11 research outputs found

    Police Building in Timor-Leste – Mission Impossible?

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    政治学 / Political Science and International RelationsIn the quest to find a success story of international police building, eyes often turn towards Timor-Leste. What we find there is neither a story of success nor failure for either the Timorese or the UN contingents sent there over the last decade. The tale of police building in Timor-Leste is one of quick fixes, short cuts, and lessons apparently not yet learned leading to modest results. The UN’s initial state building efforts did leave behind a police service, but it was a weak one. This experience shows the limits of the UN as an institution for police development.Prepared for the GRIPS State Building Workshop 2010: Organizing Police Forces in Post-Conflict Peace-Support Operations, January 27-28th, 201

    Review Essay: The Violent Archipelago: Rethinking its Place in History

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    Page range: 115-12

    Builder of cultural bridges. by Jim Della-Giacoma

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    After three years in Jakarta as the Australian embassy's first cultural counsellor and representative of the Australia-Indonesia Institute, Dr Jennifer Lindsay told the journalist it is 'people to people' contact which is underpinning our sometimes erratic political relationship with Indonesia

    Feeling the World Bank's pain: policy advocacy and those PDFs

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    In October 2007, my organisation (the Conflict Prevention and Peace Forum at the SSRC) paid for two British consultants to go to Dili to help the UN Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT) plan its security sector review. This was part of a project designed to help UN peacekeepers access ideas and people to produce better policy. In their first presentation, they put up an anonymous quote defining the desired end state for security: A safer society where the citizens\u27 rights and public tranquillity are preserved constitutes the primacy of democratic life. The assembled UN mission officials were asked: did anyone recognise it? No hands were raised. Another paragraph was projected and once again nobody could even guess its origin, though everyone agreed it was a good definition of what Timor-Leste should be doing. With one more click, the source was revealed: Government of Timor-Leste IV Constitutional Government Programme 2007-2012. No one had read it even though it was released in English and Portuguese months beforehand as the National Congress for Timorese Reconstruction\u27s (CNRT\u27s) party manifesto. It was available as a PDF, the ubiquitous format used for publishing documents online. I recalled this workshop while reading coverage of Which World Bank Reports are Widely Read?, a study that found that nearly one-third of the PDFs on the Bank\u27s website were never accessed. (The Bank\u27s bestseller was Vietnam Development Report 2009: Capital Matters, with 2955 downloads). In era of overcrowded inboxes, getting busy people to do professional background reading is difficult. One of the two consultants mentioned earlier, Gordon Peake (a regular contributor to The Interpreter and author of Beloved Land) co-wrote an academic journal article called Their Reports are not Read and their Recommendations are Resisted: The Challenge for the Global Police Policy Community. (No need to pay US$39 for a PDF, it\u27s free if you Google the title.) After five years with an organisation that has published hundreds of PDF policy reports, I know first-hand the challenge of getting decision-makers to read detailed research papers with complex arguments, often in a language that is not their native tongue. Writing the report is only the first step. The second, in a long process of advocating policy change, is making the report available as an online PDF. At some point, armed with a PDF printout, an advocate will try to make a case face-to-face. In July 2010, Crisis Group published a landmark report on the political crisis in Bangkok. Bridging Thailand\u27s Deep Divide was the first comprehensive international report on the violence of that year. When then Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva\u27s spin doctors traveled to Washington DC, they found the report had got there first, framing the understanding of this conflict in the US. This is when the PM\u27s office called and we were asked to come to the Purple Room in Bangkok\u27s Government House. Arrayed against my Thai colleague and me that day was an intimidating debating team led by the Oxford-educated prime minister, supported by a cabinet minister, his spokesman, and a few director-generals — sixteen staff in all. The crowd put us on the defensive, until we realised that the criticisms the PM was making were not of our analysis but of foreign media dispatches. The prime minister\u27s points became easier to rebut as it became clear that he had not read our carefully edited PDF and neither, apparently, had the person who wrote his talking points. In March 2012, I made the case on The Interpreter for a new role for Australia in Myanmar to incoming Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr. By that time, Crisis Group had been writing reports on the country for a decade, emailing them and posting them online. Aware that bureaucracy had long made the case for change, we thought we were adding weight to an existing argument; one Crisis Group had made around the world for some years. A few months later, Australia\u27s policy did change to one of engagement along the lines we had been urging. Did we have influence or make a contribution? We had no idea and no way to evaluate our impact. If Bob Carr\u27s Diary of a Foreign Minister had a mention of Crisis Group\u27s work on Myanmar, which Australia now calls Burma again, I missed it. But last year I serendipitously sat down for lunch at a function in an Asian capital next to an Australian diplomat. We had not met previously, but this official knew our work on Myanmar. I was told that before making the decision to re-engage, front office staffers had been asked to download and print all the Crisis Group PDFs on Myanmar (among other documents) for the minister to read. In almost five years overseeing the publication of more than seventy PDFs as well as dozens of opinion pieces and blog posts, this is the only proof I have that someone of ministerial rank might have ever read one. He was only one reader, but a high value one. Proof, perhaps, that a PDF in the right hands can make a difference.   Republished with permission from The Interpreter. Original version published on 14 May 2014. Image: Policy Folder / Shutterstoc

    Texting for peace

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    Indonesia has shown that new communications tools can serve peace rather than spread conflict, writes Jim Della-Giacoma in The Interpreter. . From London to Jakarta, there have been accounts of how social media have been used to help encourage violence. In some ways, this is to be expected: people often fear new technologies, so stories of this sort play to receptive audiences. But now a conflict on the margins of the international datelines has shown how helpful these new communications tools can be in waging peace in fractious communities. Read the full article Photo: Xraijs_ / flick

    Police Building in Timor-Leste – Mission Impossible?

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    In the quest to find a success story of international police building, eyes often turn towards Timor-Leste. What we find there is neither a story of success nor failure for either the Timorese or the UN contingents sent there over the last decade. The tale of police building in Timor-Leste is one of quick fixes, short cuts, and lessons apparently not yet learned leading to modest results. The UN’s initial state building efforts did leave behind a police service, but it was a weak one. This experience shows the limits of the UN as an institution for police development. This work was supported in part by Global COE Program "The Transferability of East Asian Development Strategies and State Building", Mext, Japan.

    Entry and exit points: violent extremism in South-East Asia

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    Violent extremism remains a significant challenge for South-East Asia, but in no country does it pose an existential threat. In Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines and Thailand, governments have the capacity to prevent it, while at the same time they should understand that it is unlikely to disappear completely. Whether violent extremism spreads, or is minimized, depends largely on how states react to its presence

    Global Peace Operations Review : Annual Compilation 2015

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    Providing the most comprehensive overview of multilateral contributions to peacekeeping, conflict prevention, and post-conflict peacebuilding, the Review aims to initiate and inform discussions on the comparative advantages and appropriateness of different missions, and through constructive analysis to further strengthen existing partnerships necessary for them to succeed
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