Foreword, Peter Katzenstein 1. Introduction, Chip Gagnon, Stefan Senders and Keith Brown Section 1: The Post-Conflict concept 2. The origins of "post-conflict", Aida Hozić 3. Reconsidering ‘post-conflict’ in the American way of war tradition: A short conceptual History, Colonel Isaiah (Ike) Wilson III Section 2: Recasting Mission Introduction to Section 2, Chip Gagnon 4. Democracy promotion as mission, Chip Gagnon 5. Accompaniment as mission: A successful model from Colombia, Kim Marie Lamberty 6. Gender, security, and religious freedom in post-conflict societies, Evelyn Bush Section 3: Criminalization Introduction to Section 3, Keith Brown 7. Post-conflict justice enclaves: The development of a war crimes justice model following the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Chris Engels 8. Unknowing the other: A short essay on criminalization through narrative in postwar El Salvador, Ellen Moodie Section 4: Reflections on Post-Conflict as Practice Introduction to Section 4, Keith Brown 9. Post-colonial subjectivities in the post-conflict aid triangle: The drama of educational missionization in the Thai-Burma borderlands, Rosalie Metro 10. The sum of tiny things: Civil society, democracy promotion and The Ugly American in Macedonia, 1995-2004, Keith Brown 11. Social scientists in post-war contexts: Bridging the gap between reflection and action, Elton Skendaj 12. Conclusion: Toward a field of post-conflict studies, Keith Brown and Chip Gagnon
Chip Gagnon is Associate Professor of Politics at Ithaca College, USA.
Keith Brown is Professor (Research) of International Studies and Director of the Brown International Advanced Research Institutes, Brown University, USA.