"By drawing on feminist IR work and critically engaging with notions of everyday peace, Helen Berents convincingly argues for widening our understandings of political engagement and questions narratives that situate young people as inevitably ‘problems’ rather than agential actors facing problems of conflict and violence alongside the wider community. This careful, ethnographically informed research offers rich, engaging details of the lived experiences of young people in the Colombian conflict and highlights how youth have navigated insecurity while demonstrating resilience and resistance."
Lesley Pruitt, Monash University, Australia and author of Youth Peacebuilding: Music, Gender & Change
"Empirically rich and conceptually sophisticated, Helen Berents’ latest contribution on young people’s thoughtful and creative navigations of insecurity develops important insights into peacebuilding in the midst of conflict and violence. More broadly, it is exemplary not only of what can be brought to light by taking children and youth seriously as agents of change but also how to sustain affirmation of both their agency and relative powerlessness in ways that hold them productively in tension."
J. Marshall Beier, Professor of Political Science, McMaster University
"Young People and Everyday Peace is a groundbreaking contribution to (re)populating IR that integrates ethnographic fieldwork with a focus on the meanings of peace constructed by people in their everyday lives. Berents listens carefully to the perspectives of young people on the margins of a complexly violent society. Drawing on feminist and embodiment theories, she centers young people’s experience, knowledge, and aspirations, showing how they imagine and forge an "embodied-everyday-peace-amidst-violence." Berents’ book is a must-read for anyone interested in how peacebuilding can be more genuinely inclusive, locally responsive, just and realistic. This book comes at just the right time for scholars and practitioners concerned about Colombia’s peace process."
Siobhan McEvoy-Levy, Professor, Butler University
"Young People and Everyday Peace by Helen Berents explicitly engages with how knowledge over terms such as peace and conflict are produced. The book is a powerful argument that peace exists amidst violence and can be found within the everyday routines and practices of the people who live in insecure and dangerous communities. It questions the liberal peace model but extends its critique to the ‘critical’ peace literature, as they both marginalize the voices of those who live amongst violence and whose daily practices and routines constitutes a struggle for peace. Berents convincingly argues that it is necessary to ‘repopulate’ understandings of peace and violence with the lived and embodied experience of those who are most affected by these terms. It is refreshing to have an account that takes the totalizing critiques of liberal peace seriously and then acts on it by seeking to understand the inter-relationship of violence and peace at the micro-level."
Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding