Contributors

Contributors

Isabel Bramsen is director of peace and conflict studies and associate senior lecturer at the Department of Political Science, Lund University. In her research she applies a micro-sociological framework to study diplomacy, peace processes, and dialogue to non-violent resistance and violence in a variety of contexts in the Middle East, Europe, South America, and Asia. She is author of the forthcoming book The Micro-Sociology of Peace and Conflict, to be published by Cambridge University Press. She is a member of Nordic Women Mediators, chairman of the Council for International Conflict Resolution (RIKO), and mediator at the Centre for Conflict Resolution (CFK).

Niklas Eklund is a professor of politics and public administration at the Department of Political Science, Umeå University. He currently leads a multi-disciplinary research project on critical flows and infrastructure in Sweden, and he is a member of the Grey Zone research network at the University of Tromsø, Norway. His recent work has included chapters in international volumes on security, leadership, and geopolitics, focusing not least on Russia. Some of his previous work can be found in Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management, Earth's Future, Policing & Society, Journal of Urban Affairs, Polar Journal, Journal on Baltic Security, and Eurasian Daily Monitor.

Jörgen Elfving is a former Swedish army officer and an expert in military issues related to the Soviet Union and Russia. Since retiring from the army, he has worked as an author, translator, and consultant for various Swedish governmental bodies and other agencies.

Jenny Hedström is an associate professor in war studies at the Swedish Defence University. Her research concerns the relationship between households, gender, and warfare; gender, transitions, and peacebuilding; women's activism and resistance; and ethics and methods in research on war. Her research is focused on Myanmar, and her work has appeared in journals such as International Feminist Journal of Politics, Women's Studies International Forum, International Studies Quarterly, Critical Military Studies, and Peacebuilding, among others. She has co-edited (with Elisabeth Olivius) the forthcoming book Waves of Upheaval: Political Transitions and Gendered Transformations in Myanmar (NIAS Press).

Anna Jarstad is a professor of political science at the Department of Government, Uppsala University. She leads the research network Varieties of Peace (varietiesofpeace.net). Jarstad is co-editor of From War to Democracy: Dilemmas of Peacebuilding (Cambridge University Press, 2008) and the special issue “Introducing hybrid peace governance: impact and prospects of liberal peacebuilding,” Global Governance 18(1) (2012). Her research focuses on the nexus of democratization and peacebuilding in war-torn societies, especially in Afghanistan, Cyprus, Kosovo, and South Africa. She has led a quantitative data collection on power-sharing and peace agreements (IMPACT) with Desirée Nilsson and Ralph Sundberg.

Jason Klocek is an assistant professor in the University of Nottingham's School of Politics and International Relations, a faculty affiliate of the University of Notre Dame's Center for the Study of Religion and Society, and a senior researcher with the US Institute of Peace's Religion and Inclusive Societies team. His research and teaching interests primarily lie at the intersection of religious violence and repression. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Journal of Peace Research, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, and other scholarly and media outlets.

Manuela Nilsson is an associate professor and chair of the Peace and Development Unit at Linnaeus University in Sweden. Her research and publications focus on peace processes and post-conflict peacebuilding, particularly in Central and South America. Nilsson was actively involved in the Nicaraguan post-conflict reconstruction process and was trained in conflict transformation by the UN and the Organization of American States. Her current research focuses on police community relations as well as the role of the military in post-peace-accord Colombia.

Elisabeth Olivius is an associate professor in political science at Umeå University, Sweden. Her research explores peacebuilding, post-war development, women's activism, and migration and diaspora politics with a focus on Myanmar, and she coordinates the Varieties of Peace research network. Her work has appeared in journals such as the International Feminist Journal of Politics, Conflict, Security & Development, Journal of Refugee Studies, and European Journal of Development Research, among others. She has co-edited (with Jenny Hedström) the forthcoming book Waves of Upheaval: Political Transitions and Gendered Transformations in Myanmar (NIAS Press).

Nilanjana Premaratna is a lecturer in international politics at Newcastle University, UK. Her research takes place at the intersection of the arts, politics, and peacebuilding. Her first book, Theatre for Peacebuilding: The Role of Arts in Conflict Transformation in South Asia (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), examines the peacebuilding approaches and practices of three theatre groups from Sri Lanka, Nepal, and India. Her current research explores how different art forms – specifically film, theatre, music, and literature – contend with past violence, present conceptualizations of peace, and imagined futures in Sri Lanka.

Johanna Söderström is a senior lecturer at the Department of Government, Uppsala University. She received her PhD in political science from Uppsala University. Her research interests include peacebuilding, state-building, and democratization, as well as methodology. In particular, she has focused on former combatants, taxation, election violence, life history interviews, and focus groups. Her work has appeared as monographs with Manchester University Press and Routledge, and in journals such as Journal of Modern African Studies, International Studies Review, Qualitative Research, Political Studies, Journal of Development Studies, Civil Wars, and Administration & Society.

Malin Eklund Wimelius is a senior lecturer, an associate professor, and currently the deputy head of the Department of Political Science, Umeå University, Sweden. At present, she is involved in a research project on Swedish crisis management, focusing on critical flows. Her earlier research includes a four-year interdisciplinary project, which she led, on radicalization and local resilience; migration and integration policies; the role of police officers in international peacebuilding missions; and Islamist political thought.

Malin Åkebo is a researcher and lecturer in peace and conflict studies at the Department of Political Science, Umeå University. Her research focuses on peace processes and post-war developments, including the politics and dynamics of ceasefires, victor's peace and illiberal peacebuilding, and post-war state formation in Asia, including Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and the Philippines. She is the author of Ceasefire Agreements and Peace Processes: A Comparative Study (Routledge, 2016) and co-editor of the special issue “Exploring varieties of peace” in Journal of Peacebuilding & Development (2021).

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