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A different kind of peacebuilding?

NUPI has, together with five partners, investigated the rising powers’ approach to peacebuilding.
Bildet viser en EU-representant som lander med FN-helikopter på Haiti i 2010.

PREVENTION: The European Union’s understanding of peacebuilding is closely related to a broader conflict prevention agenda. The image shows a member of the European Union assessment team disembarks a UN peacekeeping helicopter in Petit-Goâve, Haiti in 2010.

Foto: UN Photo/Logan Abassi

PREVENTION: The European Union’s understanding of peacebuilding is closely related to a broader conflict prevention agenda. The image shows a member of the European Union assessment team disembarks a UN peacekeeping helicopter in Petit-Goâve, Haiti in 2010.

Foto: UN Photo/Logan Abassi

The  Rising Powers and Peacebuilding project has looked into questions that have not previously been thoroughly researched: what are the approaches that rising powers take to peacebuilding, how do they differ from those of traditional powers and multilateral institutions, and what lessons can be learned from these new approaches? 

The project shed light on how rising powers differ from traditional donors through their increased use of humanitarian aid, development assistance, unconditional commitment of resources, national ownership, and inclusivity as key methods and principles in peacebuilding and conflict prevention. 

Dr Cedric de Coning has been the project leader at NUPI, while Dr Marc Lanteigne and Dr Eli Stamnes have contributed to the research and produced policy briefs for the project.

Earlier this year, Dr Stamnes published a policy brief titled 'The European Union and Peacebuilding', as part of the project. The policy brief investigates the European Union’s approach to peacebuilding. This represents one of the traditional/Western approaches to which the rising powers’ peacebuilding activities are being compared.

The policy brief shows that the European Union’s understanding of peacebuilding is closely related to a broader conflict prevention agenda, involves a broad range of instruments, and is in line with the liberal peacebuilding approach that has dominated the field for the last two-three decades. 

Themes

  • Peace operations
  • International organizations
  • The EU

Fact

  • The term rising powers refers in this context to China, Brazil, India, Indonesia, South Africa and Turkey.
  • NUPI has collaborated with the African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD, in South Africa), the Istanbul Policy Center (IPC), the United Service Institution of India (USI), the American University’s School of International Service (SIS), and Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS, in Indonesia). The project is funded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, American University, and NUPI.