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NUPI skole

Mateja Peter

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Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
kapittel

Securitisation of the EU approach to the Western Balkans: from conflict transformation to crisis management.

Dette kapittelet analyserer EUs kriserespons på Vest-Balkan gjennom linsen til EULEX. Ved å utforske hvordan de som er umiddelbart ansvarlige for mandatutførelsen og de som er direkte berørt av dets resultater oppfatter EULEX, påpeker vi fallgruvene ved politisk innblanding. Mens EULEX har blitt ansett som en viktig vakthund for å forhindre ytterligere menneskerettighetsbrudd, fortsetter EUs tilnærming til Kosovo og regionen å være preget av konkurrerende prioriteringer: EUs bredere politiske mål påvirker og hindrer EULEX’ juridiske arbeid. I sin tur reduserer dette lokalbefolkningens tillit til EULEX og undergraver EUs overordnede mål om å fremme godt styresett og et europeisk perspektiv for Kosovo. Denne spenningen understreker motsetningene i EUs kortsiktige fokus på krisehåndtering og dets mer langsiktige fokus på krisetransformasjon. Dette er spesielt problematisk for en aktør hvis selvbilde som en «normativ makt» er underbygget av en antakelse om at dens innflytelse i verden er oppnådd gjennom «ideenes makt».

  • Forsvar og sikkerhet
  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Global økonomi
  • Regional integrasjon
  • Diplomati og utenrikspolitikk
  • Diplomati
  • Utenrikspolitikk
  • Regioner
  • Europa
  • Fred, krise og konflikt
  • Konflikt
  • Global styring
  • Menneskerettigheter
  • Styring
  • EU
The-EU-and-Crisis-response_large.jpg
  • Forsvar og sikkerhet
  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Global økonomi
  • Regional integrasjon
  • Diplomati og utenrikspolitikk
  • Diplomati
  • Utenrikspolitikk
  • Regioner
  • Europa
  • Fred, krise og konflikt
  • Konflikt
  • Global styring
  • Menneskerettigheter
  • Styring
  • EU
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

UN peace operations in a multipolar order: Building peace through the rule of law and bottom-up approaches

FNs fredsoperasjoner trenger en ny fredsbyggende agenda som anerkjenner både konfliktdrivernes grenseoverskridende natur og den nye multipolare globale orden. En slik agenda vil innebære å forkaste den nåværende tilnærmingen til stabiliseringsoperasjoner, men også å forlate liberal fredsbygging slik vi kjenner det fra den unipolare perioden vi er i ferd med å legge bak oss. En mer realistisk agenda vil innebære at FNs fredsoperasjoner prioriterer rettsstaten og tilnærminger nedenfra og opp, og dermed skaper potensialet for å bli omfavnet av et bredere spekter av medlemsland. I denne artikkelen bringer vi liberal fredsbyggingskritikk inn i en diskusjon om den globale orden. Mens liberal fredsbyggingskritikk er forankret i nedenfra og opp-problematisering av internasjonale intervensjoner og viser hva slags fredsbygging som er ønskelig, avslører debattene om den globale ordrens multipolare karakter ovenfra og ned-begrensninger for hva slags fredsbygging som er mulig.

  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Globalisering
  • Diplomati
  • Utenrikspolitikk
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Styring
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Globalisering
  • Diplomati
  • Utenrikspolitikk
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Styring
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

The double proximity paradox in peacebuilding: implementation and perception of the EU rule of law mission in Kosovo

This contribution increases the understanding of the EU's role in post-conflict settings by exploring perceptions of EULEX by local rule of law experts. Drawing on critical peacebuilding and the decline of normative power Europe literatures, we develop an analytical framework, underlining the importance of the intention–implementation gap and the implementation–perception gap in understanding how EU missions are perceived. By comparing local expert narratives to those of EULEX judges, prosecutors, and legal officers, we contend that the core problem for the negative perception of the mission results from what we call the double proximity paradox in peacebuilding. The first paradox is one of implementation and transpires when an actor commits substantial resources to address structural problems in a post-conflict territory due to its centrality for its own interests, but fails to uphold its commitment as its immediate interests can only be achieved through agents who contribute to these problems. The second paradox relates to perception and transpires as high commitments raise expectations of structural impact. The visibility of the actor's investment makes any implementation failures more tangible. The actor is therefore, paradoxically, the most open to criticism in a territory where it is doing the most.

  • Forsvar og sikkerhet
  • Europa
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • EU
  • Forsvar og sikkerhet
  • Europa
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • EU
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
kapittel

Peacekeeping: Resilience of an idea

This chapter examines the evolution of the idea of UN peacekeeping, asking how an instrument developed in the late 1940s managed to not only survive but also respond to the changing geopolitical and conflict landscape over the last seventy years. Through an overview of major doctrinal developments and institutional adaptations, the chapter analyses how the peacekeeping tool was adapted from a bipolar world, via a unipolar one to today’s multipolar world. Peter argues that peacekeeping started as a conflict management instrument, which was adapted to a conflict resolution mechanism after the end of the Cold War, but has now come full circle and is again increasingly used to manage and contain, not resolve conflicts.

  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
kapittel

Introduction. UN peace operations: Adapting to a new global order?

The introduction identifies four transformations in the global order, whose implications on the UN peace operations are studied in the remainder of the volume. These four transformations are: (1) the rebalancing of relations between states of the global North and the global South; (2) the rise of regional organisations as providers of peace; (3) the rise of violent extremism and fundamentalist non-state actors; and (4) increasing demands from non-state actors for greater emphasis on human security. With the entry of new actors from the global South as important players in the peace arena, we are entering a more pragmatic era of UN peace operations. At the same time, the UN is facing a classic struggle between the promotion of liberal international norms and realist security concerns.

  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Bok

United Nations Peace Operations in a Changing Global Order

This edited volume generates a discussion about UN approaches to peace by studying challenges and opportunities that the organisation is facing in the 21st century. We use some of the findings from the HIPPO report as an inspiration and put both its recommendations and broader UN actions in a wider context. We identify four transformations in the global order and study what implications these have on UN peace operations. The first two transformations emanate from the changing relations between states and reflect the increasingly multipolar character of contemporary global governance. The latter two transformations reflect the changing relations between state and non-state actors. These two broad groups of non-state actors are fundamentally incompatible in their outlook on how and whether the international community should be intervening. That notwithstanding, both groups of non-state actors also force the UN and its member states to rethink the centrality of state-based approaches to security and intervention. In this volume, we identify four transformations in the global order and study their implications on the United Nations peace operations. We ask: - How is the rebalancing of relations between states of the global North and the global South impacting the UN’s decision-making, financing and ability to design operations that go beyond the minimum common denominator; - How is the rise of regional organisations as providers of peace impacting the primacy of UN peace operations and how and whether the UN can remain relevant in this era of partnership and competition; - How have violent extremism and fundamentalist non-state actors changed the nature of international responses and what does this mean for previously advanced longer-term approaches to conflict resolution; - How are demands from non-state actors for greater emphasis on human security impacting the UN’s credibility, and whether, in light of the first three transformations, is the UN even able to prioritise people-centred approaches over state-centred ones. Our core finding is that with the entry of new actors from the global South as important players in the peace arena, we seem to be entering a more pragmatic era of UN peace operations. As contributions to this volume show, there is a greater willingness to innovate and experiment with new forms of conflict management, including more robust interpretations of UN peacekeeping and an increasing reliance on regional actors as providers of peace. At the same time, the UN is facing a classic struggle between the promotion of liberal international norms and realist security concerns. The resolution of this struggle is less clear. The contributors to this volume emphasise the importance of people-centred approaches, conflict sensitivity and longer-term thinking as key aspects to continued relevance of the UN, but their conclusions as to how achievable these are by the UN are not as clear cut.

  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • FN
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • FN
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
kapittel

UN support in the formation of new states: South Sudan, Kosovo, and Timor-Leste

This edited volume offers a thorough review of peacekeeping theory and reality in contemporary contexts, and aligns the two to help inform practice. Recent UN peacekeeping operations have challenged the traditional peacekeeping principles of consent, impartiality and the minimum use of force. The pace and scope of these changes have now reached a tipping point, as the new mandates are fundamentally challenging the continued validity of the UN peacekeeping’s core principles and identity. In response the volume analyses the growing gap between these actual practices and existing UN peacekeeping doctrine, exploring how it undermines the effectiveness of UN operations, and endangers lives, arguing that a common doctrine is a critical starting point for effective multi-national operations. In order to determine the degree to which this general principle applies to the current state of UN peacekeeping, this book: - Provides a review of conceptual and doctrinal developments in UN peacekeeping operations through a historical perspective - Examines the debate related to peace operations doctrine and concepts among key Member States - Focuses on the actual practice of peacekeeping by conducting case studies of several UN peacekeeping missions in order to identify gaps between practice and doctrine - Critically analyses gaps between emerging peacekeeping practice and existing doctrine - Recommends that the UN moves beyond the peacekeeping principles and doctrine of the past Combining empirical case-based studies on UN peace operations, with studies on the views and policies of key UN Security Council members that generate these mandates, and views of key contributors of UN peacekeepers, this volume will be of great use to policy-makers; UN officials and peace operations practitioners; and academics working on peace and conflict/security studies, international organizations and conflict management.

  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
  • Fredsoperasjoner
  • Konflikt
  • Internasjonale organisasjoner
  • FN
Publikasjoner
Publikasjoner
Vitenskapelig artikkel

Securitisation of research: fieldwork under new restrictions in Darfur and Mali

Knowledge on conflict-affected areas is becoming increasingly important for scholarship and policy. This article identifies a recent change in knowledge production regarding 'zones of danger', attributing it not only to the external environment, but also to an on-going process of securitisation of research resulting from institutional and disciplinary practices. Research is increasingly framed by security concerns and is becoming a security concern in itself, although the implications are not readily acknowledged. To illustrate these developments, we draw on fieldwork in Mali and Darfur.

  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Afrika
  • Konflikt
  • Sikkerhetspolitikk
  • Afrika
  • Konflikt
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