Dilemmas and advances in post-conflict in Colombia: a look from the subaltern perspective of peace (s) in the territories
Author(s) -
Eduardo Andrés Sandoval Forero,
José Javier Capera Figueroa
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
telos revista de estudios interdisciplinarios en ciencias sociales
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2343-5763
pISSN - 1317-0570
DOI - 10.36390/telos222.10
Subject(s) - subaltern , praxis , sociology , hegemony , perspective (graphical) , politics , ethos , subject (documents) , epistemology , political science , environmental ethics , gender studies , law , philosophy , artificial intelligence , library science , computer science
The emergence of building a popular culture, based on the ethical-political imperative that links the demands, needs and struggles of those below, constitutes an aspect that configures the dynamics of re-existence of social groups in their different realities. On reflection of this is the peace process signed between the Farc-Ep guerrilla group / party and the Colombian government. Thus, the objective of the following article is to conduct a theoretical-conceptual discussion about the dilemmas and advances that coexist in the Colombian post-conflict, from a subaltern perspective of peace (ces) in the territories, taking into account the proposals theoreticians of peace scholars like Alonso (2013); Marquez Fernandez, A. (2018a) , who consider the need to question from a critical perspective the dynamics of peace (s), created in the territories. The methodology used was collaborative research and critical discourse analysis (Sandoval, 2016a), which starts from generating an intersubjective and horizontal dialogue between the researcher and the social groups. The fundamental conclusion of the investigation was the need to recognize the subject's praxis and his political ethos in terms of building laboratories, spaces and territories of peace from and with those below, that give weight to the logic of violence promoted and exerted from the hegemonic groups in the regions.
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