Peace Operations and Restorative Justice

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A01=Peter Reddy
Author_Peter Reddy
Category=JPS
Category=JWLP
civil war intervention
Civil War Scenarios
Common Language
Conflict Management Orientation
Conflict Resolution Responses
conflict resolution strategies
Contemporary Civil Wars
Criminal Justice Encounter
Dash Board
East Timor
El Bushra
emergent
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fieldwork Notes
international policing methods
military peacekeeping theory
NGO Group
NGO Presence
Peace Force
Peace Monitors
Peace Operations
PNG Government
Post War
postwar community rebuilding
processes
Restorative Architecture
Restorative Justice
restorative justice in armed conflict
Restorative Justice Theory
Solomon Islands
Somali Society
Strategic Peacekeeping
transitional justice
UNOSOM II
values
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781409429890
  • Weight: 650g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Jul 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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With a bold vision and a distinctive message, Reddy stipulates that international peacekeeping can be designed and implemented using the principles of restorative justice. To prove this, Reddy discusses the congruence of crime, armed conflict and violent disorder, critiquing restorative justice and its nuanced character as a suitable application to complex civil wars. This book provides a comprehensive survey of peace operations and then focuses on the cases of Somalia and Bougainville. The comparison between their societal contexts, their conflicts, peace operations and final outcomes are crucial to this argument. Furthermore, this shows how the constraining, maximising and emergent values of restorative justice can be applied in a peacekeeping setting, from the overall command level through to the behaviours of deployed peacekeepers - with direct contemporary application. This sharp study makes for evocative reading as it introduces the new concept of regeneration as key to any restoratively arranged peace operation. Military, police, NGO and civilian peacekeeper practitioners, as well as academic theorists, can use this unique work to produce better and more lasting results for conflict ridden communities.
Dr Peter Reddy is a practicing lawyer in Canberra and regional New South Wales. Peter received a PhD in law from the Australian National University and a Master of Criminology, focussing on human rights violations, from the University of Western Sydney. He has previously worked in the private security industry, managed companies in the training and employment services sector and formerly served in the Australian Army. His current research interests include resistance and dissent within authoritarian states and organisations, and a comparative study of violent and non-violent quests for autonomy and independent statehood.

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