institutions?
Foreign Affairs, 2003
Preface Chapter 1. IR Theory and the Problem of Violence Chapter 2. What Happened in Yugoslavia C... more Preface Chapter 1. IR Theory and the Problem of Violence Chapter 2. What Happened in Yugoslavia Chapter 3. The Social Construction of Man: Identity, the Self and Social Theory Chapter 4. Identity and (Ethnic) Conflict in the former Yugoslavia: In Their Own Words Chapter 5. The Social Construction of the State: State-Building and State Destroying as Social Action Chapter 6. The Social Construction of War Chapter 7. Causes of War: A Constructivist Account Chapter 8. The Other Wars: The War Against Women and the War Against War Chapter 9. Identity, Conflict, and Violence
SAGE Publications, Inc. eBooks, 1993
... Imprimer la notice. The indigenous voice in world politics. Auteur : WILMER F. Prix indicatif... more ... Imprimer la notice. The indigenous voice in world politics. Auteur : WILMER F. Prix indicatif 84,96 € Ajouter au panier le livre de WILMER F. Date de parution : 11-1993 Langue : ANGLAIS Hardback Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 20 jours). © 2000-2011. ...
Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science, Jul 1, 1997
SAGE Publications, Inc. eBooks, Mar 7, 2014
The Indigenous Voice in World Politics: Since Time Immemorial
Routledge eBooks, Jul 19, 2022
The Indigenous Voice in World Politics: Since Time Immemorial
The Indigenous Voice in World Politics: Since Time Immemorial
As a legacy of colonialism, ethnic chauvinist leaders led virulent chauvinistic ethnonationalist ... more As a legacy of colonialism, ethnic chauvinist leaders led virulent chauvinistic ethnonationalist movements within a segmented cultural milieu to manufacture boundaries amongst ethnic groups and intensify polarization, competition, and violence (Anastasiou, 2010; Sandole, 2003). The recent re-emergence and escalation of protracted ethnopolitical conflicts in places like Kordofan and Darfur-South Sudan, Molo and Mount Elgon-Kenya, West Papua-Indonesia, Kivu-DRC, Ossetian-Georgia, Republika Srpska-Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kurds-Turkey and Syria, Oromos and Somalis-Ethiopia, Kashmir-India and Pakistan, Catalonia-Spain, Houthis-Yemen, the Crimea-Ukraine, Israel and Palestine, Cyprus, the Sahel, Afghanistan, Roningya-Myanmar, Indigenous peoples and ethnic refugees in North America and Europe, and Biharis-Bangladesh, among others, remain major threats to international peace and security. The urgency and complexity of these conflicts have brought increased interest in exploring the issues anew within critical and emancipatory peacebuilding. Analyzing these conflicts and resolving them tend to move along separate paths. Consequently, this panel explores the role of economic aid, ethnographies of peacebuilding, civil society and digital space, measurements of positive peace, and UN intervention in critical peace and emancipatory peacebuilding. This panel is part of a series of chapters in the forthcoming Handbook of Peacebuilding and Ethnic Conflict
This comprehensive introduction to the study of human rights in international politics blends con... more This comprehensive introduction to the study of human rights in international politics blends concrete developments with theoretical inquiry, illuminating both in the process. Franke Wilmer presents the nuts and bolts of human rights concepts, actors, and implementation before grappling with issues ranging from war and genocide to social and economic needs to racial and religious discrimination. Two themes - the tension between values and interests, and the role of the state as both a protector of human rights and a perpetrator of human rights violations - are reflected throughout the text. The result is a clear, accessible exposition of the evolution of international human rights, as well as the challenges that those rights pose, in the context of the state system.
Encyclopedia of Violence, Peace, & Conflict, 2008
Page 216. Indigenous Peoples' Responses to Conquest Franke Wilmer Montana State University I... more Page 216. Indigenous Peoples' Responses to Conquest Franke Wilmer Montana State University I. Introduction II. Who Are Indigenous Peoples? III. Indigenous Peoples and Conquest IV. Indigenous Peoples' Responses in Settler ...
As a legacy of colonialism, ethnic chauvinist leaders led virulent chauvinistic ethnonationalist ... more As a legacy of colonialism, ethnic chauvinist leaders led virulent chauvinistic ethnonationalist movements within a segmented cultural milieu to manufacture boundaries amongst ethnic groups and intensify polarization, competition, and violence (Anastasiou, 2010; Sandole, 2003). The recent re-emergence and escalation of protracted ethnopolitical conflicts in places like Kordofan and Darfur-South Sudan, Molo and Mount Elgon-Kenya, West Papua-Indonesia, Kivu-DRC, Ossetian-Georgia, Republika Srpska-Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kurds-Turkey and Syria, Oromos and Somalis-Ethiopia, Kashmir-India and Pakistan, Catalonia-Spain, Houthis-Yemen, the Crimea-Ukraine, Israel and Palestine, Cyprus, the Sahel, Afghanistan, Roningya-Myanmar, Indigenous peoples and ethnic refugees in North America and Europe, and Biharis-Bangladesh, among others, remain major threats to international peace and security. The urgency and complexity of these conflicts have brought increased interest in exploring the issues anew w...
The Indigenous Voice in World Politics: Since Time Immemorial
conWEB – webpapers on Constitutionalism and Governance beyond the State www.bath.ac.uk/esml/conWEB
The connection between “nation ” and “state ” is far from settled, and though naturalized in ordi... more The connection between “nation ” and “state ” is far from settled, and though naturalized in ordinary political discourse, it is often regarded with circumspection by many social scientists. Can Charles Tilly’s application of Nettl’s idea of stateness to European state formation illuminate the nation/state relationship and if so, what does this reveal about the tension between national majorities and national minorities that produces civil strife, conflict, and even violence within states? This article explores the implications of the interplay between the international normative framework produced by European state formation that inevitably creates “minorities ” in states on the one hand, and Tilly’s notion of “stateness, ” on the other. How does the existence of minorities and the de facto privileging of national majorities within the state affect its ability to develop and sustain politically stable authoritative institutions?