Unravelling Liberal Interventionism 2019
DOI: 10.4324/9780429507649-9
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Inside-out and outside-in on dealing with the past in Kosovo

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In terms of agency, the literature emphasises how Kosovo's citizens are oppressed by the arrangement and unable to exercise popular sovereignty (Rrustemi, 2019;Visoka & Bolton, 2011;Visoka & Richmond, 2017). Luci and Gusia (2019) and Visoka (2019) have considered how groups such as the Self-Determination Movement and feminist activists contest the power structure through formal practices of resistance. But instead of viewing agency as a capacity to act, a relational perspective shows how citizens can exercise it without formal practices-and how ruling actors may have less than they seem (Adams, 1996;Reed, 2017).…”
Section: Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In terms of agency, the literature emphasises how Kosovo's citizens are oppressed by the arrangement and unable to exercise popular sovereignty (Rrustemi, 2019;Visoka & Bolton, 2011;Visoka & Richmond, 2017). Luci and Gusia (2019) and Visoka (2019) have considered how groups such as the Self-Determination Movement and feminist activists contest the power structure through formal practices of resistance. But instead of viewing agency as a capacity to act, a relational perspective shows how citizens can exercise it without formal practices-and how ruling actors may have less than they seem (Adams, 1996;Reed, 2017).…”
Section: Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Prishtina, at UP, the project was led by sociologist Linda Gusia and her colleagues and tied to a 3‐year‐long collaboration between academic and civil society organisations (including the University Program for Gender Studies and Research, Civil Peace Forum Kosovo [Forum ZFD] and Alter Habitus: Institute for Studies in Society and Culture). Their long years of collaborating under the umbrella of what was known as the Memory Mapping project and a more recently developed InsideOut/OutsideIn framework of analysis (Luci & Gusia, ) aimed to create a critical space for interrogating knowledge and practices surrounding Kosovo's recent history. Specifically, it drew from over 10 research‐based “ateliers” with students to interrogate the historical narratives of events memorialised in various commemorative sites.…”
Section: Ways Of Knowing and Epistemic Justice Or How “We” Came Into mentioning
confidence: 99%