Professor Gearoid Millar

Professor Gearoid Millar
Professor Gearoid Millar
Professor Gearoid Millar

MA, PhD

Chair in Peace and Conflict Studies

Accepting PhDs

About
Email Address
g.millar@abdn.ac.uk
Telephone Number
+44 (0)1224 273238
Office Address

Edward Wright Building, F21

School/Department
School of Social Science

Biography

My work focuses on the local experiences of international interventions for peace, justice, and development in post-conflict states.

In most of my past work (between 2007 and 2015) I used an ethnographic approach (see Routledge 2014) to examine how local individuals and communities understand, experience, and evaluate the impacts of projects planned, funded, and administered by international actors.

This form of research provides a detailed account of the often unseen and usually unpredicted effects that international interventions for peace, justice, and development produce or inspire in senstive post-conflict states, as well as the responses among local actors on the ground.

My research to date has focused on the case of Sierra Leone, but many of the dynamics I have discussed for this case are clearly replicated across a diverse range of other settings.

My theoretical contributions regarding the generation of hybrid peace structures in the Journal of Peace Research (2014), the friction between international actors and local settings in International Peacekeeping (2013), and, most recently, the complex nature of peace and conflict systems in Peacebuilding (2020) and the Journal of Peace Research (2021), are applicable to many different contexts and forms of intervention. 

Please see my Research and Publications pages for further information.

Qualifications

  • PhD Social Science 
    2010 - Syracuse University 
  • MA International Peace and Conflict Resolution 
    2006 - American University, Washington DC 

Memberships and Affiliations

Internal Memberships

Head of Sociology (2019-present)

Member of the School Executive Committee

Research Impact Lead for the Department of Sociology

Plagiarism Officer for the School of Social Science

Member of the School of Social Science Internationalization Committee

Member of the School of Social Science Post-Graduate Committee

 

External Memberships

I have been an active member of the International Studies Association (ISA) for over 10 years and have served in various administrative roles, including, from 2016 to 2020, as the Chair of the Peace Studies Section.

I currently serve on the Editorial Board of both Civil Wars and Peacebuilding

As of April 2021 I have  peer reviewed articles for the following journals:

  1. African Affairs (3)
  2. Africa Today
  3. Alternatives
  4. American Political Science Review;
  5. Cambridge Review of International Affairs
  6. Civil Wars
  7. Conflict Resolution Quarterly (2)
  8. Conflict, Security & Development (2)
  9. Cooperation and Conflict (7)
  10. Critical Studies in Media Communications
  11. Development and Change
  12. Economy and Space
  13. Ethnic and Racial Studies (4)
  14. European Journal of International Security
  15. Global Policy; Human Rights Review
  16. International Journal of Transitional Justice (4)
  17. International Peacekeeping (4)
  18. International Studies Quarterly
  19. International Studies Review
  20. Journal of Comparative Politics
  21. Journal of Contemporary African Studies
  22. Journal of International Political Theory
  23. Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding (3)
  24. Journal of Modern African Studies (2)
  25. Journal of Peacebuilding and Development (3)
  26. Journal of Peace Research (6)
  27. Land Use Policy
  28. Media, War & Conflict
  29. Memory Studies (2)
  30. Peace and Conflict Studies (3)
  31. Peace and Conflict: The Journal of Peace Psychology
  32. Peacebuilding (2)
  33. Political Geography
  34. Politics and Religion
  35. Review of International Studies (3)
  36. Rural Sociology
  37. Sage Open
  38. Security Dialogue
  39. Social Anthropology
  40. Social Problems
  41. Society and National Resources
  42. Stability Journal
  43. Third World Quarterly (5)
  44. Third World Thematics (2)
  45. Transitional Justice Review (3)

Latest Publications

View My Publications

Research

Research Overview

My research interests concern international conflict and peace, transitional justice, and processes of peacebuilding and development.

I am primarily focused on studying the local experiences of international projects in transitional states and assessing how projects planned, funded and administered by international actors in post-conflict settings are experienced by local people. My first monograph outlined a methodology for conducting this kind of research  (Routledge 2014), and additional volumes have developed the approach further (Palgrave 2018, Routledge 2019).

Related to these methodological projects, I have also develop theoretical approaches to understanding and conceptualizing these interactions between 'international' and 'local' actors. In an edited volume (Routledge 2016) myself and a number of colleagues forward the notion of friction as a key conceptual tool for this exploration, and my more recent work explores the complex nature of these interactions (2020, 2021).

My current research continues to develop these themes. First, I continue, based on earlier efforts, to develop the potential for Ethnographic Peace Research as an evaluation tool for practitioners. Second,  I am focusing on a number of complex cases of global-local interaction to continue to collect empirical data regarding these dynamics. And third, I am examining 21st Century Challenges to Peace.

Research Areas

Accepting PhDs

I am currently accepting PhDs in Sociology.


Please get in touch if you would like to discuss your research ideas further.

Email Me

Sociology

Accepting PhDs

Research Specialisms

  • International Development
  • War and Peace Studies
  • Development in Africa

Our research specialisms are based on the Higher Education Classification of Subjects (HECoS) which is HESA open data, published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

Current Research

AMBITION AND AMBIVALENCE: 21st CENTURY CHALLENGES TO PEACE

In 2018-2019 I was awarded a Leverhulme Research Fellowship to start this new project, which is ongoing.

The field of Peace Studies faces significant obstacles in responding to challenges such as climate change, demographic shifts, mass migration, and declining Western influence. These obstacles undermine the field’s traditional normative ambition to contribute to peace and generate ambivalence regarding its ability to tackle future conflict.

This project examines the balance between ambition and ambivalence in Peace Studies. It does so via a mixed-method approach assessing data collected from academics, students, policymakers, and practitioners and reflecting on the past, present, and future state of the field and its capacity to theorize, research, and provide solutions for future conflicts. The first outputs from this product, reflecting on the complex challenges the field faces and how we might respond, were published in Peacebuilding (2020) and the Journal of Peace Research (2021)

 

ETHNOGRAPHIC PEACE RESEARCH (EPR)

Since late 2015 I have been working to consolidate an Ethnographic Peace Research (EPR) agenda in Peace Studies.

Following a workshop funded by the Independent Social Research Foundation (ISRF) at the University of Aberdeen in July 2016 I  co-edited a book titled "Ethnographic Peace Research: Approaches and Tensions" (Palgrave 2018), a Special Issue of International Peacekeeping on EPR as a methodology published in late 2018, and a further volume titled "Engaging Ethnographic Research" (Routledge 2019).  In addition, I have continued this work with  a number of articles regarding EPR for policy engagement in Cooperation and Conflict (2018), the benefits of long-term fieldwork for peace and conflict studies research in International Peacekeeping (2018), and very recent articles on trans-scalar EPR in both Peacebuilding (2021) and the Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding (2021).

Along with other members of informal international research network that has been involved in this project, I am now working to develop a research agenda and submit research proposals to utilize, test, and calibrate this methodology to meet the needs of contemporary peace research challenges. This effort has recently been focusing specifically on Indigenous Monitoring and Evaluation processes in everyday peace systems.

 

Just Food? Mutual Exchange Network on Just Food System Transitions

Funded from April 2021 to September 2022 by the British Academy, this action-research project established a mutual exchange network on just food system transitions including food system actors from four usually unconnected geographies. It provided a space for dialogue, exchange and learning between local food system actors working and advocating for justice in their respective food systems. It included organisations and movements linked to the right to food, environment, and agroecological transitions, as well as international advocacy NGOs working for larger global policy change. The primary goal was to establish a trans-scalar (local, national, international) and interregional (Europe, South America, Southern Africa, West Africa) network of actors engaged in food system transitions, which included the experiences of many who have yet to be given the attention they deserve in debates about sustainable development. 

This project has recently concluded and the research team is currently working on two different outputs for leading academic journals.

 

Supervision

I am interested in supervising PhD students with an interest in post-conflict justice, peacebuilding, and development in any region of the world or particularly students with an interest in using ethnographic methods to evaluate international intervention in transitional states. 

I am currently supervising Ruben Schneider in his ESRC funded PhD research focusing on the local impacts and experiences of securitized conservation projects in sub-Saharan Africa and the potential conflict or peace promoting dimensions of such interventions.

Funding and Grants

Recent Grants:

2021 - British Academy 'Just Transitions' Research Grant, £15,203

2020 - Research Impact Support Award, £2,000

2018 - Leverhulme Research Fellowshiop, £46,848

2017 - University of Aberdeen GCRF-IPPF, £9,050

2016 - Independent Social Research Foundation, £4,999

2016 - Principal's Interdisciplinary Fund, £1,225

2015 - Principal's Interdisciplinary Fund, £1,163

2013 - The Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland Research Grant, £2,420    

2013 - Principal’s Excellence Fund, £500                                 

2012 - Radboud University Nijmegen, Faculty Fieldwork Grant, €10,235

Teaching

Teaching Responsibilities

Undergradaute

Together with my colleague, Dr Luisa Gandolfo, I teach the 4th year option course titled "Between Peace and Conflict: Societies in Transition". 

Post-Graduate Programme:

I currently co-ordinate two MSc programmes, the first an MSc in Peace and Conflict Studies, and the second an MSc in Policy Evaluation

Both MScs can be completed full-time over 12 months or part time of 24 months.  

PhD Students:

I am interested in supervising PhD students with an interest in post-conflict justice, peacebuilding, and development in any region of the world or with an interest in using ethnographic methods to evaluate international intervention in transitional states. 

Publications

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Books and Reports

Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings

Contributions to Journals

Contributions to Specialist Publications