1. Beyond violence: towards a more nuanced understanding of ceasefires; 2. Redefining ceasefires in civil war; 3. Ceasefires in the Syrian context; 4. Different types of ceasefires; 5. How ceasefires affect rebel governance; 6. How ceasefires affect citizenship and property rights; 7. How ceasefires affect aspects of the sovereign state; 8. Ceasefires: order amid violence; Appendix 1. List of interviews; Appendix 2. English translation of Homs ceasefire agreement; Appendix 3. English translation of Busra al-Sham ceasefire agreement; Appendix 4. English translation of al-Waer ceasefire agreement.
Uses original evidence and first-hand interviews to demonstrate how ceasefires serve as tools for wartime order and statebuilding.
Marika Sosnowski is an Australian lawyer, a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne Law School and Research Associate with the German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA) in Hamburg. Her primary research interests are in the fields of critical security studies, local/rebel governance and legal systems. Her geographical area of specialisation is the Middle East, particularly Syria. Her PhD dissertation was awarded the 2020 Syrian Studies Association Dissertation Prize.
'This important book analyzes the complex relationship between
conflict dynamics, political order, and governance by zooming in on
the political, societal, and strategic impact of ceasefires in the
context of the Syrian civil war. It offers a nuanced, original
analytical prism through which to better understand civil wars.
Essential reading for both scholars and policymakers.' Benedetta
Berti, Head of Policy Planning – NATO
'Redefining Ceasefires makes a ground-breaking contribution to
scholarship on ceasefires and state-building. Based on
hard-to-collect data from the Syrian war, it presents a novel way
to look at ceasefires by analysing them as types of wartime order.
The book is of very high interest to both peace researchers and
practitioners.' Sara Hellmüller, Geneva Graduate Institute
'Sosnowski makes a pathbreaking contribution to scholarship on
civil wars by showing how ceasefires are not mere lulls in
fighting, but instead shape wartime orders and even enable new
forms of violence. Carefully theorized and powerfully illustrated
with original data from Syria, this book is a must-read for
students of conflict and practitioners in the field of conflict
resolution.' Wendy Pearlman, Northwestern University
'This is the most interesting scholarly work on Syria I've read in
years. Marika Sosnowski's outstanding analysis of primary documents
and interviews shows how ceasefires - commonly understood as the
first step towards peace - easily become a tool to reframe
structural and systemic violence in the context of a power
imbalance.' Bente Scheller, Heinrich Böll Foundation
'… a must read for scholars researching civil wars, peacekeeping,
state-building, regime-repression, and Syria.' Benjamin Tkach,
International Peacekeeping
'This passionately argued book is an important contribution to
policy debates on how ceasefires alter the course of civil wars …
and a vital guide for scholars and policy makers alike.' Kevin
Mazur, Perspectives on Politics
'This book is a very welcome addition to the specialized
literature. It represents an important study for those trying to
understand how local governance is constructed, maintained, and
legitimized in armed conflict. I am indeed convinced that its
findings will be of use beyond the Syrian context, informing
strategies of engagement with local actors and also serving
policymakers when negotiating ceasefires.' Ezequiel Heffes,
Articles of War
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