Making sense of peace in exile? Displaced people’s intersectional perceptions of peace

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Date

2024-11-12

Authors

Edler, Hannah
Krause, Ulrike
Segadlo, Nadine

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Abstract

This article enquires into how people with lived experiences of conflict and displacement make sense of peace in exile. For the analysis, the article focuses on displaced individuals in Kenya and Germany and theoretically complements the varieties of peace framework, situated knowledge and an intersectional approach. Findings reveal multifaceted perceptions revolving around the three dimensions of structural, collective and individual peace, outlooks shaped by gender-specific experiences, religious beliefs and familial relations. Interlocutors associate structural peace with experiences of sociopolitical, economic and legal conditions in exile, collective peace with support systems and harmonious interactions in communities, and individual or inner peace with desires for and feelings of happiness, hope and healing. Although analytically distinguishable, these three dimensions are inherently intertwined in interlocutors’ daily lives due to their lived experiences prior to and once in exile.

Description

This article is published under a Creative Commons CC-BY license.

Keywords

Peace, Displacement, Conflict, Situated knowledge, Intersectionality

Citation

Edler, H., Krause, U., & Segadlo, N. (2024). Making sense of peace in exile? Displaced people’s intersectional perceptions of peace. Peacebuilding, 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1080/21647259.2024.2418690