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Infrastructure for Peace

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Infrastructure for Peace is a new approach in peacebuilding which gained momentum after locally led and participatory peacebuilding practices tended to yield effective results in some countries beset by conflicts. It underpins the ideas of conflict transformation and stresses on under-girding the politically negotiated settlements at top level by peacebuilding efforts at the grassroots.

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Definition

In 2010, governments, political parties, civil society and United Nations country representatives from 14 African countries in Kenya agreed upon a working definition of infrastructures for peace as a ‘dynamic network of interdependent structures, mechanisms, resources, values and skills which, through dialogue and consultation, contribute to conflict prevention and peacebuilding in a society’.[1]

Examples

Studies exemplify National Peace Council (Ghana), Department on Ethnic, Religious Policy and Civil Society Interaction (Kyrgyzstan)[2] and economical approaches in Guyana, Bolivia and Kenya and the United Nations Development Programme contributes to about 30 infrastructures for peace projects around the globe.[3]

Criticisms

Critical studies on the infrastructure for peace mainly see this as a fuzzy concept because peacebuilding cannot be guaranteed only by local efforts. Such local infrastructures are prone to suffer from political upheavals,[4] they still rely on external funding and cannot do well under strictly autocratic regimes.[5] New research works, which conflate infrastructures for peace with security sector reform have also suggested such architectures need to rise above local boundaries to negotiate on security issues because (in)security has transnational connections.[6]

Contributions

Academic conferences, special editions of journals, issue-specific books and websites dedicated to this topic have begun to emerge including the UNE Peace Studies Conference (2015) on questioning 'peace formation' and 'peace infrastructure', Berghof Handbook[7] and a Journal of Peacebuilding and Development Special Edition in Vol. 7, No. 3.

References

  1. ^ JPD Editors (2012). "The Evolving Landscape of Infrastructures for Peace". Journal of Peacebuilding & Development. 7 (3): 1–7. doi:10.1080/15423166.2013.774793. {{cite journal}}: |last1= has generic name (help)
  2. ^ Kumar, Chetan; de la Haye, Jos (2012). "Hybrid Peacemaking: Building National "Infrastructures for Peace"" (PDF). Global Governance. 18 (1): 13–20. doi:10.1163/19426720-01801003.
  3. ^ Ryan, Jordan (December 2012). "Infrastructures for Peace as a Path to Resilient Societies: An Institutional Perspective". Journal of Peacebuilding & Development. 7 (3): 14–24. doi:10.1080/15423166.2013.774806. S2CID 153337459.
  4. ^ Chuma, Aeneas; Ojielo, Ozonnia (December 2012). "Building a Standing National Capacity for Conflict Prevention and Resolution in Kenya". Journal of Peacebuilding & Development. 7 (3): 25–39. doi:10.1080/15423166.2013.774790. S2CID 153944265.
  5. ^ Odendaal, Andries (December 2012). "The Political Legitimacy of National Peace Committees". Journal of Peacebuilding & Development. 7 (3): 40–53. doi:10.1080/15423166.2013.767601. S2CID 154106923.
  6. ^ Ghimire, Safal. 2016. Making Security Sector Reform Organic: Infrastructures for Peace as an Entry Point? In: Peacebuilding, DOI:10.1080/21647259.2016.1156813
  7. ^ Unger, B; Lundström, S; Austin, B; Planta, K (2013). Peace Infrastructures: Assessing Concept and Practice (Berghof Handbook Dialogue Series, No. 10) (PDF). Berlin: Berghof Foundation.
This page was last edited on 26 May 2024, at 05:51
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