Laufende Forschungsprojekte 

Wir informieren Sie hier über aktuelle Projekte und Forschungsthemen in der Entwicklung von Mitgliedern des Zentrums.

Soziale Kohäsion in Afrika 

Forschungsbereich A - Konfliktransformation 

Das Projekt identifiziert unterschiedliche Formen von sozialer Kohäsion in Afrika und untersucht welche nationale und internationale Faktoren und Politiken einen Beitrag zu stärkerer sozialer Kohäsion bzw. Prävention sozialer Desintegration leisten können. Es zielt darauf ab, die Wechselwirkungen zwischen sozialer Kohäsion und Entwicklungspolitik zu beleuchten und die Bedeutung von sozialer Kohäsion für Entwicklung in Afrika besser zu verstehen.

Projektleitung: 
Julia Leininger 
Armin von Schiller 
Francesco Burchi 

Projektteam:
Axel Berger 
Florence Dafe 
Charlotte Fiedler 
Erin McCandless 
Karina Mross 
Daniel Nowack 
Michael Roll 
Tekalign Gutu Sakketa 
Ghadafi Saibu 
Armin von Schiller 
Christoph Strupat 
Kasper Vrolijk 
Yabibal Walle 
Christopher Wingens 

Finanzierung:
Bundesministerium für wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit und Entwicklung (BMZ)
Zeitrahmen:
2018 - 2023 / Laufend

Finanzierung:
Bundesministerium für wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit und Entwicklung (BMZ)
Zeitrahmen:
2018 - 2023 / Laufend

Weintere Informationen finden Sie hier.

Avatar Hornidge

Anna-Katharina Hornidge

Beiträge zur Stabilisierung und Entwicklung in Nordafrika und dem Nahen Osten

Forschungsbereich A - Konfliktransformation 


The majority of refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) find themselves displaced for more than five years—either in their own or in neighbouring countries. Of the three durable solutions for these so-called protracted refugee situations—local integration, resettlement in third countries and repatriation—the latter is still considered to be the best option by most stakeholders. Yet, due to the increasing prevalence of protracted conflicts worldwide, voluntary return often is not possible. Thus, as only very small numbers of displaced persons are eligible for resettlement, the most relevant issue for the vast majority of displaced persons is local integration. Even though return and local integration of displaced persons have increasingly featured on the agendas of researchers and politicians in the past few years, effective sustainable solutions for practical implementation are lacking.

In January 2015, BICC started the four-year research project entitled “Protected rather than protracted—Strengthening refugees and peace” as a response to the challenges posed by reintegration respectively local integration of displaced persons and their participation in peace processes. This project is funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) in the framework of its Special Initiative “Fighting the causes of refugee movements, reintegrating refugees”. In the centre of the project is the collection of empirical data from seven regions, their comparative analysis and the elaboration of concrete proposals for action.

Field research will be led by three main questions:

·         What chances and risks can be observed during the reintegration of refugees and IDPs or rather what makes reintegration sustainable and successful?

·         Under which conditions does the participation of refugees and IDPs in peace processes play a key role in the sustainability of their return and peace?

·         How can local integration contribute to the development of host communities and support displaced persons in their current situation?

The dialogue-oriented research will be conducted with refugees, IDPs, decision-makers, experts and representatives of national and international organisations in the following seven regions: Middle East; Eastern Africa; Afghanistan/Iran/Pakistan; Southeast Asia; the Great Lakes region; Upper Guinea Coast; Colombia/Ecuador. Information is collected on-site, in and outside of refugee and IDP settlements, and discussed during workshops with all parties. BICC will draw lessons from the observed practice to develop recommendations for action intended to strengthen displaced persons and peace in the long term.

Please find more information here.

Avatar Hornidge

Anna-Katharina Hornidge

Protected rather than protracted—Strengthening refugees and peace


Forschungsbereich A - Konfliktransformation 


The majority of refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) find themselves displaced for more than five years—either in their own or in neighbouring countries. Of the three durable solutions for these so-called protracted refugee situations—local integration, resettlement in third countries and repatriation—the latter is still considered to be the best option by most stakeholders. Yet, due to the increasing prevalence of protracted conflicts worldwide, voluntary return often is not possible. Thus, as only very small numbers of displaced persons are eligible for resettlement, the most relevant issue for the vast majority of displaced persons is local integration. Even though return and local integration of displaced persons have increasingly featured on the agendas of researchers and politicians in the past few years, effective sustainable solutions for practical implementation are lacking.

In January 2015, BICC started the four-year research project entitled “Protected rather than protracted—Strengthening refugees and peace” as a response to the challenges posed by reintegration respectively local integration of displaced persons and their participation in peace processes. This project is funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) in the framework of its Special Initiative “Fighting the causes of refugee movements, reintegrating refugees”. In the centre of the project is the collection of empirical data from seven regions, their comparative analysis and the elaboration of concrete proposals for action.

Field research will be led by three main questions:

·         What chances and risks can be observed during the reintegration of refugees and IDPs or rather what makes reintegration sustainable and successful?

·         Under which conditions does the participation of refugees and IDPs in peace processes play a key role in the sustainability of their return and peace?

·         How can local integration contribute to the development of host communities and support displaced persons in their current situation?

The dialogue-oriented research will be conducted with refugees, IDPs, decision-makers, experts and representatives of national and international organisations in the following seven regions: Middle East; Eastern Africa; Afghanistan/Iran/Pakistan; Southeast Asia; the Great Lakes region; Upper Guinea Coast; Colombia/Ecuador. Information is collected on-site, in and outside of refugee and IDP settlements, and discussed during workshops with all parties. BICC will draw lessons from the observed practice to develop recommendations for action intended to strengthen displaced persons and peace in the long term.

Please find more information here.

Avatar Schetter

Prof. Dr. Conrad Schetter

Reconciliation and Its Resentments: The Suppression of Justice and Truth Recovery in Germany, Northern Ireland, and Western Balkans   


Forschungsbereich A. Konflikttransformation

In his seminal work, Civilisation and Its Discontents (1930), Sigmund Freud challenges the near-universal espousal of civilisation (die Kultur) as a virtue and social process, while ignoring the great costs and sacrifices that such a project demands. The over-suppression of deep-seated human needs renders the otherwise humanity-serving endeavour a source of unnecessary suffering for those who “fail” to be civilised. The “discontent” (das Unbehagen) or dissatisfaction with such a condition is thus expressed as an earnest call for the reform of civilisation. In the past three decades or so, there has also been a sustained effort to promote “reconciliation” among historical enemies around the globe, not the least by the European Union, whose self-identity as a peacebuilder and model reconciler in regional conflicts has been buttressed by the Nobel Peace Prize of 2012. Yet, there has also been growing resentment among those – not the least within Europe itself – directly affected by the project of reconciliation, whose needs for justice and for truth have time and again been sacrificed in the name of peace and mercy. Like the “uncivilised”, the unreconciled are subject to social pressure to let go or to feel the guilt imposed upon them for “blocking” society from moving forward. As they say in Northern Ireland, “Reconciliation is a dirty word” (McEvoy et al. 2006). Such discontents and resentments with regard to political reconciliation and their sources are the subject of the proposed four-year project. Built upon its principal investigator’s previous and ongoing work on “coming to terms with the past” in different regional contexts, the project takes seriously the lingering “resentments” and “nasty unreconcilability” (Améry 1966: 115) of victims and survivors of atrocities committed in Europe in the last century. It investigates the nature of such resentments at political reconciliation in selected post-conflict European cases. Using process tracing and triangulated comparative historical analysis, the project examines the cases of reunified Germany, post-accord Northern Ireland and the disintegrated former Yugoslavia to theorise on “premature reconciliation” and “false reconciliation” as the twin mutations of the otherwise commendable enterprise that are responsible for lingering resentments of victims and survivors of past atrocities. In terms of impact beyond academic outputs (e.g. in International Journal of Transitional Justice, Journal of Peace Research), the project endeavours to contribute to the discussion on “reconciliation” in Hong Kong where the abuse and misuse of the concept have likewise aroused reservation (Shen 2020).

For more information about the project, please visit: https://cerg1.ugc.edu.hk/cergprod/scrrm00542.jsp?proj_id=12614422&old_proj_id=null&proj_title=&isname=&ioname=&institution=HKBU&subject=H2&pages=1&year=2022&theSubmit=12614422

Avatar Chung 鍾子祺 博士

C.K. Martin Chung 鍾子祺 博士

Laufende Dissertationsprojekte 


James Krull: Trauer mit „Geschichtswucht“ – nationale Gedenktage in Deutschland und Großbritannien seit 1945  (Betreuung: Christine Krüger)
Nationale Gedenktage nehmen eine zentrale Rolle im kollektiven Gedächtnis einer Gesellschaft ein. Als Kristallisationspunkte zeigen sie das Verhältnis eines Staates zu seiner Vergangenheit und damit zu sich selbst; intime, individuelle Emotionen werden öffentlich auf das Kollektiv übertragen und in Ritualform begangen. Ziel des Dissertationsprojekts ist es, eine aktuelle, theoretische gestützte und transnational vergleichende Perspektive auf nationale Gedenktage zu schaffen. Dazu werden die zentralen staatlichen Veranstaltungen anlässlich jährlich wiederkehrender offizieller Gedenktage mit Weltkriegs- oder Holocaustbezug in der Bundesrepublik und Großbritannien seit 1945 untersucht. In einem asymmetrischen Vergleich werden inszenatorische und narrative Praktiken der Geschichtspolitik sowie die jeweilige nationale Prägung des Gedenkakts in den Fokus genommen.
Großbritannien eignet sich als Kontrastpunkt insbesondere aufgrund der offensichtlichen Unterschiede wie der Siegerperspektive und der Monarchie. Es sind aber auch auffällige Gemeinsamkeiten in den Partizipationsstrukturen zu entdecken, die einen Vergleich gewinnbringend erscheinen lassen. Der Untersuchungszeitraum reicht bewusst bis in die Gegenwart, da das junge 21. Jahrhundert bereits neue transnationale Gedenktage, entscheidende Wandlungsprozesse und intensive öffentliche Diskussionen um die Ausrichtung und Ausgestaltung nationalen Trauerns gesehen hat, die nicht außen vor gelassen werden sollen.

 

Dissertationsprojekt von Philomen Mtoi:  Debating Colonial Destructive Administration: The interface between German and Indigenous health systems in North Eastern Tanzania, 1884 -1914 (Betreuung: Christine Krüger)
This study investigates the interface between German health policies and the indigenous health system in North-eastern Africa from 1884 to 1914. It is an attempt to uncover the rich but under research topic in German colonial history by examining the interplay of German and indigenous health systems in North-Eastern Tanzania, in the former German East Africa. Specifically, the study examines Indigenous health system plea to colonization in North-eastern Tanzania, the imposition of German health system and policies during German colonial era in North-eastern Tanzania. Equally, it analyzes the reactions of indigenous people towards German health policy and investigates how these two-health care systems co-existed, conflicted or deviated from each other. The research data will come from oral interviews and archival records. It is expected that this kind of history that will be an outcome of this study will be of benefit to the public, researchers, and scholars interested in researching the history of German health system and medical history in general. Furthermore, the government and other institutions will benefit from this research, as it will chart the degree of co-existence and deviation of the health systems of both German and indigenous and learn how the challenges have been dealt with over time.

 


Dissertationsprojekt von Theresa Gerlach, M.A. (wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin am Lehrstuhl Politische Theorie und Ideengeschichte) - Der ethisch-politisch blinde Fleck agonaler Demokratietheorien (Betreuung: Grit Straßenberger)
Ausgangspunkt des Dissertationsprojektes ist die Annahme, dass demokratisch verfasste Gemeinwesen der sozio-moralischen Fundierung bedürfen. Was bedeutet das für das Projekt agonaler Demokratie? Agonalen Politiktheorien liegt die geteilte Annahme zugrunde, dass die Demokratie konstitutiv auf das öffentliche Austragen von Dissens und Konflikt angewiesen ist. Ethisch-politische Argumente stehen daher aus agonaler Perspektive unter dem Verdacht der Einhegung demokratischen Streits. Das Forschungsprojekt mobilisiert sozio-moralische Ressourcen agonaler, republikanischer und liberaler Ansätze und führt diese zu einer pluralistischen Ethik agonaler Politik zusammen, die die Praxis demokratischen Streitens erst ermöglicht.

 

 

Dissertation project by Wendy Chavez: “Powerful and Powerless: Senses of Justice regarding Conflicts Treatment in community-based Management“ (Supervisior: Conrad Schetter)

My research topic is "Powerful and Powerless: Senses of justice regarding conflict treatment in community-based management." Fieldwork will be carried out in Ecuador from October 2022 to August 2023. The objective is to document and compile the conflicts that communities live within Community-based Mangrove Management and analyze their senses of justice about the way these conflicts are treated.

 

Dissertation project by Elizabeth Mumbi Ndunda: Grassroot Conflict Management. Challenges and Opportunities for Collective Action among Pastoral Communities in Northern Kenya (Second Supervisor: Conrad Schetter)

 

Dissertation project by Gina Chinchilla: “Memory Work in Colombia after the Peace Accord with the FARC-EP Guerilla: Memory Actors and Narratives in Dispute“ (Supervisor: Conrad Schetter)




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