Co-operation, Contestation and Complexity in Peacebuilding

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Broad SSR
Category=GTU
Category=JKV
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Community Based Policing
Community Policing
community policing models
conflict transformation
Crime Preventers
DDR Process
DDR Programme
Defence Sector Reform
demobilisation and reintegration
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eq_society-politics
Feminist Institutionalist Approach
gender in security studies
governance reform
International organisations
Liberal Peace Building
Mai Mai Militias
Military Expenditures
Military Integration
Military Power Sharing
Nepal Army
non-state security actors in post-conflict reform
Norm contestation
peace operations
Peacebuilding endeavour
Peacebuilding Interventions
Security Sector
Security Sector Institutions
Security Sector Reform
SSR Literature
SSR Programme
Timorese Police
Veto Player Approach
Veto Player Theory
Veto Players
Veto Players Increases

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367637569
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Security Sector Reform (SSR) remains a key feature of peacebuilding interventions and is usually undertaken by a state alongside national and international partners. External actors engaged in SSR tend to follow a normative agenda that often has little regard for the context in post-conflict societies. Despite recurrent criticism, SSR practices of international organisations and bilateral donors often remain focused on state institutions, and often do not sufficiently attend to alternative providers of security or existing normative frameworks of security.

This edited collection explores three aspects that add an important piece to the puzzle of what constitutes effective Security Sector Reform (SSR). First, the variation of norm adoption, norm contestation and norm imposition in post-conflict countries that might explain the mixed results in terms of peacebuilding. Second, the multitude of different security actors within and beyond the state which often leads to multiple patterns of co-operation and contestation within reform programmes. Third, how both the multiplicity of and tension between norms and actors further complicate efforts to build peace or, as complexity theory would posit, influence the complex and non-linear social system that is the conflict-affected environment.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding.

Nadine Ansorg is Senior Lecturer in International Conflict Analysis at the University of Kent, UK, and Research Associate at the GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Hamburg, Germany.

Eleanor Gordon is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Development at Monash University, Australia. She has spent 20 years engaged as a practitioner and scholar addressing inclusive ways in which to build security and justice after conflict.