The Rethinking Peace Mediation blog provides a forum for debate on trends and challenges in the field of peace mediation broadly defined.

RETHINKING PEACE MEDIATION: AN ONGOING DIALOGUE

 
 

About the Blog

Rethinking Peace Mediation arose as a project from the need to examine new developments in the peace mediation field.  Conflicts have fundamentally changed since the end of the 20th Century, and as a result operational and practical challenges for mediators have multiplied in a world where the global-local nexus has become tighter and is overshadowed by growing threats from new actors and phenomena such as terrorism, cybersecurity and climate change.

 The rapid expansion of the field, and the location of peace mediation as a core activity within the Sustaining Peace Agenda has raised the profile of mediation. It has also led to some conceptual tensions in respect of the core aims, objectives and actors. The Rethinking Peace Mediation volume seeks to shine a light on these new trends, including the move towards a more technical and professionalised field of practice, the growth in normative understandings of the purpose of peace mediation, and the range of actors who are included. 

 The volume also highlights the exclusions of the field – those actors and voices who are not currently captured by the ‘inclusion’ paradigm- as well as alternative disciplinary perspectives that have been marginalised though professionalisation. 

 As an extension of the book, the Rethinking Peace Mediation Blog seeks to create a space for dynamic and evolving thinking in the field of peace mediation. It welcomes contributions from scholars, policy makers or practitioners that reflect on the theory or practice of peace mediation. It particularly welcomes submissions from beyond mainstream debates or practice; those who bring experiential knowledge of the impact of peace mediation efforts; and those who or are developing new or critical lenses through which to understand peace mediation as a field of theory and practice.