Violence Studies Oxford

About
original berlin pic r kowalski 2016

This network was funded from 2018 to 2021.

The study of domestic and international conflict dominates the humanities and social sciences. Wars are recorded, analysed, and contested through art, literature, history, and beyond. It is only when we consider 'violence' as a separate phenomenon to 'war', 'terrorism' or 'genocide', however, that we are truly able to ascertain how and why it occurs, the elements which contain or constrain it, and factors which determine its nature and intensity.

The external factors and personal idiosyncrasies which drive an individual to commit violence can become lost in the greater narrative of a war or conflict. And the dynamics which shape the nature of any violent attack can only be surmised when we understand violence at a local or individual level. Why, for instance, are some attacks especially brutal, exceed what would be clinically required to take the life of an individual, or venture into what can only be perceived as cruelty? And why are some warring organisations considered barbaric, illogical, or callous whilst others are considered capable of exhibiting the principles of Jus ad Bellum or Jus in Bello?

Violence Studies Oxford was a research network which sought to further our understanding of the phenomenon of violence, challenge assumptions and preconceptions of war, and encourage a collaborative effort to rethink the way in which we discuss conflict. Comparing conflict, on the micro and macro scale, across different periods of time, in various parts of the globe, and through different genres of human record, allows greater scrutiny and understanding of the relationship between the human condition, the environment, and the notion that the individual can in any way be predisposed to violence.

The network focused on bearing fruits from inter-disciplinary research by having a bias towards the hosting of panel events, over single-speaker seminars, to physically bring together scholars to discuss thematic topics across the disciplines, using global, contemporary and historical examples. 

 

Violence Studies Oxford

The study of domestic and international conflict dominates the humanities and social sciences. Wars are recorded, analysed, and contested through art, literature, history, and beyond.

 

Convenor:

Rachel Kowalski

People

Convenors:

Rachel Kowalski (History)

Erica Charters (History)

Adam Brodie (Politics and International Relations)

David Dwan (English)

Events
Past Events

Violence Studies Oxford

violence studies
 
British Imperial Responsibility? (May 2018) 
Reflections on disparate approaches to post-conflict reconciliation and transitional justice: Malaya, Cyprus, Kenya, and Northern Ireland   
Speakers: 
  • Professor David Anderson, University of Warwick 
  • Professor Karl Hack, The Open University 
  • Dr Cheryl Lawther, Queens University Belfast 
  • Dr Iosif Kovras, City University Of London 
 
The Subnational Links between Oil Wealth and Armed Conflict in Colombia (May 2018) 
Paper to provide localized evidence about the mechanisms that may link oil wealth with the use of armed force against civilians by non-state armed groups in Colombia. 
Speaker: Juan D. Gutiérrez-Rodríguez (University of Oxford)  
Guest Respondent: Dr Annette Idler (University of Oxford) 
 
The Micro-Dynamics of Violence (October 2018) 
A 2-day conference with two primary themes: ‘Writing Violence’ and ‘Understanding Violence’.   
Key Note Speakers:  
Professor Richard English (Queen's University, Belfast) 
Professor Stathis Kalyvas (University of Oxford) 
 
The Wrong Kind of Genocide: Anglo-American Newspaper Coverage of Mass Violence in the 1990s (October 2018) 
Speaker: Dr David Patrick, University of the Free State 
 
The Battle of the Bogside (May 2019) 
Dr Simon Prince, Canterbury Christ Church University 
 
'Look Behind You! Reconstructing the Troubles' (June 2019) 
Book Launch – Reconstructions, the Troubles in Photographs and Words (Photo/Poetry book) 
Photographs by Bobbie Hanvey and poems by Steafan Hanvey. 
Live multi-media performance by Steafan Hanvey 
 
'An Army of Tribes: British Army Cohesion, Deviancy and Murder in Northern Ireland’ (June 2019) 
Research Seminar 
Speaker: Dr Edward Burke, University of Nottingham 
 
Violence Studies Oxford – A Research Seminar (June 2019) 
Speaker:  Professor Gavin Schaffer, University of Birmingham 
 
‘Bearing a banner for the IRA?’: The 'Troubles' and the Catholic Church of the United States of America (June 2019) 
Research Seminar 
Speaker:  Dr Maggie Skull,NUI Galway 
 
Call for Participation: Violence Studies (September 2019) 
Call for scholars and DPhil candidates to take part in a regular term-time seminar series. 
 
 
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