Security Sector Reconstruction and Reform in Peace Support Operations

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administration
BiH
Bosnia And Herzegovina
Category=JWLP
civil-military relations
countrys
DDR Process
Defence Law
Defence Reform
Defence Reform Commission
democratic oversight
deputy
Deputy SRSG
east
East Timor
East Timorese
East Timorese Government
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
external actors in security reform
forces
Gdp Growth
government
Haitian Armed Forces
International Humanitarian Law
international peacekeeping
Jam
KLA Commander
military intervention analysis
OSCE Mission
Police Service
post-conflict governance
programming
Security Sector
Sierra Leone Armed Forces
Sierra Leone's SSR Programme
Sierra Leone’s SSR Programme
srsg
SSR
SSR Agenda
SSR Model
SSR Process
SSR Programme
timorese
transitional
transitional justice

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415377867
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Dec 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume provides a framework for analyzing security sector reform under international tutelage.

Following violent conflict and military interventions, international organizations or coalitions of countries increasingly engage in post-conflict reconstruction. Part of the international post-conflict agenda is the ‘reconstruction’ or ‘reform’ of the security sector (SSR). In post-conflict situations, the security sector is often characterized by politicization, ethnicization, corruption of the security services, excessive military spending, lack of professionalism, poor oversight and inefficient allocation of resources. At the same time, there is great need for effective and efficient (re-)establishment of a legitimate monopoly of force. While initially this is in the purview of the external intervention forces, they also face the task of the building up of effective, efficient accountable and democratically legitimized security forces as quickly as possible.

The contributors analyze six pertinent cases: Afghanistan, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Haiti, Kosovo, Sierra Leone and Timor Leste, focusing on issues such as priorities for security and for security sector reform, sequencing of reconstruction and reform, tensions between requirements of security and security governance and the interaction of domestic and external actors in security sector reform.

This book was previously published as a special issue of International Peacekeeping.

Michael Brzoska, Director of Research, Bonn International Center for Conversion (BICC), has published widely on the role of armed forces in developing countries, military expenditures and the arms trade and security sector reform.

David Law is Senior Fellow, Security Sector Reform, Geneva Center for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces (DCAF) and coordinator of the DCAF Working Group on Security Sector Reform. In this capacity, he works on such issues as security sector reform in the Euro-Atlantic area, the interface between the security and development communities as well as the conceptual and programming links between security sector reform and other new approaches to security that have emerged in the post-Cold War environment, such as Human Security