Toward Responsibility in the New World Disorder: Challenges and Lessons of Peace Operations (Small Wars and Insurgencies)

Type
Book
Authors
Manwaring ( G.Max and John T.Fishel )
 
ISBN 10
0714649015 
ISBN 13
9780714649016 
Category
327.172- international relations in central American  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
1998 
Publisher
Pages
215 
Subject
Peace; Conflict management; Security, International; International relations; 
Abstract
The driving concept behind main this book is found in the title, Toward Responsibility in the new world Disorder. it has been the experience and perception of the contributions that the major failing of the various civil- military peace keeping operation beginning in the last days of the cold war and continuing through the present has been the unwillingness of the major participants and the international community to accept fully their responsibility for the long-term outcome of the intervention they undertake.

Separately and collectively, the contributors to this issue argue that responsible peace operations take us beyond protecting a people from another group of people or from a government. They take us beyond compelling one or more parties to a conflict cease human right violations and other morally repugnant activities. They take us beyond repelling simple aggression. They take us beyond providing some form of humanitarian or refugee assistance in cases of misery and need. The amorphous contemporary peacekeeping task is to create internal condition within failed or failing states that can lead to the mandated peace and stability with justice. the intent is to be ensure an internationally supported government does not revert to the unstable status quo ante and initiate another threat to the interdependent international community.

This volume commends itself to the reader to provoke thought about what governments and international organizations ought to do when faced with the responsibilities of a given peace operation. Equally important, it suggests what we as citizens in the world community ought to demand of our governments and that community in the current world disorder.


 
Description
This volume commends itself to the reader to provoke thought about what governments and international organizations ought to do when faced with the responsibilities of a given peace operation. Equally important, it suggests what we as citizens in the world community ought to demand of our governments and that community in the current world disorder. The intent is to help decision-makers, policy makers, opinion-makers and students understand the nature of the problem that is likely to provide the greatest challenge to international security management into the next century.  
Biblio Notes
CONTENTS
1. An interview with General John r. Galvin, us army (Ret), Dean,
Fletcher school of Law and Diplomacy, 6 August 1997……………………………………P 1
Max G. Manwaring
2. Tragedy in the Balkans: A Conflict Ended- or interrupted?............................P 12
Michael Moodie
3. from peacemaking to peace building in Central America:
The illusion versus the Reality of peace…………………………………………………………P 32
Kimbra L. Fishel
4. The Challenge of Haiti’s Future………………………………………………….………………P 50
Donald E. Schulz
5. Waiting for ‘The Big One’ Confronting complex Humanitarian Emergence and state Collapse in central Africa………………………………………………………………………P 72
Walter S. Clarke
6. Normative implications of the savage Wars of Peace……………………..…………P 102
John T. Fishel
7. Beyond the logjam: A Doctrine for Complex Emergencies…………….…………..P 114
John Mackinlay
8. Policing the new world disorder: Addressing Gaps in public
Security during peace operation…………………………………………………………..……….P 132
Michael H. Dziedzic
9. The Future of Peace support Operations……………………………………………………P 160
Robert H. Dorff
10. Facing the choice Among Bad option in complex of
Humanitarian Emergencies………………………………………………………………….………P 179
Dayton L. Marwell
11. the Almost Obvious’ lesson of the peace Operation……………………………..…P 192
Max G. Manwaring and Edwin G. Corr
 
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