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FS
2905
Why peace fails : the causes and prevention of civil war recurrence
Call, Charles T., 2012Verfügbar | Ja (1) |
Exemplare gesamt | 1 |
Exemplare verliehen | 0 |
Reservierungen | 0Reservieren |
Medienart | Buch | ||||
ISBN | 978-1-58901-894-5 | ||||
Verfasser | Call, Charles T. | ||||
Systematik | FS - Friedensstudien | ||||
Schlagworte | peace, war, case study, civil war, nicaragua, prevention, sudan, peru, peacebuilding, liberia, zimbabwe, mali, burundi, tibet, georgia (republic), haiti, east timor, lebanon, causes of war, chechnya, causes, political aspects, central african republic | ||||
Verlag | Georgetown University Press | ||||
Ort | Washington, DC | ||||
Jahr | 2012 | ||||
Umfang | xii, 315 p. | ||||
Altersbeschränkung | keine | ||||
Sprache | englisch | ||||
Verfasserangabe | Charles T. Call | ||||
Annotation | Contents: Why peace fails: theory -- Examining the cases -- Implications for theory and practice. Summary: Call (international studies, American U.) analyzes causal patterns that explain the recurrence of organized political violence after civil wars seem to have ended. He challenges four dominant trends in postconflict scholarship: the emphasis on economic factors in civil war, the emphasis on international peacekeeping, the focus on state capacity over legitimization, and electoral democracy as the best framework for postwar governance. Organized into three parts, the book starts out explaining why peace fails then moves into several case studies from China, Tibet, Chechnya, Georgia, East Timor, the American Civil War, Lebanon, Nicaragua, Rwanda, Haiti and other sites from around the world. The final section represents the main findings of the book and argues for rethinking peacekeeping and for building legitimacy. Annotation ©2012 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com). Table of Contents: Terms of Use List of Tablesp. x Acknowledgmentsp. xi Introduction: The Tragedy of Civil War Recurrencep. 1 The Importance of This Bookp. 2 The Central Argumentp. 3 Contributions to Theoryp. 6 Research Design and Methodologyp. 7 Organization of the Bookp. 17 Notesp. 20 Part IWhy Peace Fails: Theory 1 What Do We Know about Why Peace Fails?p. 25 What We Know about Civil Wars and Ethnic Conflictp. 26 Four Approaches to Peacebuildingp. 30 Clarifying Concepts: Exclusion, Inclusion, and Legitimacyp. 36 Conclusionp. 47 Notesp. 48 2 Is Civil War Recurrence Distinct from Its Onset? A Quantitative Analysis and the Limits Thereofp. 50 A Regression Analysis of Civil War Recurrencep. 51 The Contributions and Limitations of Quantitative Methods for Studying Civil Warsp. 59 Conclusionp. 65 Notesp. 66 Part IIExamining the Cases 3 Liberia: Exclusion and Civil War Recurrencep. 71 The First Civil Warp. 72 The Onset of Peacep. 74 The Second Civil War: A Brief Summaryp. 76 Charles Taylor's Exclusionary Behaviorp. 78 Alternative Explanationsp. 81 Insights from Liberia's Second Postwar Peace Processp. 88 Conclusionp. 91 Notesp. 94 4 Separatist Recurrences of Civil Warp. 96 Sudan: The Marginalization of the Southp. 100 Chechnya: Reneging and Resistancep. 106 Georgia and South Ossetia: Integration Backfiresp. 110 China and Tibet: Compelled from Autonomyp. 115 Analyzing Cases of Reneging on Territorial Autonomyp. 118 Notesp. 120 5 Nonseparatist Recurrences of Civil Warp. 122 Precipitating Exclusionary Behaviorp. 123 The Central African Republic: Exclusion and State Weaknessp. 124 Haiti: Political Exclusion and Recurrencep. 129 East Timor: Liberation, Statehood, and Exclusionp. 136 Zimbabwe: Liberation, Statehood, and Exclusionp. 146 Burundi and Rwanda: Chronic Exclusionary Behaviorp. 150 Alternative Explanations and Conclusionsp. 158 Notesp. 160 6 Recurrences That Defy the Argumentp. 162 Lebanon: Failed Powersharingp. 163 Mali: Failed Powersharingp. 167 Nicaragua: Externally Driven Recurrencep. 173 Peru: Exclusion, Coca, and Rebel Resurgencep. 177 Conclusionp. 179 Notesp. 181 7 Making Peace Stick: Inclusionary Politics and Twenty-Seven Nonrecurrent Civil Warsp. 183 Inclusion, Powersharing, and Peacebuilding Successp. 186 Powersharing and Peace Consolidation: Examining the Pool of Casesp. 192 Beyond Powersharing: Inclusionary Behavior and Peacep. 195 Peace and Exclusionary Behavior?p. 196 International Troops and "Frozen" Conflictsp. 202 Notesp. 209 Part IIIImplications for Theory and Practice 8 Conclusions for Theory: Legitimacy-Focused Peacebuildingp. 213 The Main Findings of the Bookp. 213 Rethinking the Aims and Approaches of Peacebuildingp. 218 Addressing Limitationsp. 230 Notesp. 235 9 Conclusions for Policy and Practice: Can External Actors Build Legitimacy after War?p. 236 Why Legitimacy Building Is Exceptionally Difficultp. 237 Beyond Blanket Inclusionary Formulas: Four "Moments" for Key Choices and External Strategyp. 245 Conclusionp. 273 Notesp. 275 Referencesp. 277 Indexp. 303 |
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