2013
DOI: 10.1080/21647259.2013.813178
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From friction to hybridity in Cambodia: 20 years of unfinished peacebuilding

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Cited by 18 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The aforementioned hybridity of the Cambodian political system is thus also characterised by disjuncture. Apparently to be ‘expected in virtually any peacebuilding process pursuing liberal peace’ (Öjendal and Ou , 369), friction is identifiable between the respective rationalities of the global human rights regime and that of Cambodian government lawmakers. Friction, as I have written elsewhere, is also manifest
between what is hallowed as a national culture and tradition of harmonious households, set against a law which has arisen conversely from the disharmonious realities that many women face.
…”
Section: Ideological Logics Of Local Reconciliation In Cambodiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The aforementioned hybridity of the Cambodian political system is thus also characterised by disjuncture. Apparently to be ‘expected in virtually any peacebuilding process pursuing liberal peace’ (Öjendal and Ou , 369), friction is identifiable between the respective rationalities of the global human rights regime and that of Cambodian government lawmakers. Friction, as I have written elsewhere, is also manifest
between what is hallowed as a national culture and tradition of harmonious households, set against a law which has arisen conversely from the disharmonious realities that many women face.
…”
Section: Ideological Logics Of Local Reconciliation In Cambodiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The deep-seated Cambodian political elite, argue Öjendal and Ou (2013, 367), 'impeded the smooth transition to full liberal democracy' and tried to create new arrangements for more 'indigenous powerinduced, negotiation-based, consensus politics' (374). This resistance, as found by Öjendal and Ou (2013), was not motivated by a desire to prolong conflict but rather by an ideological rejection of liberalism. Ideological opposition has also been enacted by locals against the state.…”
Section: Motivations Behind Local Resistancementioning
confidence: 95%
“…In many post-conflict societies this turns troublesome when national political elites remain divided and confrontational, in spite of a formal peace agreement. Such polarised national political dynamics frequently trickle down into local politics, and in those cases the space for localised peace initiatives appears severely restricted (Öjendal & Ou 2013). This problem is all the more pressing in societies which have a history of top-down political leadership, including (former) communist regimes, neopatrimonial systems, and other strongly hierarchical political structures (Mannergren-Selimovic 2010).…”
Section: Challenges To the Local Turnmentioning
confidence: 99%