Societal Transformation in Conflict Contexts (TRANSFORM)

Societal Transformation in Conflict Contexts (TRANSFORM)
Photo: Illustrated by Lindsay Pollock. Produced by Benjamin Dix.
Led by Cindy Horst
May 2017 - Jul 2022

​​​The project focuses on how individual deeds, in times of radical uncertainty and flux, inspire collective action or lead to new institutional practices in ways that determine the direction a society takes. The emphasis will lie on the small but often heroic everyday acts of common people who attempt to challenge dehumanizing trends of exclusion and abuse in violent conflict and civil war in Syria, Somalia and Myanmar.

​The new project is led by Research Professor Cindy Horst and titled Societal Transformation in Conflict Contexts (TRANSFORM). It was awarded a 10 million Norwegian kroner budget from the Research Council of Norway. 


In addition to Horst, project participants include Senior Researcher Marte Nilsen (PRIO), Senior Researcher Kjetil Selvik (CMI), Lecturer Tamar Groves (Universidad de Extremadura), Research Fellow Benjamin Dix (SOAS) and doctoral researcher Ebba Tellander (PRIO).

Project summary 

In times of radical uncertainty and flux, how do individual deeds inspire collective action or lead to new institutional practices in ways that determine the direction a society takes? What can we learn from conflict contexts about the driving forces of societal transformation?

TRANSFORM studies the small but often heroic everyday acts of common people who attempt to challenge dehumanizing trends of exclusion and abuse in violent conflict and civil war. The project involves a close examination of the origins of individual deeds in violent conflict, and the process by which these acts encourage collective action and new institutional practices. 

The individual, social and institutional drivers of transformation have not been studied systematically within one project, as disciplinary divides often prevent insights on one from informing research on the others. Thus, the project aims to make a theoretical contribution to the agency-structure impasse in the social sciences and humanities - an impasse that hides a fundamental disagreement about the driving forces of societal transformation. 

TRANSFORM combines a strong social-anthropological and political philosophical curiosity about the normative aspects of moral acts in situations of radical uncertainty with empirical research on actual practices and processes during transformative moments in the history of violent conflict and civil war in Syria, Somalia and Myanmar.

Data collection combines life histories and institutional ethnography with a new method that uses graphic illustrations in focus group discussions, and will take place in the three countries and/or among refugee communities from these countries in the region and in Norway. Collecting data on the societal impacts of ordinary citizens' moral counter-acts of empathy, care and protection in conditions of suffering and marginalization, TRANSFORM aims to make a ground-breaking contribution to the newly established field of the 'anthropology of the good'.

Objective

​​The primary objective of this project is to develop a comprehensive theory on the driving forces of societal transformation.

Publications

Peer-reviewed Journal Article

Groves, Tamar & Trude Stapnes (2023) Prefiguring a democratic state: student activism and the National Education Law in Myanmar, Compare: a Journal of Comparative and International Education. DOI: 10.1080/03057925.2023.2195047.
Stapnes, Trude; Erik Carlquist & Cindy Horst (2022) Responsibility to Protest: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of Motives for Protest Participation in Myanmar, Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology 28(1): 101–110.
Horst, Cindy & Odin Lysaker (2021) Miracles in Dark Times: Hannah Arendt and Refugees as ‘Vanguard’, Journal of Refugee Studies 34(1): 67–84.

Book Chapter

Horst, Cindy (2020) Collective hope in dark times: Refugee political agency influencing migration trajectories, in Vezzoli, Simona; & Hein de Haas, eds, Renewing the migration debate. Building disciplinary and geographical bridges to explain global migration. Amsterdam: The Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) and the International Migration Institute (IMI) (66–71).
Horst, Cindy (2019) Refugees, Peacebuilding, and the Anthropology of the Good, in Bradley, Megan; James Milner; & Blair Peruniak, eds, Refugees' Roles in Resolving Displacement and Building Peace: Beyond Beneficiaries. Washington DC: Georgetown University Press (39–54).
Nilsen, Marte (2019) No Peace in a Ceasefire: Women's Agency in the Kachin Conflict, in Åshild Kolås, ed., Women Peace and Security in Myanmar: Between Feminism and Ethnopolitics. London: Routledge (58–73).

Popular Article

Nilsen, Marte & Benjamin Dix (2020) Myanmar: weak leadership is prompting grassroots activists to make a difference, The Conversation, 14 November.
Nilsen, Marte (2020) Finnes det håp for Myanmar? Valget, makt og motmakt, Asiapunkt, 8 November.
Nilsen, Marte (2020) Hvem kan redde Myanmar?, Klassekampen, 6 November.

Master Thesis

Christophersen, Sara (2020) Embodied possibilities: A study of dance as an artistic, everyday practice in Palestine. MA thesis, Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo, Oslo.

Related pages