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Call for Publications

Publication: Journal of Pacifism and Nonviolence (JPN)
Date: 2023
Deadline: Ongoing

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The new Journal of Pacifism and Nonviolence (JPN) is now open for
manuscript submissions as well as proposals for special issues,
special sections and forums. JPN especially welcomes potential
contributions from authors from the Global South. Guidelines and
instructions can be accessed under the “Submit Article” tab on the
journal’s webpage:
https://brill.com/view/journals/jpn/jpn-overview.xml

The Journal of Pacifism and Nonviolence is committed to
methodological pluralism and welcomes research employing either
theoretical or empirical methods. It is rooted in politics and
international relations (including security studies, social movements
studies, political theory, peace studies, terrorism studies,
strategic studies, and resistance studies) and is open to
contributions grounded, for example, in historiography, sociology,
anthropology, psychology, economics, geography, philosophy, and
religious studies.


The Journal of Pacifism and Nonviolence aims to:

- analyse and critique the considerable range of pacifist positions
(political, ethical, religious, etc.) and approaches to nonviolence
in both theory and practice, reflect on historical and more recent
case studies (small- or large-scale), reflect on influential
activists and social movements, and compare the effectiveness of
violence and nonviolence as well as the effectiveness of the huge
variety of tactics of nonviolent dissent;

- interrogate central accusations against pacifism: that it
reinforces the status quo; that it is predominantly white and middle
class; that it cannot be sustained in the most challenging scenarios;
that it is philosophically incoherent or morally impoverished, etc.;

- discuss tensions between pacifism (as an ethical position) and
nonviolence (as a form of political action) and consider criticisms
of both;

- consider, compare, and discuss theories and practices of pacifism
and nonviolence (including those that have emerged in the Global
South and/or that may employ vocabularies different from those
employed in the Global North) and/or that may find expression through
art/aesthetics;

- study the multiple (political, social, economic, psychological,
cultural, philosophical, etc.) direct and indirect consequences of
violence and militarism and of nonviolent action and pacifism;

- examine the place of violence and nonviolence in the history of
political thought, in the arguments of core thinkers (e.g., Hobbes,
Kant, Tolstoy, Gandhi, Schmidt, Arendt, Bourdieu, Butler), in those
of overlooked or marginalised thinkers, as well as in political
ideologies (e.g., anarchism, fascism, liberalism, feminism), in some
of their principal concepts (e.g., masculinity, democracy,
sovereignty, utopia, prefiguration, colonialism), and in relation to
themes examined in cognate scholarship (e.g., technology, emotions,
temporality, identity);

- analyse the relationship between nonviolence/violence and gender,
race, and other social identities; for example, how racism and
patriarchy may be tied to the legitimation of violence and how racial
and gender identities, norms, and/or privilege intersect with the
practice and strategy of nonviolent action;

- explore and debate the diverse religious/spiritual roots of
pacifism and nonviolence past and present: Christian, Buddhist,
Muslim, Indigenous, etc.;

- debate the role of violence in popular culture past and present,
the often lukewarm reception of pacifist ideas by the broader public,
and the interests these serve;

- assess the potential for not only nonviolent resistance but also
nonviolent policies of governance (such as in public order
maintenance, policing, crime management, and counterterrorism),
nonviolent practices of protection (such as unarmed civilian
protection and zones of peace), and practical proposals to move away
from institutions that rely on violence (such as “trans-armament”,
demilitarisation, and nonviolent civilian-based defence);

- re-examine predominant assumptions in international relations
theory and practice about terrorism, the international order, “just
war”, etc.;

- develop more precise conceptualisations of violence and
nonviolence, reflecting on the exact nature of violence (e.g.,
institutional violence, property damage, racism, gendered constructs)
and on the point at which direct action becomes violent;

- identify and debate methodological challenges in researching
pacifism and nonviolence, articulate pacifist critiques to research
ethics, and reflect on pedagogies of pacifism and nonviolence. 


We have also set up a Google Groups mailing list, the Pacifism and
Nonviolence Research Network, for researchers to exchange ideas and
information about potential research projects covering the thematic
remit of JPN. All interested researchers are welcome to subscribe:
https://groups.google.com/g/pnrn


Contact:

Alexandre Christoyannopoulos, Editor-in-Chief
Journal of Pacifism and Nonviolence
Department of International Relations, Politics and History
Loughborough University
Loughborough (United Kingdom)
Email: a.christoyannopou...@lboro.ac.uk
Web: https://brill.com/view/journals/jpn/jpn-overview.xml




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