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Researching Spaces of Violence Through Family

Harker, C.

Authors

C. Harker



Contributors

C. Harker dlvt78@durham.ac.uk
Editor

K. Hörschelmann
Editor

T. Skelton
Editor

Abstract

This chapter uses families’ spatial practices as a lens for exploring violence. Geographical understandings of violence and conflict often focus on international terrorism and domestic governance. This can create situations where certain contexts, often in the global South, are apprehended solely as spaces of death, destruction, and demise. Far less attention is paid to the experiential and everyday dimensions of violence or the context that coconstitutes it. This chapter uses the family as a lens for exploring violence and lived experience. While the family can be a site of gendered, generational, and patriarchal violence, this chapter argues that family relations need to be understood in more complex ways. In particular, geographical practices of family can do other kinds of work that enable people to endure and resist violence and conflict. These arguments are given substance through a detailed exploration of Palestinians living through, resisting, and enduring Israeli settler-colonial violence.

Citation

Harker, C. (2016). Researching Spaces of Violence Through Family. In C. Harker, K. Hörschelmann, & T. Skelton (Eds.), Conflict, violence and peace (1-16). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-4585-98-9_20-1

Online Publication Date Jul 12, 2016
Publication Date Jul 12, 2016
Deposit Date Oct 10, 2016
Publisher Springer Verlag
Pages 1-16
Series Title Geographies of children and young people
Book Title Conflict, violence and peace.
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-4585-98-9_20-1
Keywords Family - Palestine - Geopolitics - Colonialism - Global South - Resistance - Endurance
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1665462