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Title
Embedded institutions, embodied conflicts: public universities and post-war peacebuilding in Sierra Leone and Sri Lanka |
Full text
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38472; http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/1736 |
Date
2021 |
Author(s)
Russell, Ian |
Contributor(s)
Spencer, Jonathan; Gray, Hazel; other |
Abstract
This thesis is a study of the interaction of public universities with peacebuilding in Sierra Leone
and Sri Lanka, two countries marked by civil wars in recent decades. Utilising documentary
evidence and qualitative interviews with staff, students, and other related actors conducted
over a total of six months in the two contexts, it identifies and conceptualises key factors which
can constrain the ability of public universities to contribute to peacebuilding. In doing so, the
research departs from existing scholarship on the relationship between universities and
peace. Much of this literature has focussed on describing particular mechanisms by which
universities might act towards peace or drive conflict. To fully understand and explain the
factors that can affect university contributions to post-war recovery, I argue that it is vital to
consider universities both as social groups that are embedded in larger social, political,
economic, and historical processes and as distinct spaces containing unique social
formations. Examination of the two cases, which differ significantly in the nature of their wars
and in their political and economic trajectories since decolonisation, serves to draw out the
significance of these contingent features of university environments. The thesis explores the
shaping of university faculties by wars and political and economic crises, the socialisation and
connected mobilisation of student groups, the entanglement between universities and political
forces, and the silencing of critical voices through social and political pressures. Through
analysis of these phenomena, I show that narrow human capital and institutional capacity
framings of universities fail to capture the full complexity of the evolving social and political
relations that constitute university communities and that connect them to the societies in which
they are embedded. Crucially, I contend that this social and political complexity is not
incidental to university functioning. Instead, the ways in which universities as social groups
embody social fracture lines, political connections, and experiences of conflict and crisis are
powerfully consequential for how universities operate and for how they interact with post-war
peacebuilding. |
Subject(s)
development; education; conflict and peace; higher education; human capital; post-conflict; Sierra Leone; Sri Lanka |
Language
en |
Publisher
The University of Edinburgh |
Type of publication
Thesis or Dissertation; Doctoral; PhD Doctor of Philosophy |
Format
application/pdf |
Repository
Edinburgh - University of Edinburgh
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Added to C-A: 2022-01-31;09:41:10 |
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