Bottom-up Change in Frozen Conflicts: Transnational Struggles and Mechanisms of Recognition in Western Sahara
Fernandez-Molina, I
Date: 25 January 2019
Article
Journal
Review of International Studies
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP) for British International Studies Association
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This article proposes a typology of causal mechanisms whereby transnational relations of
recognition constitute conflict actors in frozen conflicts. While the agency of an emerging
conflict actor manifests itself in ‘struggles for recognition’ motivated by experiences of
‘disrespect’, responses from different significant others vary ...
This article proposes a typology of causal mechanisms whereby transnational relations of
recognition constitute conflict actors in frozen conflicts. While the agency of an emerging
conflict actor manifests itself in ‘struggles for recognition’ motivated by experiences of
‘disrespect’, responses from different significant others vary in terms of motivations and
pathways (mechanisms of recognition). Adapting Honneth’s tripartite division, the
typology distinguishes between four forms of recognition; thin cognitive recognition,
‘respect’/rights, ‘esteem’/difference and ‘love’/empathy. Three transnational corrections
are made in order to include transnational relations of recognition, non-state actors and
unstructured social-relational forms of international/transnational recognition. The
typology is applied to the conflict of Western Sahara, which has been reshaped by the rise
of internal Sahrawi pro-independence groups (based inside the territory annexed by
Morocco) as an increasingly relevant conflict actor, with their identity shifting from
victims to human rights activists to activists involved in an unsolved conflict. This
identity and social-status formation has been the product of transnational recognition
from three significant others, i.e. the annexing state (Morocco), the contested state-inexile
(SADR) and the international community. The overall effect of intermingling
recognition processes, including various instrumental initiatives deprived of mutuality,
has been increased struggle and conflict complexity rather than ‘recognitional peace’.
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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