APeCS - Anthropology of Peace, Conflict and Security

APeCS is a research network of the European Association of Social Anthropologists born in 2022 out of the merger between the Anthropology of Security network and the Peace and Conflict Studies in Anthropology (PACSA). The merger took place at the EASA biennial conference in Belfast, a place in itself rich with significance in terms of peace, conflict, and security.

Convenors

Portrait Decleve Livnat Konopny-Decleve is a British Academy International Fellow at The School of Social and Political Science at The University of Edinburgh. She is a political anthropologist working on the Jewish radical left, and on alternative political imagination in Israel/Palestine and abroad. Livnat received her PhD from the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Tel Aviv University (2022), and was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute for International Relations at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (2023).
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Dr. Pascale Schild is a political anthropologist. Her research focuses on disaster government, the politics of reconstruction, state/citizenship, civil society peacebuilding, political solidarity and ethnographic vulnerability. She explores these themes primarily in relation to the disputed territories of Kashmir and the local and transnational Kashmiri freedom struggle.
Pascale holds a PhD from LMU Munich. She was a visiting researcher at the SOAS South Asia Institute, University of London (2021-2024) and is currently based at swisspeace, University of Basel. For her postdoctoral research in Kashmir and with the Kashmiri diaspora in the UK, she received fellowships and grants from the Walter Benjamin Kolleg of the University of Bern and the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF).
Her work has appeared in Citizenship Studies, Peacebuilding and Contemporary South Asia, among other journals and edited volumes. She is the guest co-editor of the special issue “In/Civility in Peace and Conflict” published in Peacebuilding in 2023.

You can contact the network convenors via .

Vision & Mission

Security, peace, and conflict are topics that tend to carry a heavy political, emotional, and ethical baggage. In public debates, such topics often take simplistic forms. We believe that anthropological knowledge has the power to restore complexity where the public debate and policies at large offer one-dimensional perspectives. Therefore, our vision as APeCS builds on the idea that anthropology plays a major role in research, theory-making, and public engagement on issues related to peace, conflict, and security.

The network's mission is to promote the anthropological perspective and ethnographic research on issues related to security and peace & conflict among anthropologists working in Europe. Concretely, APeCS aims to:

Become a member

EASA members can become members of this network. To join the network, please complete this (very short) application form.

If you are not already a member, consider becoming an EASA member.