84 research outputs found
Re-conceptualising leadership for effective peacemaking and human security in Africa
This article explores the meaning of peace and human security from the
perspective of the individual — the presumed referent point of security
— and examines responses to armed conflict, a leading source of
insecurity for African peoples. It identifies inherent flaws in approaches
to conflict in Africa and looks to a different field — that of leadership —
for a more effective formula for peacemaking. In the absence of a
framework that can effectively end the cycle of conflict relapse in Africa,
the paper argues that an alternative framing of leadership is needed;
and that alternative leadership approaches to dealing with conflict and
insecurity offer a chance for stable peace and human security. It suggests
that an expanded perspective on leadership provides a basis for
exploring interventions that can potentially alter peacemaking discourses
as well as the terrain in which peacemaking takes place. The article
therefore asks what a focus on the individual as the referent point of
security means if and when viewed from the perspective of a collection
of individuals. In this regard, it presents emerging perspectives from a study of young Africans on leadership programmes in a classroom
setting and attempts to extrapolate them to wider societal settings. It
then explores how a different perspective of leadership might serve as
a facilitator of peace and human security in Africa, drawing examples from past and on-going situations of armed conflict in Africa.http://www.up.ac.za/en/political-sciences/article/19718/strategic-review-for-southern-africaam2016Political Science
Crises of war-to-peace transition and civil war recurrences : a focus on leadership building and the postcolonial state in Africa
This paper focuses on process-based leadership as an entry point for discussion of war-to-peace transitions. Process-based approaches to leadership reside in the interactions between leaders and followers. Too great an expectation is often placed on individual leaders to effect transformation: armed conflict is likely to re-ignite in more than 40 per cent of conflict situations where peace was previously negotiated. In dealing with conflict relapse, few alternatives exist in academic and policy literature to dominant approaches to peacebuilding. The starting point for war-to-peace transition is a return to the state building conversations that preceded armed conflict in the affected society
Making a case for reframing narratives of peacebuilding in Africa
This paper examines two main types of violent and armed conflict settings. The first consists of situations of armed conflict where violence ended on the battlefield, such as in Ethiopia and Rwanda. The second includes situations where the end of violence and the post-conflict agenda were negotiated and facilitated either internally or by external interveners such as the United Nations or regional organisations, such as in the case of South Sudan. The study focuses on forms of peace settlement that are able to return to the nation and state building conversations that lie at the root of the conflicts
Twenty Years of UNSC Resolution 1325 call for a Frank Forward Look
Since the United Nations (UN) adopted UN Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 1325 on Women, Peace and Security (WPS) in 2000 there have been significant shifts in discourse and practice on gender, peace and security. Twenty years later, conscious of the original limitations that shaped UNSCR 1325 in the first place, we must account for these shifts whilst striving to do much more than simply sustain the agenda
Thinking about peace and the role of state building and political settlement in the pursuit of sustainable peace in Africa
The nature of liberal peace used for reconstitution of states after conflict is essentially a one-size-fits-all paradigm. The central idea in this study is that it is the nature of internal conversations between leaders and peoples that determine the path to a viable, peaceful state. This research aims to reframe the state-building–peacebuilding problematic by re-centring the notion of conversation in the processes of peacebuilding and state building. Charting conversation among contending actors in non-violent ways is not simply a method for post-conflict restoration; it can also result in transformation of institutions
The role of the UN Security Council in health emergencies : lessons from the Ebola response in Sierra Leone
The UN Security Council has increasingly involved itself in health emergencies over the last two decades, but the advantages and potential risk of its role have not been well explored. The experience Security Council intervention in the Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone can be instructive, in particular because it contributed to the establishment of a first-ever UN emergency health mission. While this mission was not considered effective, Security Council involvement may have helped to mobilise resources, highlight the need for a cross-sectoral response, and maintain international flights. More broadly, however, questions remain about whether the securitisation of health risks diverting funding and policy focus towards the priorities of wealthy countries and away from basic health needshttps://www.tandfonline.com/toc/caji20Political Science
Shifting ideas of sustainable peace towards conversation in state-building
This article offers reflections on the meaning of peace and peace-building in Africa and proposes a reframing of the state-building problematic. It argues for a shift in analytical lens by providing alternative ways of looking at state-building in order to explore a different approach to peace-building. Thus, the paper re-centres the notion of conversation in the processes of building peace and state. This concept of conversation requires a shifting of the debate from a focus on which institutions, liberal or otherwise, and which policies are most effective for peace, to how inter-elite and society-elite conversation gives rise to, or fails to bring about particular ensembles of institutions and policy outcomes. We analyse the role of political settlement in shaping the nature and outcome of these conversations. We suggest that the pursuit of peace must account for the depth of conversation about the presence, absence or desire for peace as well as accompanying perspectives of state-building across the target society.http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/ccsd20hj2022Political Science
The convergence and divergence of three pillars of influence in gender and security
This article explores the convergence between three pillars of influence – feminist security
studies, civil society activism and policy decision-making – and its role in the adoption
and implementation of United Nations Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 1325.
It argues that these three pillars, individually and collectively, have made important contributions
to the debate and action on the gender and security agenda, but that they
remain organically disconnected. Their convergence has the potential to achieve
path-breaking results in the sphere of gender and security, whilst their divergence
makes transformation unattainable. We show the disconnect in the application of
UNSCR 1325 in Africa and argue that this is partly the reason why, despite enormous
efforts, the gains realised in terms of gender equality in the peace and security arena
have been negligible.http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rasr202016-06-30hb2016Political Science
Militancy and violence in West Africa : reflecting on radicalisation, comparing contexts and evaluating effectiveness of preventive policies
By 2000, ‘radicalisation’ had become a major global issue. Although ‘9/11’ was still a year away, the
American Embassies in East Africa had been bombed in 1998 and violent conflicts simmered in many
parts of the world. At just about the same time, bitter civil wars, resource-centred conflicts and intraethnic
strife raged in West Africa. Against the background of research being undertaken at King’s
College London, 1. the mutually reinforcing links between ‘radicalisation’ and
‘violence’ (potentially sensitive terms, discussed below) in West Africa became clearly obvious and
a successful application to investigate this was submitted to the UK Economic and Social Research
Council (ESRC). 2. This Special Issue contains articles emerging from that work, with a set of country
studies complemented by overarching synthetic analysis.http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/ccsd20hb201
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