School of Law University of Edinburgh Old College South Bridge Edinburgh EH8 9YL UK
Biographical Details
Kirsten joined the School of Law in September 2011 as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow. She holds a PhD from Queen's University Belfast, an LLM in the Law of Armed Conflict (Distinction) from the University of Nottingham, an LLB in Scots Law (Hons) from the University of Glasgow, and was admitted to the New York State Bar in 2004. She is a peer reviewer for the Journal of Transitional Justice and Focaal.
Kirsten's current work builds on her doctoral research, which studied governance and justice practices among Karen refugees from Burma living in Thailand. Her wider research interests include non-state justice systems, migration and refugee situations (with a particular focus on governance), legal pluralism, legal anthropology and transitional justice. Past research and fieldwork has been supported by awards from the Northern Ireland Department of Education and Learning, the Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, and the Emslie Horniman Fund of the Royal Anthropological Institute.
Selected Publications
Journal Articles
Kirsten McConnachie 'Rethinking the ‘Refugee Warrior’: The Karen National Union and Refugee Protection on the Thai–Burma Border' (2012) Journal of Human Rights Practice 4:1
Well-founded fears that ‘refugee warriors’ will use refugee camps as a base for military operations, exploit a wider refugee population, or misuse international aid have led to the development of policies intended to ensure the separation of combatants and civilian refugee populations. However, a dogmatic approach to that policy goal may miss the true complexity of both refugee protection and the relationships between a refugee population and a military group. This article examines an alternative possibility, that a non-state armed group may be a potential partner in refugee protection and welfare promotion. It draws on the experiences of refugees from Burma living in camps in Thailand, where there has been a long-standing connection between camp governance structures and a political/military organization movement, the Karen National Union/Karen National Liberation Army. While camp governance activities have been flawed, they have also displayed a high level of integrity. It is argued that in such a situation, where there is a proven record of working to improve civilian welfare, international organizations might usefully explore possibilities of engagement with non-state armed groups as partners in refugee protection, with the specific goal of encouraging a more representative, accountable, and democratic approach to governance.
Kirsten McConnachie, Lesley McEvoy, Kieran McEvoy 'Reconciliation as a dirty word: Community, education and political generosity in transition' (2006) Columbia Journal of International Affairs 60(1): 81-107
Kirsten McConnachie, Kieran McEvoy, Ruth Jamieson 'Political Imprisonment and the War on Terror' in Yvonne Jewkes (eds) Handbook on Prisons (Willan Publishing, 2007) 293-323
Reports
Kirsten McConnachie, Kieran McEvoy From Making War to Making Peace: Ex-Combatants and Reconciliation in Northern Ireland and South Africa (Report commissioned by Atlantic Philanthropies, 2009)
Kirsten McConnachie The Frati Guidelines for NGO Engagement with Truth Commissions (International Centre for Transitional Justice, 2004)
Notes and Reviews
Kirsten McConnachie 'Review of Susanne Karstedt, ed., Legal Institutions and Collective Memories' (2010) Theoretical Criminology 14(4): 549
Kirsten McConnachie 'Review of Naomi Roht-Arriaza and Javier Mariezcurrena, eds., Transitional Justice in the Twenty-First Century, Cambridge University Press' (2009) Sociology 43(2)
Kirsten McConnachie 'Review of James Sheptycki and Ali Wardak, eds., Transnational and Comparative Criminology (London: Glasshouse Press)' (2005) British Journal of Criminology 45:356
Papers and Presentations
Kirsten McConnachie 'Governing Migration: Refugee-led Justice Systems and Community Management on the Thai-Burma Border' presented at International Association for the Study of Forced Migration, Kampala, 2011
Kirsten McConnachie 'Law, Order and the Figure of "the refugee"' presented at Workshop on Law and Mobility, Gottingen, 2010
Kirsten McConnachie 'Refugee Statecraft and the Politics of Justice' presented at Burma Studies Conference, Marseille, 2010
Kirsten McConnachie 'Governing Exiles: Competing Sites of Law, Justice and Memory on the Thai-Burma Border' presented at Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology, Central European University, Budapest, 2010
Kirsten McConnachie 'Towards a Victimology of Transitional Justice' presented at SLSA Annual Conference (2008), University of Manchester, 2008
Kirsten McConnachie, Kieran McEvoy 'Engendering Humility in International Criminal Justice' presented at Law and Society Association International Meeting, Berlin, 2007
Kirsten McConnachie, Kieran McEvoy 'Human Rights, the Rule of Law and the Future of Transitional Justice' presented at Departmental seminar, Queen's University Belfast, 2007
Kirsten McConnachie, Kieran McEvoy 'Transitional Justice 'from below'' presented at American Society of Criminology, Los Angeles, 2006
Kirsten McConnachie, Tony Ward 'Logging and Legality: State Crime Theory Meets Green Criminology' presented at European Group for the Study of Deviance and Social Control, Queen's University Belfast, 2005