A Liberal Peace?: The Problems and Practices of Peacebuilding
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A Liberal Peace?: The Problems and Practices of Peacebuilding
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Product Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781780320052 |
|---|---|
| Publisher: | Bloomsbury Publishing |
| Publication date: | 11/10/2011 |
| Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
| Format: | eBook |
| Pages: | 280 |
| File size: | 530 KB |
About the Author
David Chandler is Professor of International Relations, Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Westminster, London, UK. He is the founding editor of the Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding. His recent books include International Statebuilding: The Rise of Post-Liberal Governance (Routledge, 2010) and Hollow Hegemony: Rethinking Global Politics, Power and Resistance (Pluto, 2009).
Meera Sabaratnam is a PhD candidate in the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics, with previous degrees from Balliol College, Oxford and the LSE. Her current research applies postcolonial theoretical approaches to a critical appraisal of the liberal peace in Mozambique. She has formerly edited Millennium: Journal of International Studies and currently teaches a Masters' course on Conflict and Peace Studies. She is co-editor of the collection Interrogating Democracy in World Politics (Routledge, 2011).
Read an Excerpt
A Liberal Peace?
The Problems and Practices of Peacebuilding
By Susanna Campbell, David Chandler, Meera Sabaratnam
Zed Books Ltd
Copyright © 2011 Susanna Campbell, David Chandler and Meera SabaratnamAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-78032-005-2
CHAPTER 1
The Liberal Peace? An Intellectual History of International Conflict Management, 1990–2010
Meera Sabaratnam
In this volume, the term 'the liberal peace' is understood as the dominant critical intellectual framework currently applied to post-Cold War policies and practices of post-conflict intervention. However, as Heathershaw observes, its use within analysis has sometimes tended, misleadingly, to claim that the liberal peace has had only a singular logic or set of assumptions (2008a: 603), gradations of this logic notwithstanding. Both he and Call and Cousens (2008) note that different ideas are at work in the movements between peacebuilding and statebuilding as modes of conflict management. This chapter gives an alternative historical overview of these developments and locates the academic critiques in the context of these changes, giving a sense in which academic critique and political practice have coevolved. These shifts and expansions reflect something rather more complex, and perhaps more opaque, than a hardening or deepening of a liberal logic in intervention – rather they reveal a reflexive anxiety about inadequacy of this logic to address seemingly intractable challenges of conflict, insecurity and underdevelopment. By tracking the recent evolution of these discourses and the critiques of the paradigm, this chapter sets the stage for the other contributions to the volume which interrogate and broaden empirically and conceptually the problem of 'the liberal peace'.
The chapter begins through exploring the intellectual and political climate of the early 1990s and the founding principles of 'peacebuilding' as articulated by the UN. It then shows how these were lost almost immediately in the mid-1990s, both to unfolding global events and to new discourses about failing and collapsed states. This had important linkages with changing discourses in other aspects of institutional intervention, including the policy turn within the international financial institutions towards the question of 'governance'. Connected to a resurgent interest in 'grassroots' and 'bottom-up' interventions, however, therapeutic discourses and practices dealing with trauma, healing and reconciliation became a central element of peacebuilding. At this time an increasingly broad set of actors, including humanitarian and transitional justice agencies, became involved. In the last ten years, however, renewed interest in the question of state fragility and the principles of statebuilding has become pervasive not just in responses to conflict but the governance of the global South more generally. In conclusion the chapter offers some reflections on the current historical juncture and how this might shape future understandings of conflict management.
UN Peacebuilding, the Early Years: From Social Justice to State Collapse
In the early days of the practice, third-party post-war interventions were seen as the basic preserve of the UN. The end of the Cold War was a watershed moment for the organisation, and in particular for its Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO). Having been paralysed from all but minimal activity due to the exercise of Security Council vetoes, it found itself launching fourteen new operational missions between 1988 and 1992, compared to none in the previous ten years (DPKO 2010a). Whilst some of these operations followed the logic of traditional peacekeeping – mainly ceasefire monitoring, others began to foreshadow the more comprehensive, multidimensional and transformative operations that would become the hallmark of post-conflict peacebuilding. Early apparent successes in Nicaragua (1990) and Namibia (1990), involving relatively light-touch and well-defined missions in already-post-conflict environments, emboldened the organisation to take a more proactive stance in shaping the nature of the peace to come, through shepherding elections and demobilisation.
It was in this context that Boutros-Ghali's groundbreaking 1992 Agenda for Peace statement was delivered. Taken widely as the foundational text for the policy of 'post-conflict peacebuilding', it defined it as 'action to identify and support structures which will tend to consolidate peace and advance a sense of confidence and well-being among people' (1992: 32). In this text could clearly be seen an understanding of conflict that was based on structural violence and social grievance as the generative causes, with economic development and political freedom intended as the appropriate remedies:
Our aims must be ...
– To stand ready to assist in peace-building in its differing contexts: rebuilding the institutions and infrastructures of nations torn by civil war and strife; and building bonds of peaceful mutual benefit among nations formerly at war;
– And in the largest sense, to address the deepest causes of conflict: economic despair, social injustice and political oppression. (Agenda for Peace, 1992, emphasis added)
Indeed, in defining the term 'peacebuilding', the Agenda for Peace was about re-envisioning a role for the UN as a progressive, autonomous agent of peace, development and global justice after years of marginalisation. This theme is reinforced in the text itself through an explicit connection of the peace agenda to the contemporaneous Rio Summit and the proposed World Forum for Social Development. Establishing 'peacebuilding' as a defined and distinctive activity, grounded in the apparently universal aspiration of solving conflict, was intended, perhaps successfully in the short term, to channel growing Western attention towards these issues into a blossoming multilateral progressive consensus for peacemaking, development and social justice.
However, this new mandate became almost immediately besieged by events which demonstrated the split between its transformative ambitions and the shape of political events. Even as Boutros-Ghali gave his speech in June 1992, the violence in Bosnia was accelerating, and five months later Savimbi would defect from the UN's carefully chaperoned electoral process in Angola, prompting extensive caution and delay in the Mozambique mission. In 1993, UN troops and humanitarian workers would be ambushed in Somalia, leading to the re-deployment of US troops and the Black Hawk Down incident, resulting in the US withdrawal and little appetite to involve itself in international peacemaking. The tragic and egregious failures of the UN Assistance Mission for Rwanda in early 1994 seemed to underscore the gulf between Boutros-Ghali's projections for building peace and the mood of the contributing states, whilst the massacre at Srebenica in 1995 seemed to call into question the point of UN peacekeeping altogether. In particular, cracks were beginning to show between the expanded mandate for peacekeeping forces and their attempts to deliver humanitarian and political projects, which were clearly limited.
These peacekeeping failures had a knock-on effect on the ideas governing the expansion of peacebuilding, as the implications of a more ambitious peace operations agenda became clearer. Strangely, however, this was not a pull-back from the extended agenda, but a ramping-up of activity, ambition and response. More actors were involved, and asked to undertake a wider range of tasks. As reflected in the rather less exuberant Supplement to the Agenda for Peace(Boutros-Ghali, 1995), failures were rationalised through the perception that the nature of conflict was changing, from interstate to intrastate, and into chaotic, unmanageable situations where state institutions had collapsed:
Another feature of such conflicts is the collapse of state institutions, especially the police and judiciary, with resulting paralysis of governance, a breakdown of law and order, and general banditry and chaos. Not only are the functions of government suspended, its assets are destroyed or looted and experienced officials are killed or flee the country. This is rarely the case in inter-state wars. It means that international intervention must extend beyond military and humanitarian tasks and must include the promotion of national reconciliation and the re-establishment of effective government. (1995: section 13, emphasis added)
Nonetheless, Boutros-Ghali attempted to maintain and protect a traditional UN discourse that these were necessary precursors to addressing the injustices that underlay conflict:
As I pointed out in 'An Agenda for Development' (A/48/935), only sustained efforts to resolve underlying socio-economic, cultural and humanitarian problems can place an achieved peace on a durable foundation. (1995: section 22, emphasis added)
As such, the ideological and political foundations for an altogether more comprehensive, wide-ranging and co-ordinated effort at the transformation of state and society through multilateral multidimensional peace operations were being laid, even at this early stage, in the political arena. What we see in theSupplement is Boutros-Ghali trying to maintain the UN vision whilst accepting this more pessimistic account of conflict dynamics, which produces the idea that intervention has been insufficient rather than overambitious. This movement towards a comprehensive reform agenda in post-conflict societies was noted at an early stage by academic commentators, who pointed out its potentially radical implications (Bertram 1995).
Managing Global Chaos? The Emergence of a Field
Simultaneously with this new departure in UN thinking, the silos that that had been established in academia between 'peace studies' and 'security studies' through the 1970s and 1980s had begun to break down. In particular, peace studies was rescued from its political obscurity and engaged in the service of this new international agenda for peace. In particular, theories of human need (Burton 1987) and social grievances (Azar 1986) informed these early, Third World-friendly readings of conflict held by multilateral organisations. These readings of conflict held out the promise of peaceful resolution of conflict along politically emancipatory lines. Importantly, they corresponded with the Democracy and Development Agendas of the UN that underpinned the Agenda for Peace, and provided a scholarly rationale for how and why peace building, envisaged as progressive social transformation, was necessary.
New avenues of research were facilitated by this more expansive peacebuilding programme, which argued for broadening the intervention agendafor a more comprehensive peace programme. Academic debates about conflict prevention and early warning (Lund 1996), the management of spoilers (Stedman 1997), mediation processes (Touval and Zartman 1985), the involvement of humanitarian actors (Prendergast 1996) and the importance of human rights underpinned the much wider and deeper role peacebuilding practices were beginning to assume around conflict. Slowly, this set of concerns began to develop independent momentum as an industry, with various funding streams and research streams coalescing around this agenda. For example, large collaborations such as the UNRISD War-Torn Societies Project (1994–1998) and the Carnegie Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict (1994–1999) were tasked with developing and bringing together work on conflict prevention and resolutions specifically to address what was seen as the worrying increasing prevalence of intrastate conflict.
The substance of the first United States Institute of Peace collected volume Managing Global Chaos (Crocker et al. 1996) gives us an interesting snapshot of the moment and captures some of the core intellectual trends which supported this expansion of the notion of peacebuilding, as understood by the peace studies community. The volume itself is divided into sections on the sources of conflict, with prominence given both to 'structural' explanations and social-psychological explanations, a large second section on traditional means of diplomacy, collective security, peacekeeping and humanitarian intervention, a sizeable third section on conflict management via mediation, conflict prevention and problem-solving, and a final, briefer section on the consolidation of peace and the need for custodianship of the post-settlement phase. The drawing together of these questions in a single textbook volume announced assertively the presence of a coherent, professional and focused field of conflict analysis and peace-based interventions, and strongly echoed the political climate in which it was believed that improving knowledge of conflict and peace processes would enable a willing international community to resolve these problems. At the time, critique of the paradigm, such as it existed, was highly focused on the technical questions of sequencing and speed, albeit with some consciousness of its politics.
However, the optimism of these approaches in foreign policy circles was also tested by the events of the 1990s, even as the field began to cohere. The intellectual and policy climate in Washington on conflict and post-conflict situations grew darker, beginning to reflect a growing perception of global collapse and chaos. A parallel worldview began to emerge in this period, particularly from the security community during and after the problems of Somalia and Rwanda, in which it was argued that the UN apparatus was ill-equipped to deal with conflict. Publications in this vein included the influential and provocative article on 'Saving Failed States' in (1992) Foreign Policy by ex-US Government advisers Helman and Ratner, Robert Kaplan's 'The Coming Anarchy' (1994) and Zartman's (1995) edited Collapsed States: The Disintegration and Restoration of Legitimate Authority. Although arguing in different modes, they collectively signalled a belief in a world that was, outside the West, subject to deep disorder and spinning further adrift from the state authority and order of the Cold War era. These states were seen as no longer 'transitioning' but 'failed' or 'failing', presenting a threat to regional and global security.
Although ostensibly coming from different places, these different intellectual traditions – peace studies and security studies respectively – nonetheless pushed international multilateral policy on conflict in a more or less consistent direction: on the basis of superior knowledge, deeper involvement, more commitment and the use of force where necessary, the international community could and should undertake more comprehensive and extensive interventions to secure global peace. This broad consensus became a basic truism of what came to be understood in later years as 'the liberal peace' by its critics.
Institutionalisation: The Turn to Governance, Responsibility and Transitional Administration
Whilst the new preoccupations with peacebuilding and state failure were beginning to animate the peace and security intellectual communities during the 1990s, the economic development community was also beginning to move in a similar direction. As Williams and Young (1994) note, in the early 1990s the international financial institutions, and particularly the World Bank, became quickly and deeply interested in questions of 'good governance', which it characterised as pertaining to the technical functional requirements of modern statehood, moving the institution towards a much more maximalist interpretation of its mandates for promoting 'efficiency'. This allowed it, in the framework of articles forbidding involvement in non-economic affairs, to become involved in legal reforms, reforms within the state, the promotion of civil society and so on. These were significant departures in terms of both the ideas and practices of the Bank that underscored the end of an uncontrolled market orthodoxy and a shift towards a more regulatory approach. This shift precipitated a rapid expansion of sectoral activities and a much deeper embedding in the governments of recipient states, such that they became part of the permanent state apparatus itself (Harrison 2004).
There were clear parallels between the expansion of this agenda and the expansion of the peace and security agendas, which connected the phenomena of conflict and underdevelopment to the fact that they had their roots in a malfunctioning political society in need of detailed and externally driven reform. Indeed, in practice these structures of external governance were deeply connected at the level of national missions, with powerful co-ordination mechanisms being established, such as the International Committee for the Reconstruction of Cambodia, which brought together the peacekeeping mission structures with the international financial institutions and other donor governments' agencies (DPKO 2010b). Although in theory these mechanisms were subordinate to national governments, in practice they were often the centre of political decision-making in the post-war periods (Harrison 2004).
(Continues...)
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Table of Contents
TablesAbout the Authors
Acronyms
Introduction: The Politics of Liberal Peace, Susanna Campbell, David Chandler and Meera Sabaratnam
Part I: Introducing the Debate
1. A Brief Intellectual History of International Conflict Management, 1990-2010, Meera Sabaratnam
2. Critiques of Liberal Peace, Roland Paris
Part II: Not Such a 'Liberal' Peace? Rethinking Intervention
3. Why Peacebuilding is Toothless: Sovereignty, Patrimonialism and Power, Ole Jacob Sending
4. The Liberal Peace - A Tough Sell?, Christoph Zuercher
5. Routine Learning? How Peacebuilding Organizations Prevent Liberal Peace, Susanna Campbell
6. Promoting Women's Rights in Afghanistan: The Ambiguous Footprint of the West, Torunn Wimpelmann Chaudhary, Orzala Ashraf and Astri Suhrke
7. Neither Liberal nor Peaceful? Practices of 'Global Justice' by the ICC, Adam Branch
8. Civil Society Beyond the Liberal Peace and its Critique, Thania Paffenholz
Part III: Rethinking the Critique: What Next?
9. Alternatives to Liberal Peace?, Roland Paris
10. The Uncritical Critique of Liberal Peace, David Chandler
11. Reality Check: The Critique of the Liberal Peace Meets the Politics of State-Building, Shahar Hameiri
12. Hybrid Peace: How does hybrid peace come about?, Roger Mac Ginty
13. Resistance and the Post-Liberal Peace, Oliver P. Richmond
14. Situated Critiques of Intervention: the Diverse Politics of Response, Meera Sabaratnam