Journal Article10.1177/0967010610374312
Hybrid peace: The interaction between top-down and bottom-up peace
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TL;DR: In this article, a four-part conceptual model is proposed to help visualize the interplay that leads to hybridized forms of peace, which is the result of the following: the compliance powers of liberal peace agents, networks and structures; the incentivizing powers of conservative peace agents and networks; the ability of local actors to resist, ignore or adapt liberal peace interventions; and the ability for local actors, networks, and structures to present and maintain alternative forms of peacemaking.
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Abstract: This article is interested in the interface between internationally supported peace operations and local approaches to peace that may draw on traditional, indigenous and customary practice. It argues that peace (and security, development and reconstruction) in societies emerging from violent conflict tends to be a hybrid between the external and the local. The article conceptualizes how this hybrid or composite peace is constructed and maintained. It proposes a four-part conceptual model to help visualize the interplay that leads to hybridized forms of peace. Hybrid peace is the result of the interplay of the following: the compliance powers of liberal peace agents, networks and structures; the incentivizing powers of liberal peace agents, networks and structures; the ability of local actors to resist, ignore or adapt liberal peace interventions; and the ability of local actors, networks and structures to present and maintain alternative forms of peacemaking.
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Citations
Exploring local compliance with peacebuilding reforms: legitimacy, coercion and reward-seeking in police reform in Kosovo
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore why local police officers choose to comply or resist the police reforms stipulated by an international peacebuilding mission operating in their country, and show that legitimacy, coercion, and reward-seeking do not influence compliance directly, but only through the hypothesised intervening variables.
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Constructing the capable state: Contested discourses and practices in EU capacity building:
Timothy Edmunds,Ana E. Juncos +1 more
TL;DR: Capacity building has risen to prominence in the vocabulary of the international community as a way to promote security and development in fragile and post-conflict environments as mentioned in this paper. But capacity building has not yet been considered as a sustainable development strategy.
The Rise of China’s Developmental Peace: Can an Economic Approach to Peacebuilding Create Sustainable Peace?
TL;DR: The rise of China's international peace activities has brought new challenges to the notion and practice of peacebuilding as mentioned in this paper, and China employs a style of "developmental peace" in the developing countries.
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Winning wars, building (illiberal) peace? The rise (and possible fall) of a victor’s peace in Rwanda and Sri Lanka
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors look at Sri Lanka and Rwanda, two countries where a victorious leadership has led the process of post-conflict reconstruction, largely by employing illiberal means.
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Bilge Yabanci
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: In this paper, an analytical perspective of legitimation based on local support is adopted to understand how and when local agency impacts EU conflict resolution, and the framework is applied to analyse the complex interaction between fragmented local groups (political elites, non-state organisations and public) and the EU (as a framework and as a policy-actor) in two grand conflict resolution projects of the EU: Kosovo and North Cyprus.
21
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