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Between Past and Future

Foto: Susanne Buckley-Zistel

An Assessment of the Transition from Conflict to Peace in Post-genocide Rwanda

The Rwandan genocide of 1994 was a prime example for the negative impact of manipulation and propaganda discourses which incited a large section of the Hutu population to kill approximately 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu. The project asked if and how today, more than a decade after the genocide, the antagonistic relationships between the parties to the conflict have changed and whether sustainable peace is possible in the future. The overall object of analysis was thus the process of conflict transformation in Rwanda. Against this backdrop, it analysed the impact of various peacebuilding discourses, leading to two objectives: 

Objective 1: Development of a framework for the analysis of conflict transformation

Even though peacebuilding has been central to peace and conflict studies for some time, the question of how the transformation from war to peace can be assessed is rarely ever asked, let alone discussed. The theoretical objective of the project was therefore to develop a framework for the evaluation of conflict transformation processes in post-conflict societies. To this end, the project took a lead from contemporary studies on the construction of enemies in discourse. It analysed if and how enmity can be ‘un-constructed’, i.e. reduced discursively. 

Objective 2: Assessment of the impact of peacebuilding discourses on conflict transformation in Rwanda

In Rwanda in 1994, the impact of enmity discourses and hate speech made it possible for people to murder their own community members and sometimes even relatives. Against this backdrop, it can be assumed that discourses on inclusion, coexistence and reconciliation lead to the opposite effect of transforming the divided society so that sustainable peace becomes a possibility. The project examined to what extent this is the case in postgenocide Rwanda. It analysed various peacebuilding efforts by internal and external agents in order to reveal what discourses about dealing with the past they promote, how these discourses impact on the relationship between Hutu and Tutsi and whether they lead to a long-term transformation of the conflict.

To this end Between Past and Future analysed the unification discourse of the Rwandan government, discourses about national commemorations and remembering, local discourses about the past, the national transitional justice discourse based on the village tribunals Gacaca as well as the role of the international community in shaping these processes. It concluded that rather than leading to conflict transformation many of the discourses produce and reproduce the antagonistic relationship, standing in the way of future peace and security. The following shall discuss each of these aspects in turn.

Projektleitung: Prof. Dr. Susanne Buckley-Zistel
Förderung: Deutsche Stiftung Friedensforschung
Laufzeit: 2003-2006

Publications 

Nation, Narration, Unification. The Politics of History Teaching after the Rwandan Genocide. Special Issue on Reconciliation in Rwanda. International Journal of Genocide Research, Volume 11, Number 7, pp. 31-53 (2009).

We are Pretending Peace: Local Memory and the Absence of Social Transformation and Reconciliation in Rwanda. In: After Genocide: Transitional Justice, Post-Conflict Reconstruction, and Reconciliation in Rwanda and Beyond (edited by Philip Clark and Zachary D. Kaufman). New York: Columbia University Press 2009, pp. 153-171 (2009). URL:http://www.aftergenocide.com/table-of-content.php

Between Past and Future. An Assessment of the Transition from Conflict to Peace in Post-Genocide Rwanda, Forschung DSF No. 15, Deutsche Stiftung Friedensforschung (DSF), Osnabrück 2008. URL: http://www.bundesstiftung-friedensforschung.de/publikationen/forschung.html

Gewählte Amnesie. Die soziale Dimension von Erinnern und Vergessen nach dem Völkermord in Ruanda, in: PERIPHERIE Nr. 109/110, 28. Jg. 2008, pp. 131-147.

Frieden Entwickeln? Eine kritische Analyse der Strategien der Internationalen Gebergemeinschaft zur Friedenskonsolidierung in Ruanda, in: S+F (25. Jg.) 2/2007, pp. 77-81.

Ethnographic research after violent conflicts: personal reflections on dilemmas and challenges. In: Journal of Peace, Conflict & Development 10, March 2007, pp. 1-9. URL: http://www.peacestudiesjournal.org.uk/docs/FIELD%20WK%20Ethnographic%20research%20after%20violent%20conflict%20FINAL%20EDIT.pdf

Dividing and Uniting: The Use of Citizenship Discourses in Conflict and Reconciliation in Rwanda. In: Global Society, Volume 20, Number 1, January 2006, pp. 101-113.

In-Between War and Peace: Identities, Boundaries and Change after Violent Conflict. In: Millennium: Journal of International Studies, Vol. 35, No. 1, 2006, pp. 3-21.

Remembering to Forget: Chosen Amnesia as a Strategy for Local Coexistence in Post-Genocide Rwanda. In: Africa: The Journal of the International African Institute, Volume 76, Number 2, 2006, pp. 131-150.

„Die Wahrheit heilt“? Gacaca-Tribunale und Friedenskonsolidierung in Ruanda, in: Die Friedens-Warte, 80 (2005) 1-2, pp. 113-129.

The Gacaca Tribunals in Rwanda: Community Justice? (Dokumentation der Tagung „Civil Society and Civilian Crisis Management: Enhancing Cooperation and Coherence by Multi Level Dialogues“ vom 2.-4. Februar 2007 im Evangelischen Johannesstift Berlin, veranstaltet von der Evangelischen Akademie Iserlohn und der Plattform Zivile Konfliktbearbeitung), 2007, pp. 1-4. URL: http://www.konfliktbearbeitung.net/downloads/file831.pdf

Living in the Shadows of Genocide. In: Index on Censorship, Vol. 34, No. 2, 2005, pp. 43-47.