Role of Memory in War Politics and Post-Conflict Reconciliation

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assimilation
Austria
Balkans
casualties
Category=JHM
Category=JP
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Category=NHD
Central Eastern Europe
collective memory
collective memory studies
commemorative practices
conflict
crisis
Czechia
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eq_history
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eq_society-politics
exceptionalism
Georgia
Gusen concentration camp
historical framing
historical memory
identity
imperialism
Mathausen-Gusen concentration camp
Memorials
memory politics
memory politics in Eastern Europe
memory studies
militarism
national myths
peace
Poland
political mythmaking
politics of memory
Post-Cold War
Prague Spring
remembrance
Romania
Russia
Russia-Ukraine war
Second world war
security
Soviet Union
transitional justice
trauma and identity
Ukraine
Vergangenheitsbewaltigung
war
War memorialised
Warsaw Pact invasion 1968
young people
youth perspectives conflict

Product details

  • ISBN 9781041093398
  • Weight: 410g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Mar 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Role of Memory in War Politics and Post-Conflict Reconciliation: Historical Memory in Crisis explores how memories of war, trauma, and national identity shape politics, diplomacy, and reconciliation across Europe and beyond. Spanning from the Second World War to the current Russia–Ukraine war, the book examines how governments and societies choose to remember – or forget – their past.

How do states use history to justify current policies? Why do certain events become national myths while others are erased? And how can memory be used to promote peace instead of conflict? Through case studies from the UK, Poland, Romania, Georgia, Ukraine, Austria, and the Czech Republic, the book explores how war memorials, education systems, and media shape public opinion and foreign policy. Part 1 looks at past conflicts and their commemoration, while part 2 focuses on the Russia–Ukraine war as a living example of memory in action. Special attention is given to young people’s perspectives and the role of cultural memory in their views on war and identity. Bridging history, politics, and culture, the book shows that memory is not static – it is a battleground. Whether manipulated by elites or reclaimed by citizens, how we remember the past deeply affects our present choices and future peace.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of political science, history, international relations, sociology, psychology, anthropology, and media studies.

Lily Hamourtziadou is Senior Lecturer in International Relations, Birmingham City University, Birmingham, the UK. She served as principal researcher and analyst of the NGO Iraq Body Count (2006–2025) and was twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. She is a member of the West Midlands Military Education Committee and a member of the Counter Terrorism Evidence-Based Review Group. She has worked for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) as a Middle East reports writer, and she is the author of three books: Body Count: The War on Terror and Civilian Deaths in Iraq (2020), The Ethics of Remote Warfare (2024), and Human Costs of War (2024).

Przemysław Łukasik is Assistant Professor at Institute of Journalism and International Relations, National Education Commission University, Kraków, Poland. He has been a visiting fellow in the ‘Scholar in Residence’ programme of the Goethe-Institute and the Institute for Advanced Study in Humanities in Essen, Germany. He had been also editorial secretary (2011–2015) of the English-language historical scientific journal Remembrance and Solidarity: Studies in 20th Century European History, published by the European Network Remembrance and Solidarity.