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    <title>Cultures &amp; Conflits | Cairn.info</title>
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    <updated>2026-03-27T00:00:00+01:00</updated>

                <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_141</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        (In)stability of the Political Game
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2026/1 n° 141)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2026-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2026-03-10T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2026-03-27T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>This issue of <i>Cultures &amp; Conflits</i> explores a specific
operative grammar: what are the political and social consequences
of the fixation on stabilising and promoting “resilience”? What
mediations are exhausted when technical architectures, whether in
the form of security apparatuses or indicators, replace democratic
deliberation? How do precautionary policies become government
doctrines that normalise exceptions, externalise costs, and
ultimately restrict the scope for contestation? Often, to prevent
such contestation, precautionary policies as governing doctrines
invoke impending catastrophes and rely on preventive policies and
predictive instruments that, despite relentless technological
acceleration, are unable to deliver on their promises. The result
is a governmentality of unease or anxiety that fosters autocratic
tendencies. By mapping these shifts across several domains –
security, diplomacy, expertise, the city and academic knowledge –
the contributions in this issue examine the impact of the promise
of continuity on politics and how the invocation of resilience
often obscures the collective invention of change.</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 16| Editorial
                                            |  Emmanuel-Pierre Guittet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 41| Political Legitimation in Crisis: January and the Anticipation of
Political Change
                                            |  Amin Allal
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 71| ‘Too Big to Fail’: Diplomatic Common Sense and Political
Stabilization before the Escalation into War in Ethiopia
(2014-2020)
                                            |  David Ambrosetti
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 101| In the Twilight of Leaks: Internal Dissidence and the Struggle for
Control at the International Monetary Fund During the Greek Crisis
                                            |  Pierre Pénet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 116| From C4I to AI: Security and Surveillance Technologies from the
Athens 2004 to the Paris 2024 Olympic Games and Their Legacy
                                            |  Minas Samatas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 138| Ambivalences and contradictions of new standards applying to the
Social Sciences and Humanities
                                            |  Lionel Obadia
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 146| Detroit: A City ‘Steeped in Stories’?
                                            |  Sandrine Revet,  Miriam Périer
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_139</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Governing Internal Threats
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2025/5-6 n° 139-140)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-conflits-2025-5-6?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-11-17T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2026-01-23T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Modern democratic societies are often assumed to be pacified.
Schematically, this implies that the realms of war and enmity are
pushed outward, while within the internal order there remain only
citizens and a single legitimate adversary: the criminal. Yet even
a brief look at contemporary conflicts reveals the fragility of
this division. It is these zones of tension that this issue seeks
to explore, at the intersection of political science and history.
It focuses on specific situations in which states confront forms of
dissent that blur the boundaries between the criminal and the
enemy. Drawing on cases ranging from the early nineteenth to the
mid-twentieth century and from Argentina to the United States,
including Spain, Switzerland, and France, the aim is to offer a
social history of the “government of threat”: the multiple ways in
which those who act and speak on behalf of the state respond to
attempts to subvert the social and political order they seek to
protect.</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 13| Governing Internal Threats
                                            |  Laurent Bonelli,  Alexandre Rios-Bordes
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 34| Policing Political Order: Genesis and Institutionalization of
Political Intelligence in Nineteenth-Century France
                                            |  Laurent Bonelli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 52| The Metamorphoses of the Enemy: Suppressing Support for Carlism in
France under the July Monarchy
                                            |  Alexandre Dupont
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 77| From One Enemy to Another: Political Violence in Argentina at the
Turn of the 20th Century
                                            |  María Laura Reali
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 106| Judges and Pistoleros. Social Violence, Political Violence and the
Crisis of the Restoration Regime in Spain (1917–1923)
                                            |  Arturo Zoffmann Rodríguez,  Rubén Pérez Trujillano,  Laurent Bonelli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 128| The Threat in the Masses: ‘Modern’ War, Social Cohesion, and the
Deployment of Security Surveillance (United States, 1910s-1930s)
                                            |  Alexandre Rios-Bordes
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 150| Mechanisms and Limits of Ennemisation in Swiss Democracy:
Controversies Surrounding State Protection in the Interwar Period
                                            |  Tamara Constantin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 165| The Transnational Force of International Law: Questions of
Temporality. Interview with Luc Walleyn
                                            |  Luc Walleyn,  Didier Bigo,  Kheda Djanaralieva
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_138</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        On the Symbolic Force of International Law: the Case of Gaza
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2025/4 n° 138)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-conflits-2025-4?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-07-01T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2025-07-02T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>International justice, although imperfect, constitutes a
powerful symbolic instrument against the law of the strongest. The
thematic dossier of this issue 138 examines the scope and
limitations of this concept in light of three seismic events in
international justice during 2024 concerning Israeli policies in
Israel/Palestine: the International Court of Justice’s order of
January 29, 2024, recognizing a “plausible” risk of genocide in
Gaza; the same court’s advisory opinion of July 19, 2024, on the
illegality of colonizing Palestinian territories; and the issuance
on November 21, 2024, by the International Criminal Court of an
arrest warrant against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
for crimes against humanity. The contributions illuminate these
developments while avoiding two pitfalls: the purported “realism”
that asserts law is powerless without force, and its symmetrical
counterpart, which contends that law can do nothing against force.
This issue thus offers an original and reflective contribution on
international justice as it undergoes a historic test.</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 18| The Symbolic Force of International Law in Question
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 41| On the Symbolic Force of International Law: The Case of Gaza
                                            |   PARISS Collective
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 49| International Criminal Court and International Court of Justice:
Judging Netanyahu and Putin
                                            |  William A. Schabas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 63| On the Israeli Occupation of Palestinian Territory
                                            |  Julia Grignon,  Olivier Corten,  Anne Lagerwall
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 83| “From Surveillance of Sporting Events to Surveillance at the 2024
Olympic and Paralympic Games: Security Triumphant?”
                                            |  Laure Laref,  Michaël Laref
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 106| Uncontrolled Violence. the Logics of ‘Anti-Muslim’ Violence during
the Central African Republic’s Crisis (2013-2014)
                                            |  Mathilde Tarif
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 127| Paris, the Zone, and Their Conflicts: At the Origins of the French
Leftspace
                                            |  Jérôme Beauchez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 141| Trumpist Academics: An Interview with David Swartz by Niilo Kauppi
                                            |  David Swartz,  Niilo Kauppi
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_137</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Academic Freedom
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2025/3 n° 137)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-conflits-2025-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-06-04T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2025-06-05T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[Against the backdrop of the wars in Ukraine and Palestine, and the
rise of authoritarianism and neo-despotism based on a principle of
(automated) suspicion that is transforming the rule of law,
academic freedom is increasingly under attack, even in liberal
democracies. This first issue of 2025 presents a collective
reflection on academic freedom in different contexts and under
various types of constraints, based on the authorsâ own
experiences. It brings together texts specially written for this
issue and others, translated and contextualized, which have been
already published in English in <i>Political Anthropological
Research on International Social Sciences</i> (PARISS) -
<i>Cultures et Conflits</i>â sister journal. The aim of this issue
is to analyze the dynamics at the root of this deterioration in
the teaching and research professions, in particular those that
bear witness to the âmisery of the world of <i>homo
academicus(es)</i>â, and to encourage collective reflection on
the strategies of resistance that need to be developed.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 14| Editorial
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 49| Biographical Reflections On Academic Freedom&#160;–&#160;Part One
                                            |  PARISS Collective
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 94| Biographical Reflections on Academic Freedom&#160;–&#160;Part Two
                                            |  PARISS Collective
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 104| Academic freedom as a global issue. The story of an awakening at
the intersection of several worlds
                                            |  Jérôme Heurtaux
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 136| Artificial intelligence in the Israeli war in Gaza. History of the
production of liberal mass violence. Based on an investigation by
Yuval Abraham
                                            |  Mathias Delori,  Christophe Wasinski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 143| ‘Life always wins, for those who know how to go with the flow.’
About <i>Prisonnière à Téhéran</i>, by Fariba Adelkhah
                                            |  Miriam Périer
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_135</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        35 Years on the International Paths
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2025/2 n° 135-136)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-conflits-2025-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-05-22T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2025-05-22T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>It is with great pride that we publish this special anniversary
issue of <i>Cultures &amp; Conflits</i>, celebrating 35 years of
publication. Starting with the genesis of the journal and the
definition of a certain number of parameters, as described in the
initial round table, we have chosen to publish texts by authors who
have honoured us by supporting the journal, or by suggesting
previously unpublished works, untranslated into French, which we
have decided to make available to our readers. We have decided to
go back to the origins of both our inspiration and our
international collaborations. What emerges is not so much a single
theoretical line but rather convergent attitudes towards research,
with each expert willing to listen to what other disciplines have
to say, without seeking to replace them; a discussion on change,
counter-powers, and practices that may or may not respect rights
and freedoms; a relational and processual ontology; and a way of
betting on the link between the social sciences, the humanities and
the arts.</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 6 to 8| Taking account
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 16| 35 years already!
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 34| The Prolongation of Conflicts: Comparative Approach to War Systems.
Round Table
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 59| Generational Conflicts and National Celebrations: Analysis and
Perspectives
                                            |  Norbert Elias
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 78| The Catastrophe Quota: Trouble after the Cold War
                                            |  John Mueller
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 92| Protesting <i>Viva Voce</i>
                                            |  Charles Tilly
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 93 to 115| Transnational Protest
                                            |  Sidney Tarrow
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 131| The Global City: Strategic Site/New Frontier
                                            |  Saskia Sassen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 133 to 145| Reinventing Europe: A Cosmopolitan Vision
                                            |  Ulrich Beck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 162| “Criminologists Have Never Done Anything about the Crime Problem”
                                            |  Howard S. Becker,  Didier Bigo,  Laurent Bonelli,  Fabienne Brion
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 178| Walls As Support for Politics: the Chacón Brigade in Chile
(1989-1997)
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 192| An Artist Without a Gallery
                                            |  Sanja Iveković,  Rada Iveković
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_134</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Political crises through the lens of activist pathways in the Arab
world and its diasporas
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2025/1)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-conflits-2025-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-02-27T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2025-04-11T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[Que font les crises politiques aux individus ? Comment les
affectent-elles ? Le présent dossier dialogue avec les travaux sur
le protagonisme et ceux sur les bifurcations et les reconversions
militantes, pour étudier les incidences de tels moments sur les
trajectoires biographiques. Qu’il s’agisse de militants
«&#160;aguerris&#160;» ou d’individus ordinaires politisés dans et
par l’évènement, les articles croisant histoire, sociologie et
science politique, permettent tout aussi bien de saisir ce qui se
joue dans ce moment de fluidité, que d’étudier comment celui-ci se
traduit par la suite dans des réarrangements biographiques partiels
ou globaux. Dans une perspective microsociologique attentive aux
expériences, aux subjectivités et aux trajectoires, c’est le
«&#160;je&#160;» du participant engagé dans la crise, et son
inscription dans un «&#160;nous&#160;» collectif qui se prolonge
au-delà de l’événement, qui sont mis en question ici. En entamant
un dialogue entre la «&#160;petite&#160;» et la
«&#160;grande&#160;» histoire, c’est la crise elle-même et son
épaisseur sociale que nous proposons d’appréhender autrement.
&#160;]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 11| Editorial
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 26| Political crises through the lens of activist pathways in the Arab
world and its diasporas
                                            |  Matthieu Rey,  Laura Ruiz de Elvira
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 27 to 44| Living and speaking the crisis. What narrative reconstruction does
to the trajectory of Adnan Saad al-Din
                                            |  Matthieu Rey
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 63| An eventful life. A biographical approach to the Syrian conflict,
from revolution to exile
                                            |  Léo Fourn
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 84| Asma, a “revolutionary woman”. The Syrian conflict through the
prism of politicization processes, mobility and the
professionalization of activism
                                            |  Laura Ruiz de Elvira
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 106| Crisis in Morocco, mobilisation in the diaspora: politicisation as
a transnational biographical process
                                            |  Christoph H. Schwarz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 112| Béatrice Hibou, Mohamed Tozy, <i>Tisser le temps politique au
Maroc. Imaginaire de l’État à l’âge néolibéral</i>, Paris,
Karthala, “Recherches internationales”, 2020, 656 p.
                                            |  Franck Duchesne
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 138| Operation Independence (Tucumán, 1975-1976)
                                            |  Ana Sofía Jemio
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_133</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2024/2)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-conflits-2024-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-01-17T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2025-01-17T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>This new issue of <i>Cultures &amp; Conflits</i>is an
opportunity to list the topics that the Journal intends to address
over the coming months. Among them, we would like to investigate
the way in which predictive narratives about different types of
disaster became a way of governing through terror, fear or simply
day-to-day concerns. The articles gathered here have these
priorities at heart, through a contribution on the French Ministry
of the Armed Forces’ Red Team project, and expand on long-standing
concerns about : the reconfiguration of war, in this case on the
impact of the widespread use of new technologies, notably the
smartphone, on the battlefield, and the redefinition of
distinctions between combatants and non-combatants; the struggle
for equality, based on a contribution on the Muslim intellectual
space in France; the ‘troublesome dead,’ to quote the title of one
of our recent publications, considered here through an
investigation into extra-judicial executions in Colombia, and a
specific type of ‘disappeared,’ the <i>falsos positivos</i> (false
positives). The issue is also supplemented by a review of the
recent literature on the counter-insurgency legacy of the Cold War
in the Global South.</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 14| Editorial
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 29| Anticipating or securitizing the future? A critical analysis of the
French ‘Red Team’
                                            |  Éric Sangar
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 71| The smartphone on the battlefield: the new ecology of war
                                            |  Matthew Ford
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 99| Over-ideologised individuals? Sociology of the Islamic intellectual
space in France
                                            |  Karim Souanef
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 124| The False Positives of Soacha in 2008: A Cynical Discourse Embedded
in a Network of Criminal Practices
                                            |  Antonio Luis López Martínez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 127 to 143| Under the Sign of Endocolonization: The Counterinsurgency Legacy of
the Cold War in the Global South
                                            |  Christophe Wasinski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 149 to 152| Tribute to Tony Bunyan (1941-2024)
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_131</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Policing the Ruling Elites
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2024/1 n° 131-132)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[automne/hiver 2023]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-conflits-2024-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-07-25T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2024-07-15T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>From the anti-corruption system in Mexico to the dynamics of
insurrection in Burkina Faso, and from the transnational
circulation of reform instruments to the reproduction of a
class-based justice system in Walloon Belgium, in addition to
French associations’ fight against white collar crime, and the
issues and uses of journalistic revelations in the age of leaks,
the articles in this issue bring to light - and raise questions
about - the diversity of actors, practices and social spaces whose
interrelationships help to ‘police ruling elites’ in the
contemporary world.</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 17| A “vigilant civil society” in the face of ruling elites’
illegalisms?
                                            |  Anthony Amicelle
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 46| “Blood and heads” or “Houses, cars and cash”? Anti-corruption
definitional struggles in Mexico
                                            |  Romain Busnel,  Hélène Combes
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 72| Making anti-corruption organizations a lever for state reform?
Importing and domesticating the Open Government Partnership (OGP)
in Argentina and Tunisia
                                            |  Quentin Deforge
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 95| Anti-corruption associations, civil society and the State
                                            |  Pierre Lascoumes
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 97 to 114| The legal dimension of the work of anti-corruption associations in
dealing with criminal elites
                                            |  Céline Laronde-Clérac
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 153| From the National School for Magistrates to Anticor. Back to four
decades of anticorruption at the intersection of the judicial,
associative and political worlds
                                            |  Éric Alt,  Anthony Amicelle,  Benjamin Loveluck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 160| Fighting against a failed democracy. Resisting corruption
                                            |  Éric Alt
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 161 to 190| Making the white collar illegalisms visible. Investigative
journalism and social reactions in an age of big data
                                            |  Numa Gagey
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 191 to 226| Inform and punish? Pandora Papers, an unprecedented non-scandal
                                            |  Anthony Amicelle,  Jean Bérard,  Killian Chaudieu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 227 to 251| Working class economic illegalisms against those of the ruling
elites. Commercial monopolies and food plundering in Burkina Faso
                                            |  Vincent Bonnecase
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 253 to 285| Unlawful hunters and ‘outlaw’ poachers. Differential management of
illegalisms and incentives to play with the law
                                            |  David Scheer
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_130</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Engagements at work and transnational capitalism
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2023/3 No 130)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2023-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-02-15T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2024-02-16T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[Analyses of global capitalism present at times transnational
corporations as anonymous and invincible giants that have wiped out
any kind of citizenship at work. The articles in this special issue
of Cultures &amp; Conflits, rather, present a variety of forms of
(dis)engagement at work, from trade unionism to corporate
volunteering, from whistle-blowing to disinvestment. By paying
attention to the empirical thickness of social relations within the
sphere of production, as well as to the normative infrastructures
and political processes that condition them, the special issue
argues for a political sociology of engagement at work. It shows
that the forms of engagement, as well as disengagement, are forged
at the intersection of the labour process, localized legal and
political orders, and the social propertiesof workers. In such
perspective,the “local” and the “global” are less preexisting
realities than ways of articulating these three dimensions.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 21| Engagements at work and transnational capitalism
                                            |  Pierre Rouxel,  Karel Yon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 23 to 41| “We Are Rio Tinto”: Involvement and management of the workforce in
a “sustainable mine”
                                            |  Doris Buu-Sao
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 68| What a “citizen” transnational corporation does to citizens. The
managerialization of employee commitments in Mexico
                                            |  Pierre Rouxel,  Karel Yon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 88| Ryanair in Belgium. Conquering industrial citizenship
                                            |  Bruno Bauraind,  Jean Vandewattyne
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 115| The recompositions of a form of “docker citizenship”. The fight
against the circulation of weapons by a collective of Genoa port
workers
                                            |  Julien O’Miel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 127| Amazon and Mercado Libre, two perspectives on warehouse work. An
interview with Tamara L. Lee, Maite Tapia and Maurizio Atzeni
                                            |  Tamara L. Lee,  Maite Tapia,  Maurizio Atzeni,  Pierre Rouxel,  Karel Yon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 136| The muscle of capital
                                            |  Mohamed Slim Ben Youssef
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 146| “Life is hidden in the details!” Interview with Judith Perrignon on
the use of archives in Victor Hugo has died and Our civil war
                                            |  Judith Perrignon,  Antonia García Castro
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_129</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Varia
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2023/2 No 129)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2023-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-10-30T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2023-10-30T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[From the inner workings of international negotiations, to the study
of judicial responses to the Italian authorities’ refusal to rescue
migrants at sea, to the analysis of mobilizations by supporters of
Jair Bolsonaro calling on the army to undo the result of the
election he had just lost, this issue of Cultures &amp; Conflits
brings together texts dealing with heterogeneous subjects, but
which have in common their resonance with topical issues, on which
they provide an alternative reading. It also presents a collective
reflection on the writing of the social sciences, through which
globalization tends to produce a homogenization of forms and modes
of reasoning, to the detriment of different cultural traditions and
ways of thinking.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 9| Editorial
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 40| The art of writing social sciences: Disrupting the current politics
of style
                                            |  PARISS Collective
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 58| Value creation in international negotiations. Horizontal
transactions in the launch of peace operations and in the making of
the Law of the Sea
                                            |  Yves Buchet de Neuilly,  Natália Frozel Barros
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 59 to 74| The responsibility of Italian public authorities for border
violence against migrants
                                            |  Maria Elisa D’Amico,  Paolo Gambatesa
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 75 to 97| The square against the ballot box: Bolsonarist protests in Rio de
Janeiro’s presidential election
                                            |  Marie-Hélène Sa Vilas Boas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 108| Interrogating official discourse on the nuclear bomb: a comparative
reading of <i>Toxic</i> and <i>Rethinking Nuclear Choices</i>
                                            |  Anaïs Maurer
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 112| The international government of capitalism
                                            |  Médéric Martin-Mazé
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_127</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        (Re)negotiating citizenship. Islam, immigration, mobilizations for
equality
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2023/1 No 127-128)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2023-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-03-24T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2023-03-24T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[How can we understand struggles for equality within organizations
mobilized to defend immigrants and Muslims? After more than half a
century of “postcolonial” immigration, and the problematic
association between immigrants, Muslims and temptations towards
“separatism” or “communitarianism”, these mobilizations can take
many different paths. They can, on the one hand, be part of
strategies of conformation to the republican model of citizenship,
or be defined in rupture with it; they can, on the other hand, be
carried out on the basis of classic repertoires of action of
industrial societies, or on the basis of counter-expertise. The
intersection of these two variables makes it possible to draw a
space for these “mobilizations for equality”, based on several
empirical cases.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 17| (Re)negotiating citizenship. Islam, immigration, mobilizations for
equality
                                            |  Éric Savarese
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 38| “We have become laïcité experts”. The inaudible Republican
legitimism of Muslim representatives
                                            |  Margot Dazey
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 39 to 58| The postcolonial as a means of mobilization. Strategic divergences
in anti-racism in France
                                            |  Roman Vareilles
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 59 to 79| Republican universalism put to the test of politics. Challenging
the representative status of minority candidates in municipal
elections
                                            |  Samir Hadj Belgacem
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 81 to 100| Being young, Muslim and from Brussels: the impact of discrimination
on an ostracized identity
                                            |  Corinne Torrekens,  Nawal Bensaid,  Dimokritos Kavadias
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 122| Tunisian activists in exile between ‘anti-regime struggles’ and
‘immigrant struggles’
                                            |  Mathilde Zederman
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 140| Study the military, understand the humanitarian. Warlike
interpretations of aid by Brazilian soldiers in Haiti
                                            |  Izadora Xavier do Monte
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_126</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Development aid: A window on politics
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2022/2 No 126)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2022-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-08-25T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2022-09-19T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[This special issue proposes to re-politicize the analysis of
development aid policies, conceiving them as a vantage point for
observing the multi-situated making of public policies, the
internationalized exercise of power and the meanings of politics.
These three lines of research are located at the intersection of
political sociology, international relations, and public policy. In
this perspective, the authors of this special issue share a strong
background in political science, a taste for dialogue between
literatures and their use of ethnographic and sociological methods.
From Ethiopia to Mexico, via the headquarters of UN institutions,
the contributions to this special issue aim to describe, in
concrete terms, the discourses and practices of development
assistance in the daily lives of the agents who make them,
revealing the underlying logics of power and interrogating the
intentional or unintentional effects that they have on social and
political change.<br />
Cover picture: Kirundo, Burundi, 2013 (photograph by Marie Saiget)]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 18| Introduction
                                            |  Jacobo Grajales,  Marie Saiget
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 40| Reforming international development organizations through the
“stakeholder model”. The effects of a double contradictory movement
on transnational contestation
                                            |  Auriane Guilbaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 59| With or without coca? Conflictual path towards a corporatist
appropriation of development policies by the growers of the Tropic
of Cochabamba, Bolivia
                                            |  Romain Busnel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 81| From post-conflict to development, a matter of time? Timing of
public action and end of conflict in Côte d’Ivoire
                                            |  Marie Saiget,  Jacobo Grajales
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 101| Beyond Technicization. Development projects, “expert” careers and
the legitimization of authoritarian practices in Ethiopia
                                            |  Mehdi Labzaé
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 131| Thinking about development as a myth: beliefs, commitments and
(in)coherences of cooperative engagement in Chiapas, Mexico
                                            |  Raphaëlle Parizet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 133 to 151| The cartographic violence at the core of the Indigenous-State
relationship in Argentina
                                            |  Alberto Preci
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 158| Public policies to capture diaspora resources
                                            |  Hadrien Holstein
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_125</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Militia regimes: Western interventions and economies of violence in
contemporary civil wars
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2022/1 No 125)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2022-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-07-18T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2022-07-18T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[Based on extensive research in Latin America, Afghanistan, Iraq,
Mali and Burkina Faso, this issue focuses on the effects of Western
interventions on the structuration of militia regimes and local
economies of violence. By studying militia devices, the articles
question mechanisms of population governance and Western practices
of war. The special issue thus studies the role of the
international in forming the military capital of militias, that is
their ability to organize collective violence, to impose modes of
governance, and to construct new local hierarchies that brutally
transform societies.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 20| Militia regimes and transnational government in civil wars
                                            |  Arthur Quesnay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 49| From Forced Displacement to Self-Defense: Counterinsurgency
Techniques and Rural Development Policies during the Global Cold
War in Latin America
                                            |  Pamela Colombo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 69| Militia Rule in Afghanistan: Imaginary Anthropology, the
Transnational Economy of Violence and State Fragmentation
                                            |  Adam Baczko,  Gilles Dorronsoro
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 93| The Myth of the Sahwa Militia Model: American Presence in the
Kirkuk Governorate of Iraq (2003-2011)
                                            |  Arthur Quesnay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 113| A Transnational Economy of Violence and the Empowerment of Militias
in Northern Mali
                                            |  Denia Chebli
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 138| The Dividends of the “War on Terror”: Milicianization, States, and
International Intervention in Mali and Burkina Faso
                                            |  Tanguy Quidelleur
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 158| Who is “Policing for Britain”? The Daily Work of Port and Security
Agents at Dieppe’s Border
                                            |  Héloïse Grard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 161 to 164| The social turn in international organisations
                                            |  David Ambrosetti
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_123</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        War and counterterrorism
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2021/3 No 123-124)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2021-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-03-23T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2022-03-28T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 9| Editorial
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 19| War and counterterrorism
                                            |  Didier Bigo,  Laurent Bonnefoy,  Bruno Charbonneau,  Marielle Debos,  Mathias Delori,  Clara Egger,  Emmanuel-Pierre Guittet,  Jean-Paul Hanon,  Raùl Magni-Berton,  Antoine Mégie,  Christian Olsson,  Anastassia Tsoukala,  Simon Varaine,  Christophe Wasinski,  Sharon Weill
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 35| Mimetic rivalry: A matrix of the war on terror and its discursive
strategies?
                                            |  Didier Bigo,  Laurent Bonnefoy,  Mathias Delori,  Anastassia Tsoukala,  Christophe Wasinski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 37 to 65| Do military interventions cause “terrorism”? The utility of
quantitative analysis for critical security studies
                                            |  Mathias Delori,  Clara Egger,  Raùl Magni-Berton,  Simon Varaine
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 82| From the “war on terror” to endless wars: The co-production of
violence in Afghanistan, Mali and Chad
                                            |  Bruno Charbonneau,  Marielle Debos,  Jean-Paul Hanon,  Christian Olsson,  Christophe Wasinski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 93| Counterterrorism as a pretext: Returning to Operation Sirli and
French foreign policy
                                            |  Didier Bigo,  Jean-Paul Hanon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 103| The impact of the “war on terror” on justice
                                            |  Emmanuel-Pierre Guittet,  Antoine Mégie,  Sharon Weill
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 121| Terror on trial: An ethnography in French courts
                                            |  Sharon Weill
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 135| Centrifugal and centripetal dynamics in contemporary armed
conflict: The reconfiguration of the ‘war machine’?
                                            |  Christian Olsson
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 152| Towards the de-reification&#160;of “interest” in the study of
conflicts
                                            |  Thomas Lindemann
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 171| Between the licit and the illicit: Human mobilities, markets and
the militarization of controls in the post-bipolar world
                                            |  Angelina Peralva,  Vera Telles
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 173 to 212| Imagining the possibility of nuclear war as a coping device: The
role of visual popular culture from 1950 to the present
                                            |  Benoît Pelopidas
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_122</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Sex, law and migrations. Institutionalizing trafficking
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2021/2 No 122)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2021-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-11-02T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2021-11-08T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 17| Introduction
                                            |  Mathilde Darley
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 46| “Coming here is not free!”: Nigerian sex workers negotiating to
cross external and internal French borders
                                            |  Prune de Montvalon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 65| Between cooperation and conflict: On “trustworthy cooperation”
between police and counseling centers for victims of human
trafficking
                                            |  Anne Dölemeyer,  Julia Leser
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 93| Pimps on trial
                                            |  Gilles Favarel-Garrigues,  Lilian Mathieu
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 122| Between law and culture: Sexual exploitation in the court room
                                            |  Mathilde Darley
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 140| Repairing sexual exploitation. The compensation of human
trafficking victims in France
                                            |  Milena Jakšić,  Nadège Ragaru
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 173| Carceral politics as gender justice? The “trafficking of women” and
neoliberal circuits of crime, sex, and rights
                                            |  Elizabeth Bernstein
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 175 to 197| Football clubs and the making of community: A microhistory of
Turkish immigrants in France and Germany (2005-2012)
                                            |  Pierre Weiss
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 201 to 206| The mechanisms of asylum as captured by space and history&#160;
                                            |  Frédéric Salin
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_121</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        The troublesome dead. The political government of dead bodies
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2021/1 No 121)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2021-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-08-02T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2021-08-09T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>This special issue brings together five case studies to analyze
the political treatment of dead bodies deemed “problematic”, due to
their number or the conditions of their demise. They may be the
bodies of victims of mass crimes, of terrorists killed in the
course of their attacks, or bodies buried in graves that may be
either hidden or exposed, according to their nationality. They have
in common that they pose a problem for nation-state authorities,
who cannot easily deal with such bodies: some may be absent,
untraceable or poorly identified; others, on the contrary, are
present but are ‘unwanted’ to the point that they are denied a
grave or may only receive a discreet one. The different
contributions gathered here describe the collective politicization
of these problematic corpses – but above all, they show its limits:
because these bodies have been considered as “vile”, their
treatment never becomes the issue of a major controversy.</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 14| The troublesome dead. The political government of dead bodies
                                            |  Milena Jakšić,  Nicolas Fischer
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 34| “Judging the dead?” Ethnography of terrorism trials in France
                                            |  Antoine Mégie
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 50| Death and terror. Funerals of Islamist terrorists in France:
principle of equality versus exclusionary practices
                                            |  Lisa Carayon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 51 to 72| Deaths that disturb: clandestine spaces of disappearance and
necropower in Mexico
                                            |  Sabrina Melenotte
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 97| The cannibal state. Rumours of trafficking in exhumed bones in Peru
                                            |  Dorothée Delacroix
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 99 to 121| Let none remain unknown: the national topography of burial sites in
Jerusalem
                                            |  Thomas Richard
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_119</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        What kind of political sociology for studying the global? The work
of Yves Dezalay
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2020/3 No 119-120)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2020-3?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-03-09T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2021-03-15T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 16| Introduction
                                            |  Grégory Daho,  Antoine Vauchez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 38| Thinking about imperialism with field theory
                                            |  Antoine Vion,  François-Xavier Dudouet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 39 to 65| Transitional justice, a crossroads-world. Contribution to a
sociology of international professions
                                            |  Delphine Griveaud,  Sandrine Lefranc
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 93| The “African” bar in Paris: Between big bang on the market for
corporate law and imperial threads
                                            |  Sara Dezalay
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 113| Legal affairs: Yves Dezalay and the construction of the law and the
state
                                            |  Mikael Rask Madsen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 149| Tricks to doing global investigations: Readings, uses, and debates
of/about Yves Dezalay’s sociology of the international
                                            |  Didier Bigo,  Afranio Garcia,  Laurent Jeanpierre,  Ron Levi,  Johanna Siméant-Germanos,  Grégory Daho,  Antoine Vauchez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 181| Strategical violence and self-defense in the Basque Country
                                            |  Caroline Guibet Lafaye
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 183 to 200| In search of European democracy. The Treaty on the Democratization
of the Governance of the Euro Area (T-DEM) as an experience of
interdisciplinary engagement and transnational reflexivity.
Interview by Hager Ben&#160;Jaffel with Antoine Vauchez
                                            |  Hager Ben Jaffel,  Antoine Vauchez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 203 to 214| Making the environment hostile: Controlling and repressing with
sound, tear gas and “non-lethal” projectiles
                                            |  Christophe Wasinski
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_118</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Territories of secrecy: Confidentiality and inquiry in the plural
worlds of security
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2020/2 No 118)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2020-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-01-14T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2021-01-21T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 17| Territories of secrecy: Confidentiality and inquiry in the plural
worlds of security
                                            |  Grégory Daho,  Emmanuel-Pierre Guittet,  Julien Pomarède
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 19 to 36| Refusing defeatism in the face of secrecy: Research strategies for
the social sciences of the international
                                            |  Florent Pouponneau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 37 to 69| Ethnography and diplomatic-military secrecy: Reflections on
participant observation of NATO counterterrorism
                                            |  Julien Pomarède
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 87| Gender, fieldwork, and access to secret information in the domains
of defense and armament
                                            |  Catherine Hoeffler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 108| The grey zone: Mutations of secrecy at the Canadian and US borders
                                            |  Karine Côté-Boucher,  Ariane Marie Galy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 128| Migration policy through the prism of symbolic rewards. The case of
Turkish bordercrats
                                            |  Shoshana Fine
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 148| Working with the unknown of the self and of others. Interview with
Chowra Makaremi on Her film hitch: An Iranian story
                                            |  Chowra Makaremi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 153| Daniel Bultmann, <i>The Social Order of Postconflict Transformation
in Cambodia. Insurgent Pathways to Peace</i>, Lanham, Lexington
Books, 2018, 182&#160;p.
                                            |  Adélaïde Martin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 154 to 155| Nathalie Duclos, <i>Courtiers de la paix. Les vétérans au cœur
du</i> statebuilding <i>international au Kosovo</i>, Paris, CNRS
Éditions, 2018, 344&#160;p.
                                            |  Valérie Rosoux
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_117</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        The meaning of action. Framing disputes and strategic interactions
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2020/1 No 117)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2020-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2020-07-22T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2020-07-23T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 10| The meaning of action. Framing disputes and strategic interactions
                                            |  Comité éditorial
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 33| Struggles of meaning, frames, and lexical grammar in Revolutionary
Syria (2011-2012)
                                            |  Matthieu Rey,  Laura Ruiz de Elvira
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 35 to 59| Independence marches in Warsaw: Reconfigurations and
transformations of the Far Right in Poland since the 2000s
                                            |  Frédéric Zalewski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 78| The NGO-ization of popular resistance in Post-Second Intifada West
Bank (2005-2017)
                                            |  Antoine Garrault
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 96| Set things on fire or sneak past unnoticed? Resistance strategies
in Lampedusa and Calais
                                            |  Camille Guenebeaud,  Annalisa Lendaro
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 97 to 114| Qur’anic schools, Jihad, and “terrorist” violence in Northern
Nigeria
                                            |  Marc-Antoine Pérouse de Montclos,  Camille Noûs
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 128| From direct violence to slow violence. Agent Orange and cluster
bombs: The legacy of the Second Indochina War
                                            |  Anne Xuan Nguyen
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_CC_116</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Sciences in danger, journals in struggle
                    | Cultures &amp; Conflits
            (2019/4 No 116)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-cultures-et-conflits-2019-4?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2020-06-26T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2020-06-29T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 10| Why has <i>Cultures &amp; Conflits</i> (mostly) ceased to operate?
                                            |   Comité de rédaction
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 18| Why French academic journals are protesting
                                            |   Collectif des revues en lutte
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
    </feed>
