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A01=Stephen Kinloch Pichat
Author_Stephen Kinloch Pichat
Category=GTU
Cold War
Collective Measures Committee
committee
council
Direct Recruitment
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
force
Foreign Minister
French Foreign Legion
global governance challenges
humanitarian intervention theory
Humanitarian Military Intervention
Humanitarian Relief Assistance
Ideal
international
International Military Force
International Police Force
international security studies
Member States
military
military multilateralism
Military Staff Committee
Peace Force
peacekeeping operations
permanent
Permanent Force
Permanent Military Volunteer Force
permanent UN military deployment analysis
police
Police Force
Rapid Deployment Brigade
security
Security Council
staff
supranational military force
Sverre Lodgaard
Trygve Lie
UN
United Nations
United Nations Peace Force
United Nations Police Force
volunteer
World War

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415652957
  • Weight: 650g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Aug 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A fresh examination of the origins, evolution and future of proposals for a UN 'Legion' - a permanent military force recruited, trained and deployed by the UN.

This new book shows how this idea has grown, re-emerged and evolved in direct connection with the development of UN international military forces. The legionnaires have been seen as the future representatives of a modern constabulary, international police or humanitarian chivalry. They have also invariably evoked the idea of mercenaries and resurrected fears of supranational government and a 'world army'. Such a force has been unattainable when needed, not needed when attainable, revealing the deficiencies of the international system in the perspective of a particular task. The idea highlights the inadequacy of the means as compared to the objectives, and the limits of the UN's capacity to adapt itself to new challenges.

This study examinmes how the project of a UN 'Legion' is conditional on the viability of the original Utopia, and vice versa. It also argues that the extreme polarization of the debate may reflect a tendency to negate the inherent contradictions of reality, reminding us of the historical dimension of the building of an international organization, a 'work in progress'.

Stephen Kinloch Pichat is Strategic Planning Adviser at the United Nations in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. He defended his PhD thesis on the idea of an international permanent military volunteer force at the Geneva Graduate Institute of International Studies (GIIS) in 2000. His experience of conflict and post-conflict settings, include Cambodia (1992-3), the former Yugoslavia (1993-4), Somalia and Rwanda (1994), Kosovo (1999), Angola (2001-3), and Afghanistan (2003-5).

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