Resilient Communities: Non-Violence and Civilian Agency in Communal War. Cambridge University Press, 2018.
*Winner, 2019 Lee Ann Fujii Award, APSA Interpretivist Methodologies and Methods Group
*Runner-up, 2019 Conflict Research Society Annual Book Prize
Resilient Communities explaines how ethnically, religiously, and socio-economically mixed communities located within areas affected by communal wars in Indonesia and Nigeria prevented killings. Combining evidence collected from more than 200 interviews with residents, community leaders, and former fighters, local scholarly work (in Indonesian), and local newspaper-based event data analysis, this book explains civilian mobilization, militia formation, and conflict escalation. The book's comparison of vulnerable mixed communities and (un)successful prevention efforts demonstrates how under courageous leadership resilient communities can emerge that adapt to changing conflict zones and collectively prevent killings. Resilient Communities includes an analysis of the narratives and practices women employed to prevent the outbreak of communal violence within their neighborhoods, showing how their work, which received little credit, enabled male community leaders to maintain social cohesion and negotiate with militia leaders to prevent attacks.
Reviews
‘In exploring how and why low-intensity episodes of violence organized around religious identities sometimes escalate into full-fledged 'communal wars', this book underlines the dynamic interplay between locals and outsiders, while also highlighting civilian agency under conditions of exceptional duress. With this important and timely study based on extensive fieldwork in Nigeria and Indonesia, Krause succeeds in furthering our understanding of political violence.’
Stathis Kalyvas - Gladstone Professor of Government, University of Oxford
'In this fascinating study, Jana Krause turns conflict studies on its head: rather than only asking why violence breaks out, she asks why violence did not occur in some communities. Based on exceptional fieldwork, this eloquent book points to the power of local leadership and collective agency. In a field of study that can sometimes write individual actors out of the story, Krause's analysis brings people, community, and agency back in. Hers is a remarkable study that has lessons for scholars, students, and policymakers alike.'
Scott Straus - Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of Political Science and International Studies, University of Wisconsin, Madison
‘Krause’s analysis of communal violence in Nigeria and Indonesia makes an important contribution to our understanding of instances when non-violence trumps hatred in ethno-religious conflicts. Her work importantly advances our understanding of how peaceful communities and their institutional capacity emerge, and how people preserve non-violence in the context of a changing conflict zone.’
Kristen Monroe - University of California, Irvine
‘This is an excellent book: precisely the kind of detailed, field-based analysis needed for a deeper understanding of the nature and dynamics of communal conflict. The book sheds an important light on the ways in which populations and communities caught up in war adapt and respond to the exceptional circumstances in which they find themselves. Krause has made an important contribution to the field.’
Mats Berdal - King’s College London
‘Krause’s study offers insights into how civilian agency, institutional capacity, and resilience are enablers to peace. Understanding endogenous structures and capacities, and supporting, rather than replacing them with externally imported models, can become the most effective route to sustainable peace.'
Sukanya Podder Source: International Peacekeeping
‘Krause has collected a great deal of rich data and given us much to think about … well worth reading and contemplating.’
Landon E. Hancock Source: Perspectives on Politics
Krause, Jana, Juan Masullo, Emily Paddon Rhoads and Jennifer Welsh (eds). 2023. Civilian Protective Agency in Violent Settings.Oxford University Press.
More than half the world’s population live in violent settings, such as civil wars, communal conflicts, cities plagued by gang violence, and entire areas governed by criminal organizations. Living exposed to diverse forms of violence, individuals and communities have found innovative—and sometimes counterintuitive—ways to protect themselves and others. Civilian Protective Agency in Violent Settings establishes the study of civilian agency and its protective dimension across various violent settings as a systematic and unified field of research. This book brings together researchers spanning several social science disciplines to study civilian protective agency in different violent settings, including civil war, genocide, communal violence, and organized crime, and in various geographical locations, from Syria to Mozambique, Sri Lanka to Mexico, Iraq to Colombia and Western Europe. The book also offers conceptual foundations, new theoretical insights, and detailed empirics that advance our understanding of civilian protective agency and promote future research on the topic that is comparable, tractable, and cumulative.
Read Introduction
22 January 2024, PRIO, Oslo
Book launch and public discussion on Civilian Protective Agency in Violent Settings (OUP 2023).
Jana Krause, Professor, University of Oslo
Juan Masullo, Assistant Professor, Leiden University
Isak Svensson, Professor, Uppsala University
Eirin Mobekk, Policy Director on Fragility, Department for Partnerships and Shared prosperity, NORAD
Frederik Siem, Head of Unit, Protection and Restoring Family Links, Norwegian Red Cross
Moderated by Louise Olsson, Research Director at PRIO, with Welcoming remarks by Henrik Urdal, the Director at PRIO
Recording available here.