PC 2008 Web - rienner.com

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2008 C ELEBRATING 24 YEARS OF I NDEPENDENT P UBLISHING lynne rienner publishers Peace & Conflict NEW & RECENT BOOKS

Transcript of PC 2008 Web - rienner.com

Page 1: PC 2008 Web - rienner.com

2008

CELEBRATING 24 YEARS

OF INDEPENDENT PUBLISHING

lynne rienner publishers

Peace &ConflictN E W & R E C E N T B O O K S

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Peace, Justice,and Security

Studies: A Curriculum Guide

Timothy A. McElwee,B. Welling Hall, andJoseph Liechty, editors

20% discount off three or more books!You will want to take advantage of our 20% discount onpurchases of three or more titles. Just fill out the form atthe back of this catalog. (Librarians: simply attach theorder form to your purchase order.) Don’t delay—thisoffer ends May 15, 2008!

Looking for a specific book? Can’t find it in this catalog? To make space for our ever-growing list of new books, we have had to leave outsome of your old favorites. For information about booksnot in this catalog, just call us at 303-444-6684 with yourquestions or visit our website, www.rienner.com, tosearch our complete database by author, title, or keyword.

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Is the text you want to use out-of-stock? Don’t despair!Call Sheila or Patty at 303-444-6684 for details about ourText-in-Time print-on-demand program.

Full information on all LRP books can be obtained at ourwebsite, www.rienner.com. Or, just contact our office(tel: 303-444-6684; fax: 303-444-0824; e-mail: [email protected]) to request a subject-area catalog.

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Fully revised to reflect the realities ofthe post–September 11 world, this

acclaimed curricular reference providesa comprehensive review of the field ofpeace, justice, and security studies.

Seven introductory essays systemat-ically cover the state of the disciplinetoday, surveying current intellectual andpedagogical themes. These are followedby seventy classroom-tested syllabusesorganized by topics and includingcourse descriptions, schedules, bibli-ographies, and notes on successfulteaching practices. In keeping with themultifaceted nature of the subject, mul-tiple perspectives, among them politicalscience, philosophy, religious studies,sociology, and anthropology, are fullyrepresented in this indispensableresource.

Timothy A. McElwee is PlowsharesAssociate Professor of Peace Studies anddirector of the Peace Studies Institute atManchester College. B. Welling Hall isassociate professor of politics and inter-national studies at Earlham College.Joseph Liechty is associate professor ofpeace, justice, and conflict studies atGoshen College.

C o n t e n t s

•Challenges in Peace, Justice, and SecurityStudies—B. Wien.

CURRENT THEMES.•Terrorism and Security—S. Zunes. •International Organization and the Rule of

Law—R.C. Johansen. •Globalization—J. Swanger. •Conflict Transformation, Conflict

Resolution, and Peacebuilding—P. Coy. •Peace Theory, Nonviolence, and

Cultures of Peace—B. Gan. •Social and Cultural Influences on Justice,

Peace, and Security—G. Lopez. COURSE SYLLABUSES.•Introduction to Peace and Justice Studies. •Violence and Nonviolence. •Terrorism and War. •International Organization and the

Rule of Law. •Conflict Transformation. •Globalization and Human Security. •Religion: Sources of Conflict and

Approaches to Peace. •Cultures of Peace. •Social and Cultural Dynamics. •Skills in Conflict Resolution. •Peace Studies in Disciplinary Perspective.

August 2008/ca. 600 pagesISBN: 978-1-58826-601-9 hc $58/£36.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-625-5 pb $28.50/£17.95

PRAISE FOR THE PREVIOUS EDITIONS:

“Packed with information for establishing an impressive range of courses.”—PACIFIC RESEARCH

“Provides unsurpassed resources for teachers.... Anyone planning a new course or reviving an old one would be

wise to start here.... Regardless of the approach one chooses in teachingpeace studies, the syllabi provide starting points for virtually any topic a student may want to research. I imagine my copy

getting worn, stained, and dog-eared in fairly short order and remaining in active use long after.”

—PEACE & CHANGE

??

NEW—PROFESSIONAL RESOURCES!See page 23 for more information about

On the Market and The Black Academic’s Guide to Winning Tenure

—Without Losing Your Soul

Lynne Rienner Publishers

NEW—7TH EDIT ION!

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Civil War and the Rule of Law:

Security,Development,Human Rights

Agnès Hurwitz, withReyko Huang, editors

Building States to Build Peace

Charles T. Call, withVanessa Hawkins Wyeth,

editors

T here is increasing consensus amongscholars and policy analysts that suc-

cessful peacebuilding can occur only inthe context of capable state institutions.But how can legitimate and sustainablestates best be established in the after-math of civil wars? And what roleshould international actors play in sup-porting the vital process?

Addressing these questions, thisstate-of-the-art volume explores the corechallenges involved in institutionalizingpostconflict states. The combination ofthematic chapters and in-depth casestudies covers the full range of the mostvexing and diverse problems con-fronting domestic and internationalactors seeking to build states whilebuilding peace.

Charles T. Call is assistant profes-sor of international relations atAmerican University. Vanessa HawkinsWyeth is on the staff of the InternationalPeace Academy, where she focuses onissues of statebuilding and peacebuilding.

C o n t e n t s

•Ending Wars, Building States—C.T. Call.

CONTEXT.

•The Politics of Security in PostconflictStatebuilding—B.R. Rubin.

•Participation and State Legitimation—K. Papagianni.

•Peacebuilding and Public Finance—M. Carnahan and C. Lockhart.

•Postconflict Economic Policy—P. Collier.

•Justice and the Rule of Law—E. Jensen.

•Bottom-Up Statebuilding—W. Reno.

•Practical Approaches to Building StateInstitutions—S. Cliffe and N. Manning.

CASES.

•Somalia—K. Menkhaus.

•Palestine—R. Brynen.

•Bosnia and Herzegovina—M. Cox.

•East Timor—E. Bowles and T. Chopra.

•Afghanistan—J. Sherman.

•Liberia—M. McGovern.

CONCLUSION.

•Building States to Build Peace?—C.T. Call.

May 2008/ca. 460 pagesISBN: 978-1-58826-456-5 hc $59.95/£37.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-480-0 pb $24.50/£15.50A project of the International Peace AcademyNo rights in South Asia

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H ow do rule of law programs con-tribute to conflict management?

What strategies best address the chal-lenges to securing the rule of law infragile countries? What place do rule oflaw policies have in efforts to achievestable and equitable development?

The authors of Civil War and theRule of Law address these fundamentalquestions, analyzing rule of law pro-grams in the context of conflict preven-tion, peacekeeping, and peacebuildingactivities. Throughout the book, theyemphasize the critical relationship link-ing the rule of law, security, develop-ment, and human rights.

Agnès Hurwitz is in the Office ofthe President of the InternationalCriminal Tribunal for the FormerYugoslavia. Reyko Huang, formerly aprogram officer at the InternationalPeace Academy, is a doctoral candidatein political science at ColumbiaUniversity.

C o n t e n t s

•Civil War and the Rule of Law: TowardSecurity, Development, and HumanRights—A. Hurwitz.

THE RULE OF LAW: CONCEPTUAL

PERSPECTIVES. •Exploring the Rule of Law in Theory and

Practice—R. Mani.

•Invoking the Rule of Law: InternationalDiscourses—B. Rajagopal.

CONFLICT PREVENTION, PEACEKEEPING,AND PEACEBUILDING. •Prevention and the Rule of Law: Rhetoric

and Reality—C.L. Sriram. •UN Peacekeeping Operations and Rule of

Law Programs—W.G. O’Neill. •Model Codes: Laying the Foundation of

the Rule of Law—C. Rausch and V. O’Connor.

•“Ownership”: The Transfer of Authority inPostconflict Operations—S. Chesterman.

•Addressing the Past: Reparations for GrossHuman Rights Abuses—P. de Greiff.

LINKING SECURITY, DEVELOPMENT, AND

HUMAN RIGHTS.•Beyond Restitution: Housing, Land,

Property, and the Rule of Law—A. Hurwitz.

•Corruption: A Rule of Law Agenda?—M. O’Donnell.

•Counterterrorism and the Rule of Law—R. Huang.

CONCLUSION. •Toward Further Debate on the Rule of

Law in Peacebuilding Processes—A. Hurwitz.

February 2008/ca. 380 pages LC: 2007037868ISBN: 978-1-58826-531-9 hc $59.95/£37.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-507-4 pb $24.50/£15.50A Project of the International Peace AcademyNo rights in South Asia

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N E W! N E W!

Let us know your areas of interest by sending an email to [email protected],and we will deliver new bookannouncements electronically.

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From Soldiers toPoliticians:Transforming

Rebel MovementsAfter Civil War

Jeroen de Zeeuw, editor

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I n the transition from war-torn soci-eties to stable multiparty democracies,

what is the role of former rebel leaders?Can rebel movements effectively trans-form themselves from military to politi-cal organizations? From Soldiers toPoliticians explores when and how mili-tias succeed in reorienting their goalsand practices toward legitimate politicalactivities, and how external actors cansupport that practice.

The authors present eight theoreti-cally grounded country studies, focus-ing in each on the historical back-ground of the rebel movement, its(attempted or successful) transforma-tion into a political party, and the fac-tors explaining success or failure.Bridging the academic-policy divide,they identify concrete lessons from pre-vious transformations processes, as wellas options for future internationalinvolvement.

Jeroen de Zeeuw is senior researchassociate in the Conflict Research Unitat the Clingendael Institute of Inter-national Relations in the Netherlands.

C o n t e n t s

•Understanding the Political Transforma-tion of Rebel Movements—J. de Zeeuw.

•El Salvador: The Success of the FMLN—C. Wade.

•Mozambique: RENAMO’s ElectoralSuccess—C. Manning.

•Sierra Leone: Marginalization of the RUF—P. Richards and J. Vincent.

•Burundi: The Deficient Transformation ofthe CNDD-FDD—W. Nindorera.

•Palestine: Hamas’s UnfinishedTransformation—P. Scholey.

•Sudan: The Incomplete Transition fromSPLA to SPLM—J. Young.

•Afghanistan: Political Parties or MilitiaFronts?—A. Giustozzi.

•Sri Lanka: The Continued Armed Struggleof the LTTE—C. Smith.

•International Involvement in Rebel-to-Party Transformations—L. van de Goorand J. de Zeeuw.

2008/296 pages LC: 2007024805ISBN: 978-1-58826-580-7 hc $58.50/£36.95No rights in South Asia

“This book covers an important topic, the transformation of armies and paramilitaries into political actors.... The contributors are knownexperts in their field and the quality of the case studies is very high.”

—SUSAN L. WOODWARD

“The case studies are excellent—well-written and carefully researched—and will attract a broad readership.”

—TERRENCE LYONS

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N E W!

Peace and thePublic Purse:

Economic Policies for PostwarStatebuilding

James K. Boyce andMadalene O’Donnell,

editors

I n the aftermath of violent conflict,how do the economic challenges of

statebuilding intersect with the politicalchallenges of peacebuilding? How canthe international community help laythe fiscal foundations for a sustainablestate and a durable peace? Peace and thePublic Purse examines these questions,lifting the curtain that often has sepa-rated economic policy from peaceimplementation.

Drawing on recent experiences inAfghanistan, Bosnia, Cambodia, Timor-Leste, Guatemala, Palestine, andUganda, the authors bring to life a keydimension of how both peace and statesare built.

James K. Boyce is professor of economics at the University ofMassachusetts, Amherst. MadaleneO’Donnell is on the staff of the UNDepartment of PeacekeepingOperations.

C o n t e n t s

•Peace and the Public Purse: AnIntroduction—the Editors.

•From Failed State to Good Performer? The Case of Uganda—L. Ndikumanaand J. Nannyonjo.

•Aid, Public Finance, and Accountability:Cambodian Dilemmas—P. Smoke and R.R. Taliercio, Jr.

•Building Fiscal Provisions into PeaceAgreements: Cautionary Tales fromGuatemala—P. Rodas-Martini.

•National Ownership and InternationalTrusteeship: The Case of Timor-Leste—E. Pires and M. Francino.

•The Budget as the Lynchpin of the State:Lessons from Afghanistan—A. Ghani, C. Lockhart, N. Nehan, and B. Massoud.

•Managing Public Resources: TheExperience of the Palestinian “Proto-State”—R. Brynen.

•Currency and Sovereignty: Why MonetaryPolicy Is Critical—W. Coats.

•Postwar Debts: Time for a New Approach—P. Alvarez-Plata and T. Brück.

•Policy Implications: The Economics ofPostwar Statebuilding—the Editors.

2007/347 pages LC: 2007041071ISBN: 978-1-58826-540-1 hc $59.95/£37.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-516-6 pb $24.50/£15.50Center on International Cooperation Studies in MultilateralismNo rights in South Asia

“This practical and insightful book demonstrates why public finance issues should be of concern not only to economists, but to all

policymakers working with fragile postconflict societies.”—SARAH CLIFFE

“Fiscal policy is critical to sustaining peace, as well as development. Peace and the Public Purse covers this vital issue comprehensively,

insightfully, and realistically. It is essential reading for anyone working on postconflict societies.”

—FRANCES STEWART

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Greater Than theSum of Its Parts?

Assessing “Whole of

Government”Approaches to Fragile States

Stewart Patrick and Kaysie Brown

“As Zartman argues, ‘analysis is always horta-tory, serving as the basis for action, and exhor-tation should always be analytical, based onsound examination and reasoning.’ This well-stated position is equally well carried out byZartman—one of our discipline’s lions, andnever a cowardly one.” —BRUCE W. JENTLESON,

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW

“[A] significant contribution to the literatureon conflict management and resolution.”—CHOICE

W hat would have happened had the “roadnot taken” been the chosen action in

past conflict interventions? What can we

learn from a close look at alternatives thatwere not selected? Drawing on six detailedcase studies (the Balkans, Haiti, Lebanon,Liberia, Somalia, and Zaire/Congo), I.William Zartman identifies a series ofmissed opportunities—options thatarguably would have provided feasible andbetter outcomes for the reduction of violentconflict and the prevention of state collapse.

Zartman specifies potential solutionswithin the entire trajectory of each conflict,considering in each instance why the indi-cated decisions were not taken. The princi-ples and mechanisms that he develops inthe course of his analysis have profoundimplications for the actions of the interna-

tional community in preventing conflictsfrom escalating to violence, and for manag-ing violent situations when they do occur.

I. William Zartman is Jacob BlausteinProfessor of International Organization andConflict Resolution at the School ofAdvanced International Studies, JohnsHopkins University.

2005/281 pages LC: 2005010885ISBN: 978-1-58826-357-5 hc $55/£34.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-382-7 pb $22.50/£13.95

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“Does an excellent job of reviewing howWestern democracies are dealing with thechallenge of fragile states.... a fine accom-plishment full of needed candor and prac-tical recommendations.”—ANDREW NATSIOS

W ith fragile states representing both acore development challenge and a

source of major threats to internationalsecurity, the search for strategies to assist therecovery of failing and war-torn countrieshas been high on the agendas of donorcountries. Stewart Patrick and KaysieBrown candidly assess efforts to bringtogether diplomatic, defense, and develop-ment instruments—the so-called 3Ds of“whole of government strategies”—made byseven major donor countries: Australia,Canada, France, Germany, Sweden, theUnited Kingdom, and the United States.

Stewart Patrick is research fellow atthe Center for Global Development inWashington, DC, and professorial lecturerat the Johns Hopkins School of AdvancedInternational Studies. Kaysie Brown is pro-gram associate at the Center for GlobalDevelopment.

2007/157 pagesISBN: 978-0-937722-98-5 pb $16.95/£10.50Distributed for the International Peace Academy

N E W!

PromotingDemocracy inPostconflict

Societies

Jeroen de Zeeuw andKrishna Kumar, editors

“Rich in detail.... This volume contributes with

important knowledge on democracy assistance.”

—HELGA MALMIN BINNINGSBØ, JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH

“An engaging set of case studies, rich indetail and accessibly written, that under-score the complicated and challengingnature of war-to-democracy transitions.”

—TIMOTHY D. SISK

F ew would dispute the importance ofdonating funds and expertise to con-

flict-ridden societies—but such aid,however well meant, often fails to havethe intended effect. This study criticallyevaluates international democratizationassistance in postconflict societies todiscern what has worked, what has not,and how aid programs can be designedto have a more positive impact.

The authors offer a unique recipi-ent perspective as they explore threedimensions of democracy promotion:elections, free media, and humanrights. Drawing on the experiences ofAfghanistan, Cambodia, El Salvador,Ethiopia, Guatemala, Mozambique,Rwanda, Sierra Leone, and Uganda,they suggest concrete ways in whichthe international community can betterfoster democratization in the wake ofconflict.

Jeroen de Zeeuw is senior researchassociate in the Conflict Research Unitat the Clingendael Institute of Inter-national Relations in the Netherlands.Krishna Kumar is senior social scientistwith the US Agency for InternationalDevelopment.

C o n t e n t s

Foreword—G. Nzongola-Ntalaja. •Democracy Assistance to Postconflict

Societies—K. Kumar and J. de Zeeuw.

ELECTIONS AND POLITICAL PARTIES. •International Support to “No-Party”

Democracy in Uganda—J.-J. Barya. •Electoral Assistance and Democratic

Transition in Ethiopia—D. Rahmato and M. Ayenew.

•Fostering Multiparty Politics inMozambique—M. de Tollenaere.

HUMAN RIGHTS. •Strengthening Human Rights in

Guatemala—D. Azpuru.•Human Rights Challenges in Postconflict

Cambodia—S. Peou. •Human Rights Assistance to Sierra Leone

—M.G. Sesay and C. Hughes. •Transitional Justice in Sierra Leone

—M. Wierda.

MEDIA. •Media Assistance to Postgenocide Rwanda

—C. Kayumba and J.-P. Kimonyo. •Promoting Independent Media

Organizations in El Salvador—A. Germain Lefèvre.

•Building a Community Radio Network in Afghanistan—K. Kumar.

CONCLUSION. •Findings and Recommendations

—J. de Zeeuw and L. van de Goor.

2006/333 pages LC: 2006011921ISBN: 978-1-58826-446-6 hc $55/£34.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-422-0 pb $23.50/£14.95No rights in South Asia

“Through a series of frank, incisive country case studies, this valuable volume takes the measure of international

democracy assistance in postconflict countries.”—THOMAS CAROTHERS

“This unique volume offers a valuable lesson concerning what the international community can and cannot do to

assist democracy building in postconflict situations, as well as authoritative recommendations for how to do it better.”

—PETER BURNELL

Cowardly Lions: Missed Opportunities to Prevent Deadly Conflict and State Collapse

I. William Zartman

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Women BuildingPeace:

What They Do, Why It Matters

Sanam NaraghiAnderlini

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Annual Review of Global Peace

Operations, 2008

Center on InternationalCooperation

“An essential resource for understandingpeacekeeping’s contribution to interna-tional security.” —STEPHEN STEDMAN

U nique in its breadth of coverage, theAnnual Review of Global Peace

Operations presents the most detailedcollection of data on peace opera-tions—those launched by the UN, byregional organizations, by coalitions,and by individual nations—that isavailable. Features of the 2008 volumeinclude:

• a summary analysis of the trends anddevelopments in peace operationsthrough 2007

• a discussion of the nature and impli-cations of “peacekeeping partnerships”among institutions involved in fieldoperations

• incisive analyses of all peacekeepingmissions on the ground in 2007

• in-depth explorations of key missions,focusing on those that faced signifi-cant challenges or underwent majordevelopments during the year

• extensive, full-color maps, figures, andphotographs

The editorially independent Reviewis a project of the Center on Inter-national Cooperation at New YorkUniversity, with the support of thePeacekeeping Best Practices Section ofthe UN’s Department of PeacekeepingOperations and in cooperation with theInternational Peace Academy.

February 2008/ca. 330 pages, 8.5” x 11”ISBN: 978-1-58826-564-7 pb $27.50/£17.50

PRAISE FOR THE ANNUAL REVIEW :

“An indispensable source for scholars and policymakers alike, joining up-to-date assessments of the latest peacekeeping missions

with thoughtful evaluations of developments in the scholarly literature.Rarely, if ever before, have inside expertise and outside analysis of

peacekeeping been so well combined.”—MICHAEL DOYLE

“Combining a rich analysis of developments in peacekeeping with adetailed set of data on UN missions, the Annual Review is a valuable

resource for policymakers, practitioners, and scholars alike.”—LAKHDAR BRAHIMI

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N E W!

H ow and why do women’s contribu-tions matter in peace and security

processes? Why should women’s activi-ties in this sphere be explored separatelyfrom peacebuilding efforts in general?Decisively answering these questions,Sanam Anderlini offers a comprehen-sive, cross-regional analysis of women’speacebuilding initiatives around theworld.

Anderlini also traces the evolutionof international policies in this arenaand highlights the endemic problemsthat stunt progress. Her astute analysis,based on extensive research and fieldexperience, demonstrates how gendersensitivity in programming can be a cat-alytic component in the complex taskof building sustainable peace—and pro-vides concrete examples of how to drawon women’s untapped potential.

Sanam Naraghi Anderlini is aresearch affiliate at the Center forInternational Studies, MassachusettsInstitute of Technology.

C o n t e n t s

•Introduction. •Preventing and Transforming Conflict

Nonviolently. •Getting to the Peace Table. •Disarming, Demobilizing, and

Reintegrating Fighters. •Postconflict Governance and Leadership. •Transitional Justice and Reconciliation. •How the International System Lets

Women Down. •Conclusion.

2007/257 pagesISBN: 978-1-58826-536-4 hc $58.50/£36.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-512-8 pb $22/£13.95No rights in South Asia

“Anderlini moves beyond the well-tread path with this measured, well-informed analysis of the impact of women on building and maintainingpeace. Her work should be mandatory reading for students, scholars, and

practitioners in the fields of conflict resolution and security studies.”—JULIE MERTUS

Visit our website atwww.rienner.com

for complete information on all the titles in this catalog!

Annual Review of Global Peace Operations, 2007

“Essential reading for all students of peacekeeping.” —ANDREW MACK

2007/391 pages, 8.5” x 11” ISBN: 978-1-58826-509-8 pb $25/£15.95

Annual Review of Global Peace Operations, 2006

“This excellent book presents lots of data, solid analysis, and goodgraphics.” —CHOICE

2006/317 pages, 8.5” x 11”ISBN: 978-1-58826-441-1 pb $25/£15.95

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Aiding Peace? The Role of NGOs in Armed Conflict

Jonathan Goodhand

“Sandra Whitworth has written a compellingbook.... Though writing from a feminist per-spective, she provides a balanced look at theinstitutions of the military and the UnitedNations.”—DARLENE ISKRA, ARMED FORCES & SOCIETY

“The critical questions [Whitworth] raisesenrich the debate over how best to deal withthreats to international peace.”—MARGARET P. KARNS, PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS

“Whitworth digs deep into the cultural poli-tics of internationalized war, peace, and secu-rity.... The result is compulsory and grippingreading.” —CYNTHIA ENLOE

I n this important, controversial, and attimes troubling book, Sandra Whitworth

looks behind the rhetoric to investigatefrom a feminist perspective some of therealities of military intervention under theUN flag.

Whitworth contends that there is afundamental contradiction between por-trayals of peacekeeping as altruistic andbenign and the militarized masculinity thatunderpins the group identity of soldiers.Examining evidence from Cambodia andSomalia, she argues that sexual and othercrimes can be seen as expressions of a vio-lent “hypermasculinity” that is congruentwith militarized identities, but entirelyincongruent with missions aimed at main-taining peace. She also asserts that recentefforts within the UN to address genderissues in peacekeeping operations have

failed because they fail to challenge tradi-tional understandings of militaries, conflict,and women.

This unsettling critique of UN opera-tions, which also investigates the interplaybetween gender and racial stereotyping inpeacekeeping, has the power to change con-ventional perceptions, with considerablepolicy implications.

Sandra Whitworth is professor ofpolitical science and women’s studies atYork University.

paperback 2007/225 pages LC: 2004009268ISBN: 978-1-58826-296-7 hc $49.95/£31.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-552-4 pb $22.50/£13.95Critical Security Studies

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“Comprehensive, impressive in scope, andwritten with great thoughtfulness andattention to detail.... This book does awonderful job of breaking new ground.”

—MARTHA THOMPSON,DEVELOPMENT IN PRACTICE

“Effectively blending theory with realworld data and a practitioner’s insight,Aiding Peace provides solid, comparativeresearch findings on the work and impactof NGO operations in seven war-torncountries.” —CHRISTINE MAHONEY,

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW

“This is an important contribution andwill be the starting point for furtherresearch.” —LAWRENCE D. FREEDMAN,

FOREIGN AFFAIRS

A iding Peace? explores just how NGOsinteract with conflict and peace dynam-

ics, and with what results.

Jonathan Goodhand compares the pro-grams of international and national NGOsin seven conflict arenas: Afghanistan,Armenia-Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, Liberia,Moldova, Nepal, and Sri Lanka. Wellgrounded in an analysis of the political-economy context of each conflict, hisimportant and perhaps unexpected resultspoint to essential policy and practicechanges in the interest of enhanced NGOpeacebuilding efforts. Not least, they alsohighlight the need for a fundamentaladjustment of expectations.

Jonathan Goodhand is lecturer in theDevelopment Studies Department at theSchool of Oriental and African Studies,University of London.

2006/239 pages LC: 2006020578ISBN: 978-1-58826-462-6 hc $55ISBN: 978-1-58826-487-9 pb $23.50A project of the International Peace AcademyNo rights in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia

äDownload an excerpt at www.rienner.com

Profiting fromPeace:

Managing theResource Dimension

of Civil War

Karen Ballentine andHeiko Nitzschke,

editors

P roviding both a means and a motivefor armed conflict, the continued

access of combatants in contemporarycivil wars to lucrative natural resourceshas often served to counter the incen-tives for peace. Profiting from Peaceoffers the first comprehensive assess-ment of the practical strategies andtools that might be used effectively, byboth international and state actors, tohelp reduce the illicit exploitation ofnatural resources and the related finan-cial flows that sustain the violence.

Karen Ballentine is senior consult-ant to the New Security Program at theFAFO Institute for AppliedInternational Studies. HeikoNitzschke, formerly senior programofficer at the International PeaceAcademy, has also worked with theWorld Bank and Oxfam America.

C o n t e n t s

•Introduction—the Editors. •Natural Resources and Armed Conflicts:

Issues and Options—M. Humphreys.

CURTAILING CONFLICT TRADE AND FINANCE.•What Lessons from the Kimberley Process

Certification Scheme?—I. Smillie. •Tracking Conflict Commodities and

Financing—J.M. Winer. •Lessons from the UN’s Counterterrorism

Efforts—S.E. Eckert. •Combating Organized Crime in Armed

Conflict—P. Williams and J.T. Picarelli. •Protecting Livelihoods in Violent

Economies—S. Jackson.

IMPROVING CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY

AND RESOURCE MANAGEMENT. •Assessing Company Behavior in Conflict

Environments—L. Zandvliet. •Private Financial Actors and Corporate

Responsibility in Conflict Zones—M. Mansley.

•Export Credit Agencies and CorporateConduct in Conflict Zones—N. Hildyard.

•Revenue Transparency and the PublishWhat You Pay Campaign—G. Haymanand C. Crossin.

•Development Assistance, Conditionality,and War Economies—J.K. Boyce.

ESTABLISHING ACCOUNTABILITY, ENDING IMPUNITY. •Regulating Business in Conflict Zones:

Challenges and Options—L. Lunde andM. Taylor.

•Conflict Management and the OECDGuidelines for Multinational Enterprises—P. Feeney and T. Kenny.

•Improving Sanctions Through LegalMeans?—P. Kopp.

•Corporate Accountability Under the USAlien Tort Claims Act—P.L. Hoffman.

•War Economies, Economic Actors, andInternational Criminal Law—W.A. Schabas.

CONCLUSION. •Peace Before Profit: The Challenges of

Governance—K. Ballentine.

2005/539 pages LC: 2004029657ISBN: 978-1-58826-262-2 hc $65/£41.50ISBN: 978-1-58826-287-5 pb $24.95/£15.95A project of the International Peace Academy

“This is probably the most comprehensive work to date about the resource dimension of intrastate wars.”

—BJØRN MØLLER, ECONOMICS OF PEACE AND SECURITY JOURNAL

“To date the most ambitious—and successful—attempt to address thewide variety of tools available for policymakers to reduce the negative

effects of natural resource endowments like diamonds, oil and timber.”—HENRIK URDAL, JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH

äDownload an excerpt at www.rienner.com

Men, Militarism, and UN Peacekeeping: A Gendered Analysis

Sandra Whitworth

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You and your library . . . If there is a book that you would likeyour library to own, speak up! Yourrecommendations count—they helpyour librarian decide what to buy.

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Ending Civil Wars: The Implementation ofPeace AgreementsStephen John Stedman, Donald Rothchild,and Elizabeth M. Cousens, editors

“An excellent book that cumulates andadvances theory while it offers policy relevantfindings and recommendations.... A remark-able publication.” —THOMAS OHLSON,

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW

Ending Civil Wars is the most comprehen-sive, systematic study to date of the imple-mentation of peace agreements—of whathappens after the treaties are signed.

Stephen John Stedman is senior fel-low at the Center for International Securityand Cooperation, Stanford University. Thelate Donald Rothchild was professor ofpolitical science at the University ofCalifornia, Davis. Elizabeth M. Cousens ischief of staff for the UN mission in Nepal.

C o n t e n t s

• Introduction—S.J. Stedman. EVALUATING

IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGIES • Evaluation Issues—G. Downs and S.J. Stedman • Strategy andTransitional Authority—M.W. Doyle • TheChallenges of Strategic Coordination—B.D.Jones • Settlement Terms and PostagreementStability—D. Rothchild. EVALUATING IMPLEMEN-TATION TASKS • Disarmament and Demobiliza-tion—J. Spear • Economic Priorities—S.L.Woodward • Postsettlement Elections—T. Lyons.• Human Rights and Sustainable Peace—T.L.Putnam • Refugee Repatriation—H. Adelman •Civilian Security—C.T. Call and W. Stanley •Building Local Capacity—J. Prendergast and E.Plumb. CASE STUDIES • Nicaragua—C.A.Hartzell • El Salvador—C.T. Call • Guatemala—W. Stanley and D. Holiday • Rwanda—G.M.Khadiagala • Cambodia—S. Peou • Bosnia—E.M. Cousens • Lebanon —M-J. Zahar •Liberia—A. Adebajo • Sri Lanka—S. Bose.CONCLUSION—S.J. Stedman.

2003/729 pages LC: 2002017817ISBN: 978-1-58826-058-1 hc $65/£41.50ISBN: 978-1-58826-083-3 pb $28.95/£18.50A project of the International Peace Academy and theCenter for International Security and Cooperation

Demilitarizing Politics: Elections on the UncertainRoad to PeaceTerrence Lyons

“Lyons captures the complex and often con-tradictory dynamics of elections in the wake ofcivil war peace agreements in his well-designed, thoroughly researched, and coherent-ly argued book.”—TIMOTHY D. SISK, PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS

With the increasing use of elections as a toolfor peacebuilding after civil war, the questionof why some postconflict elections succeedand others fail is a crucial one. Tackling thisquestion, Terrence Lyons finds the answer inthe internal political dynamics that occurbetween the cease-fire and the voting.

Lyons shows that the promise of elec-tions can provide the incentive for thedemilitarization of politics—the transfor-mation of institutions made powerful bywar into those capable of sustainingpeace—so that warring parties will in factchoose to change their strategies and adaptto peaceful electoral competition. It is thisprocess of demilitarization that is in turnkey to meaningful elections; elections alone,as has been seen repeatedly, are not enoughto advance the dual goals of peace anddemocracy.

Incorporating evidence from a range ofrecent cases, Demilitarizing Politics offers aconcrete strategy for peaceful change thatcan be implemented, and that can make adifference.

Terrence Lyons is assistant professor inthe Institute for Conflict Analysis andResolution at George Mason University.

2005/232 pages LC: 2005018516ISBN: 978-1-58826-393-3 hc $49.95/£31.95

Postconflict Development: Meeting New ChallengesGerd Junne and Willemijn Verkoren, editors

“What kind of peace is being created by peace-building and development processes? How is thispeace experienced by local recipients? Is peacesustainable in the future? A welcome and well-crafted volume, Postconflict Developmenteffectively addresses these questions.”

—OLIVER RICHMOND,INTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW

“An appropriate and excellent text for gradu-ate courses in the disciplines of ConflictResolution, Economics, International Politics,Peace Studies, and Social Change. Additionally,upper-level and honors undergraduate coursesin similar areas could benefit from this work.”

—TISA M. ANDERS,INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL ON WORLD PEACE

Prosperity, the authors of PostconflictDevelopment acknowledge, does not guaran-tee peace; but a lack of economic develop-ment will almost certainly lead to renewedviolence. This conviction informs theirthorough discussion of the policy dilemmasconfronted in postconflict situations and arange of concrete, successful approaches toresolving them.

Gerd Junne is professor of internation-al relations at the University of Amsterdam.Willemijn Verkoren conducts research inthe area of conflict resolution and manage-ment at the University of Amsterdam.

2005/371 pages LC: 2004014977ISBN: 978-1-58826-327-8 hc $59.95/£37.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-303-2 pb $25/£15.95

Peacebuilding inPostconflictSocieties:

Strategy and Process

Ho-Won JeongT his integrative discussion of the mul-

tiple dimensions of peacebuilding inpostconflict societies offers a systematicapproach to strategies and processes forlong-term social, political, and econom-ic transformation.

Ho-Won Jeong links short-termcrisis-intervention efforts to a sustainedprocess that encompasses the entirecomplex environment of a conflict. Hisbroad analytic framework and wealth ofconcrete examples provide a sophisticat-ed, yet accessible, guide to the manystrands and interrelations in this criticalarena of world politics.

Ho-Won Jeong is associate professorat the Institute for Conflict Analysis andResolution, George Mason University.

C o n t e n t s

•Issues and Approaches. •Peacebuilding Design. •Security and Demilitarization. •Political Transition. •Development. •Reconciliation and Social Rehabilitation. •Operational Imperatives and Coordination.

2005/255 pages LC: 2004026066ISBN: 978-1-58826-311-7 pb $22.50/£13.95

“Combines conceptual rigour, a wide-ranging understanding of the relevant academic literature and an impressive grasp of major contemporary peacebuilding cases.... A concise

yet highly informative overview of this subject.”—CHARLES O. LERCHE, JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH

“Splendid.... a masterful, comprehensive assessment of peacebuilding incontemporary international relations. The combination of overarching

conceptualization and detailed case-specific discussions enables the read-er to arrive at a new understanding of both the role of peacebuilding in

the field and the ways in which it is actually handled.”—JUERGEN DEDRING

äDownload an excerpt at www.rienner.com

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“The authors of this insightful volume make an eloquent and convincing case.... Drawing on many sources of expertise, they debateeach other and in doing so engage readers searching for an image of

what a sustainable peace might be for war-torn Iraq.”—MICHAEL DOYLE

“This volume brings together many authoritative voices, all offeringoptions to help avoid the worst in Iraq. The editors have done a

masterful job of eliciting a broad range of informed opinion, allowingreaders to draw conclusions of their own.”

—LAKHDAR BRAHIMI

Islam andPeacemaking inthe Middle East

Nathan C. Funk andAbdul Aziz Said

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I slam and Peacemaking in the MiddleEast begins with a set of provocative

questions: How do Muslims conceive ofpeace? To what degree do differences inthe interpretation of Islam affect theways in which peace is sought in thecontemporary Middle East?

Through analysis of regional trendsand case studies, the authors explorevarious Islamic ideas of peace and theirbearing on difficult ethnic, nationalist,and civic conflicts. The result widens theparameters for serious discussion ofIslam’s contributions—real and potential—to ongoing negotiations.

Nathan C. Funk is assistant profes-sor of peace and conflict studies at theUniversity of Waterloo, Canada. AbdulAziz Said is professor of internationalpeace and conflict resolution andfounder of the Center for Global Peaceat American University.

C o n t e n t s

•Introduction. THE CONTEXT. •The Need for a New Story. •Religious Resources for Peacemaking:

Engaging Islam. ISLAMIC PEACE PARADIGMS. •Peace Through Authority: The Problem of

Compulsion in Islamic Politics. •Peace Through Equity: Islamic Perspectives

on a Just and Cooperative World Order. •Peace Through Conciliation: Forms of

Islamic Conflict Resolution. •Peace Through Patient Striving: A

Paradigm of Nonviolent Steadfastness. •Peace Through Universalism: Islamic

Spirituality and the Culture of Peace. RECOMMENDATIONS. •Preparing for Peace. •An Agenda for Islamic-Western

Collaboration.

June 2008/ca. 310 pagesISBN: 978-1-58826-569-2 hc $59.95/£37.95

“An important book, impressive in its scope, clarity, and balanced treatment of a highly complex and controversial subject.

No other work compares to it.”—SOHAIL HASHMI

“This pioneering book creatively synthesizes literatures as diverse as history, law, and philosophy. Funk and Said’s insights will appeal broadly

to academics, students, and peacemakers.”—SULAYMAN S. NYANG

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N E W!

Iraq: Preventing a

New Generation of Conflict

Markus E. Bouillon,David M. Malone, andBen Rowswell, editors

IRAQ IN TURMOIL. •State Collapse and the Rise of Identity

Politics—T. Dodge. •Iraq’s Identity Crisis—P. Marr. •Three Wars Later ... Iraqi Living Conditions

—J. Pedersen. •Islamism, Nationalism, and Sectarianism

—A.S. Sidahmed. •Sunni Factions and the “Political Process”

—R. Meijer. •Shi’a Militias in Iraqi Politics—J. Cole. •Kirkuk as a Peacebuilding Test Case

—J.R. Hiltermann.

TOWARD A STABLE PEACE. •Forging an Inclusive and Enduring Social

Contract—N. Haysom. •Making Federalism Work—D. Cameron. •Liberal Consociation and Conflict

Management—J. McGarry. •Federalizing Natural Resources—B. O’Leary.•US Policy and Diplomacy—J. Dobbins. •Iraq’s Arab Neighbors—J.B. Alterman. •Securing Iraq: The Mismatch of Demand

and Supply—N. Bensahel. •The Protection of Civilians—P. Gassmann. •Dilemmas of Donor Assistance—M. Bell. •Strategic Coordination of International

Engagement—B.D. Jones.

CONCLUSION. •Looking Ahead: Preventing a New

Generation of Conflict—the Editors.

2007/351 pages LC: 2007005438 ISBN: 978-1-58826-528-9 hc $59.95/£37.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-504-3 pb $24.50/£15.50A project of the International Peace AcademyNo rights in South Asia

A n enduring epicenter of conflict andinstability in the Middle East, Iraq

has not only experienced domesticupheavals, but also generated threats tointernational peace and security formore than 25 years. Is an end to theviolence, and the establishment of anenduring peace within a unified state, arealistic goal? How can it be achieved,and what may stand in its way?

Addressing these questions—andarguing that a downward spiral of vio-lence and possible state collapse can beavoided—the authors of Iraq: Prevent-ing a New Generation of Conflict consid-er the sources of conflict in the countryand outline the requirements for a suc-cessful peacebuilding enterprise.

Markus E. Bouillon is head of theMiddle East Program at the Interna-tional Peace Academy (IPA). David M.Malone returned to the CanadianForeign Service after serving for sixyears as president of the IPA and is nowCanada’s high commissioner to Indiaand nonresident ambassador to Nepaland Bhutan. Ben Rowswell, Canada’sdiplomatic representative in Iraq in2003–2005, continues to serve in theCanadian Foreign Service and is alsosenior associate at the Center forStrategic and International Studies inWashington, D.C.

C o n t e n t s

•Looking Back: State Fragility and aGeneration of Conflict—the Editors.

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The DemocraticRepublic of Congo:Economic Dimensions

of War and Peace

Michael Nest, withFrançois Grignon andEmizet F. Kisangani

“A fine set of essays and a worthy suscessor toClapham’s collection.... Highly recommended.”

—CHOICE

“This is a major contribution to our under-standing of the motives and circumstancesbehind some of the most brutal civil wars onthe continent.” —RENÉ LEMARCHAND

“A sophisticated and detailed treatment ofcontemporary African civil wars that goes wellbeyond earlier contributions.”—M. CRAWFORD YOUNG

A t the center of many of Africa’s violentconflicts are movements that do not seem

to fit any established theories of armedresistance. African Guerrillas offers new

models for understanding these movements,eschewing one-dimensional explanations.

The authors build on—and in somecases debate—the insights provided inChristopher Clapham’s groundbreaking work.They find a new generation of fighters—onethat reflects rage against the machinery of adysfunctional state. Their analysis of this phe-nomenon, combining thematic chapters anda range of representative case studies, is a cru-cial contribution to any effort to understandAfrica’s war-torn societies.

Morten Bøås is researcher at the FafoInstitute for Applied International Studiesin Oslo. Kevin C. Dunn is associate profes-sor of political science at Hobart andWilliam Smith Colleges.

C o n t e n t s

• Introduction—the Editors • African GuerrillaPolitics: Raging Against the Machine?—theEditors • Marginalized Youth—M. Bøås •Whither the Separatist Motive?—P. Englebert •Liberia: The LURDs of the New Church—W.S.Reno • Côte d’Ivoire: Negotiating Identity andCitizenship—R. Banégas and R. Marshall-Fratani• The DRC: Militarized Politics in a “FailedState”—D.M. Tull • Uganda: The Lord’sResistance Army—K.C. Dunn • Sudan: TheJanjawiid and Government Militias—Ø.H.Rolandsen • Senegal: The Resilient Weakness ofCasamançais Separatists—V. Foucher • Angola:How to Lose a Guerrilla War—A. Malaquias •African Guerrillas Revisited—C. Clapham.

2007/275 pages LC: 2007001105ISBN: 978-1-58826-495-4 hc $58/£36.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-471-8 pb $23.50/£14.95

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“Offering the clearest explanations thisreviewer has read in English, Nest reportson the political economy of Congo’s warsof the 1990s and the early 21st century;Grignon discusses the economic agendas inthe Congolese peace process; andKisangani analyzes the legacies of the wareconomy.... Highly recommended.”—CHOICE

D espite the prominent role that competi-tion over natural resources has played in

some of Africa’s most intractable conflicts,little research has been devoted to what theeconomic dimensions of armed conflictmean for peace operations and efforts toreconstruct war-torn states. Redressing thisgap, this volume analyzes the challengesthat the war economy posed, and continuesto pose, for policymakers and practitionersin the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The authors first trace the historicalrole of natural resource exploitation in

shaping economic development and gover-nance in the country. Then turning to the1998–2004 period, they assess how eco-nomic interests shaped both the peaceprocess and the belligerents’ attitudestoward resolution of the violent conflictthat wracked the DRC. They also addressthe impact of the war economy on postwarreconstruction and identify strategies formore effective approaches to resolving—andeven preventing—further economicallydriven civil wars.

Michael Nest consults on the politicaland social issues related to the extraction ofnatural resources. François Grignon is headof the UN Mission’s Conflict and PreventionUnit in the DRC. Emizet F. Kisangani isassociate professor of political science atKansas State University.

2006/164 pages LC: 2005029704ISBN: 978-1-58826-233-2 pb $15.95/£9.95An International Peace Academy Occasional Paper

Bridging the Divide:Peacebuilding in the Israeli-Palestinian ConflictEdy Kaufman, Walid Salem, and

Juliette Verhoeven, editors

“An incredibly courageous effort by Israeliand Palestinian peace scholars and practition-ers to take a critical look at themselves andtheir activities, to expose and analyze theirweaknesses, and to suggest ways to improvetheir efficacy and impact in the years ahead.”—NAOMI CHAZAN

Edy Kaufman is senior research associate atthe Center for International Developmentand Conflict Management, University ofMaryland. Walid Salem is director of theJerusalem office of Panorama, thePalestinian Center for the Dissemination ofDemocracy and Community Development.Juliette Verhoeven is coordinator of theresearch unit at the European Centre forConflict Prevention.

C o n t e n t s

• Introduction—the Editors • A HistoricalPerspective—E. Kaufman and W. Salem • CivilSociety and NGOs Building Peace in Israel—T.Hermann • Civil Society and NGOs BuildingPeace in Palestine—M. Hassassian • JointActivities—M. Dajani and G. Baskin • SecondTrack Diplomacy—M. Klein and R. Malki •Nonviolent Action in Israel and Palestine: AGrowing Force—M. Abu-Nimer • Two Peoples,One Civil Society—S. Dichter and K. Abu-Asba •Toward Transforming the Conflict—the Editors •Directory of Peacebuilding Organizations.

2006/323 pages LC: 2006002388ISBN: 978-1-58826-365-0 hc $57.50/£36.50ISBN: 978-1-58826-390-2 pb $23.50/£14.95Published in association with the European Centre for Conflict Prevention

Western Sahara: Anatomy of a StalemateErik Jensen

“This gracefully written and well arguedbook will obviously be useful to anyone withan interest in Western Saharan and NorthAfrican affairs, but students of the UnitedNations itself and the means by which itadapts to novel regional and local circum-stances in a complex political environmentwill also want this volume as an importantpart of their collections.”—ANTHONY G. PAZZANITA,INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORICAL STUDIES

The long-running conflict over the sover-eignty of Western Sahara has involved allthe states of northwest Africa and manybeyond since Spain ceded the territory toMorocco and Mauritania in 1976. ErikJensen traces the evolution of the conflict—from its colonial roots to its present mani-festation as a political stalemate.

Jensen reviews the history of the dis-pute, describes the quest by the UN andinterested states to facilitate a process ofself-determination through a referendum onindependence versus integration withMorocco, and explores the impasse overhow to determine who should be allowed tovote in such a referendum. He then turns tothe more recent efforts of UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s personal envoy forWestern Sahara, James Baker, to resolve theconflict. Despite Baker’s 2003 peace plan,the government of Morocco and thePolisario Front remain at odds, and thestalemate continues.

Erik Jensen served with the UNMission for the Referendum in WesternSahara (MINURSO) in 1993–1998, from1994 as head of the mission.

2005/179 pages LC: 2004015449ISBN: 978-1-58826-305-6 pb $15.95/£9.95An International Peace Academy Occasional Paper

Sudan: The Elusive Quest for PeaceRuth Iyob and Gilbert M. Khadiagala

Embroiled in civil war since independence,Sudan has also suffered from the failure ofboth regional and international actors tofully come to terms with the scope of thecomplex issues involved. Sudan: The ElusiveQuest for Peace contributes to a fuller under-standing of those issues, exploring the fac-tors that have contributed to the conflictfrom the days following independence tothe present.

Iyob and Khadiagala concisely examinethe cultural, sociopolitical, economic, andgeographical facets of the prolonged hostili-ties, then assess a sequence of mediationefforts. They also distill the web of griev-ances that fuel the current conflict in theDarfur region. They conclude with athoughtful analysis that highlights thepotential obstacles to sustainable peace inSudan in the decades to come.

Ruth Iyob is associate professor ofcomparative politics and international rela-tions at the University of Missouri–St.Louis. Gilbert M. Khadiagala is Jan SmutsProfessor of International Relations at theUniversity of Witwatersrand.

C o n t e n t s

• Sudan’s Quest for Peace: Exploring theComplexities • The Making of the SudanesePolity • The Geography of Conflict • Regionaland International Involvement • IGADInitiatives, 1993–2005 • Flashpoint Darfur •The Quest for Peace: Negotiating Between“Old” and “New” Sudan.

2006/224 pages LC: 2006019110ISBN: 978-1-58826-350-6 pb $16.95/£10.50An International Peace Academy Occasional Paper

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äDownload an excerpt at www.rienner.com

CHOICE OUTSTANDING ACADEMIC BOOK!

African Guerrillas: Raging Against the Machine

Morten Bøås and Kevin C. Dunn, editors

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People BuildingPeace II:

Successful Stories of Civil Society

Paul van Tongeren, Malin Brenk,

Marte Hellema, andJuliette Verhoeven,

editors

I ndividuals can make a differenceworking for peace worldwide. That is

the message of People Building Peace II,an inspiring collection of stories of how“ordinary” men and women have playeda crucial part in conflict prevention andpeacebuilding.

Thematic chapters, illustrated withcompelling case studies, present newtrends in the role of civil society in con-flict transformation. The cases reflectthe variety of activities initiated andsustained by a broad range of actors,including women’s groups, youthgroups, and faith-based organizations.Such topics as reconciliation, dialogue,networking, and traditional methods ofconflict resolution are among the topicsthoroughly explored, as are the success-ful initiatives of lesser-known NGOs.

Paul van Tongeren is founder andexecutive director of the EuropeanCentre for Conflict Prevention (ECCP).Malin Brenk is project officer in theresearch unit at ECCP. Marte Hellemais research assistant at ECCP. JulietteVerhoeven is coordinator of theresearch unit at ECCP.

C o n t e n t s

•Introduction.

REFLECTIONS.•Weaving the Web: Civil Society Roles in

Working with Conflict and BuildingPeace—C. Barnes.

•Discourses on Peace Practices: Learning toChange by Learning from Change?—C. Reimann and N. Ropers.

•Effective Regional Networks andPartnerships—A. Serbin.

•UN–Civil Society Interactions: WorkingTogether for Peace—J. Clark.

•The War on Terror: Effects on Civil SocietyActors in the Field of Conflict Preventionand Peacebuilding—K.P. Clements.

•People Building Peace: Key Messages andEssential Findings—P. van Tongeren, J.Verhoeven, and J. Wake.

THEMES AND CASES.•Women: Using the Gender Lens

—L. Schirch and M. Sewak. •Youth: Protagonists for Peace—L.R. Carter

and M. Shipler. •The Media: Reaching Hearts and Minds

—F. Rolt. •Faith-Based Organizations: The Religious

Dimensions of Peacebuilding—D. Johnston.

•Education That Makes a Difference—T.S. Jones.

•The Arts and Peacebuilding: UsingImagination and Creativity—J.P. Lederach.

•The Peacebuilding Potential of LocalBusinesses—N. Killick and C. Gündüz.

•Diasporas: Untapped Potential forPeacebuilding in the Homelands—A.A. Mohamoud.

•Civilian Peacekeepers: Creating a SafeEnvironment for Peacebuilding—T. Wallis and C. Samayoa.

•Development: No Development WithoutPeace, No Peace Without Development—M. Brenk and H. van de Veen.

•Early Warning and Early Response:Preventing Violent Conflicts—T.Z. Suifon.

•Traditional and Local Conflict Resolution—J. Malan.

•Dialogue-Based Processes: A Vehicle forPeacebuilding—E. Kaufman.

•Campaigning to Create Awareness: Howto Influence People and Change theWorld—R. Peters.

•Civil Society: Participating in PeaceProcesses—C. McKeon.

•Disarmament, Demobilization, andReintegration: Not Only a Job forSoldiers—S. Faltas and W.-C. Paes.

•Reconciliation: Challenges, Responses, andthe Role of Civil Society—H. Assefa.

2005/695 pages LC: 2005000412ISBN: 978-1-58826-358-2 hc $65/£41.50ISBN: 978-1-58826-383-4 pb $26.50/£16.95Published in association with the European Centre for Conflict Prevention

Young Soldiers: Why They

Choose To Fight

Rachel Brett and Irma Specht

“I personally believe that when peopleare young, others can abuse them. It is myvery unfortunate fate that I was drawninto wars. If instead of war skills, I knewother skills and knowledge, now I coulduse my knowledge and expertise. Thentoday I would be an engineer or doctor orsomething else useful for my society andmyself.” —JAVAD, AFGHANISTAN

“I want to advise people who want to berebel fighters, young soldiers, that theyshould learn from what we have gonethrough, which is too sad an experience.Those children younger than we areshould never again be involved in such alife anymore.” —ARTHUR, SIERRA LEONE

T hey are part of rebel factions, nation-al armies, paramilitaries, and other

armed groups and entrenched in someof the most violent conflicts around theglobe. They are in some ways still chil-dren—yet, from Afghanistan to SierraLeone to Northern Ireland, you canfind them among the fighters. Why?

Young Soldiers explores the reasonsthat adolescents who are neither physi-cally forced nor abducted choose to joinarmed groups. Drawing on in-depth

interviews with the soldiers themselves,the authors challenge conventional wis-dom to offer a thought-provokingaccount of the role that war, poverty,education, politics, identity, family, andfriends all play in driving these youngmen and women to join military life.They also address the important issuesof demobilization and the reintegrationprocess.

International in scope, covering avariety of situations in Afghanistan,Colombia, Congo-Brazzaville,Democratic Republic of Congo,Pakistan, Sierra Leone, South Africa, SriLanka, and the United Kingdom,Young Soldiers concludes with a discus-sion of the steps needed to create anenvironment in which adolescents areno longer “forced” to volunteer.

Rachel Brett is representative forhuman rights and refugees at theQuaker United Nations Office inGeneva. Irma Specht is an anthropolo-gist working at the InternationalLabour Organization.

2004/192 pages LC: 2003025740ISBN: 978-1-58826-261-5 pb $17.95/£10.95

“Young Soldiers is a book that provides the reader with a powerful opportunity to learn from the ‘inside out.’ It is

an opportunity that should not be missed.”—SHYRL TOPP MATIAS, INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL ON WORLD PEACE

“A mine of information about children and war.”—ED CAIRNS, THE ETHNIC CONFLICT RESEARCH DIGEST

“Important, impressive, thought-provoking and action-motivating. I recommend this with enthusiasm.”—MICHAEL J. LENAGHAN, INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL ON WORLD PEACE

äDownload an excerpt at www.rienner.com

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Security andDevelopment in

the Pacific Islands:Social Resilience inEmerging States

M. Anne Brown, editor

“This is perhaps the most thorough analysisof conflicts in the Asia Pacific region, and themost comprehensive database of civil societyactors involved in conflict prevention, that isavailable.... It is an indispensable resource.”—FEILOAKITAU KAHO TEVI

“[This] most welcome addition manages awide coverage of current issues and broad top-ics without losing depth of vision, and com-bines analytical essays and reflections withfocused discussions of conflict situations.”

—JEANNIE MANIPON

Third in an acclaimed series, Searching forPeace in Asia Pacific offers critical back-ground information, up-to-date surveys ofthe conflicts in Northeast Asia, SoutheastAsia, and the Pacific, and a directory ofsome 400 organizations working in the fieldof conflict prevention and peacebuilding inthe Asia Pacific region.

Annelies Heijmans is coordinator andNicola Simmonds is project officer of theAsia Pacific Program of the EuropeanCentre for Conflict Prevention (ECCP),

based in Utrecht. Hans van de Veen is sen-ior journalist and coordinator of Environ-ment and Development Productions, anindependent network of journalists.

2005/848 pages LC: 2004009267ISBN: 978-1-58826-214-1 hc $65/£41.50ISBN: 978-1-58826-239-4 pb $24.95/£15.95Published in association with the European Centre for Conflict Prevention

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R eflecting a growing awareness of the needto integrate security and development

agendas in the field of conflict manage-ment, the authors of this original volumefocus on the case of the Pacific Islands. Inthe process, they also reveal the sociopoliti-cal diversity, cultural richness, and socialresilience of a little-known region. Theirwork not only offers insight into the soci-eties discussed, but also speaks to the reali-ties of political community and state-build-ing efforts throughout the developingworld.

M. Anne Brown is research fellow atthe Australian Centre for Peace andConflict Studies at the University ofQueensland.

C o n t e n t

• Security and Development: Conflict andResilience in the Pacific Island Region—M.A. Brown • Local Solutions: Securityand Development in Papua New Guinea—M. Jacka • Power, Gender, and Security in

Papua New Guinea—O. Sepoe • PoliceReform in Papua New Guinea—A. McLeod• The Struggle over Self-Determination inBougainville—A. Regan • Development andSelf-Determination in New Caledonia —P.de Deckker • Conflict and Reconciliation inNew Caledonia—N. Maclellan • Self-Determination and Autonomy: The Mean-ings of Freedom in West Papua—J.MacLeod • External Intervention: TheSolomon Islands Beyond RAMSI—C.Moore • The Paradox of Multiculturalism:Ethnopolitical Conflict in Fiji—S. Ratuva •Elite Conflict in Vanuatu—G. Hassall •Development and Economic Crisis inNauru—M. Quanchi • Unfinished Business:Democratic Transition in Tonga—L.Senituli • Conclusion—M.A. Brown.

2007/347 pages LC: 2006035990ISBN: 978-1-58826-505-0 hc $59.95/£37.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-530-2 pb $24.50/£15.50A project of the International Peace Academy and theAustralian Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies

Searching for Peace inCentral and South Asia: An Overview of ConflictPrevention and Peacebuilding ActivitesMonique Mekenkamp, Paul van Tongeren,and Hans van de Veen, editors

“An outstanding resource in the pursuit ofglobal peace and security.”

—MOHAMMED BADRUL ALAM, PACIFIC AFFAIRS

“A refreshingly unusual book on South andCentral Asian conflict.... I strongly recommendit to scholars, students, and anyone else inter-ested in having a complete picture of securityissues in this crucial part of the world.”

—WILLIAM L. RICHTER,JOURNAL OF ASIAN STUDIES

Continuing a widely acclaimed series,Searching for Peace in Central and SouthAsia provides critical background informa-tion, up-to-date surveys of the violent con-flicts in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, theFerghana Valley, India, Nepal, Pakistan, SriLanka, and Tajikistan, and a directory ofmore than 150 organizations working in thefield of conflict prevention and peacebuild-ing in the region.

Monique Mekenkamp is former coor-dinator of the Asia Programme at theEuropean Centre for Conflict Prevention(ECCP), based in Utrecht. Paul vanTongeren is founder and executive directorof the ECCP. Hans van de Veen is seniorjournalist and coordinator of Environmentand Development Productions, an interna-tional network of journalists.

2002/665 pages LC: 2002017882ISBN: 978-1-58826-096-3 hc $65/£41.50ISBN: 978-1-58826-072-7 pb $24.95/£15.95Published in association with the European Centre for Conflict PreventionNo Rights in South Asia

Kashmir: New Voices, New ApproachesWaheguru Pal Singh Sidhu, Bushra Asif,and Cyrus Samii, editors

“Rejecting traditional assumptions that therivalry over Kashmir is ingrained in thenational identities of India and Pakistan, thecontributors to this volume offer ways andmeans to move the dispute toward settlementand analyze the role of state and nonstateactors, including women, in this process....Highly recommended.” —CHOICE

Waheguru Pal Singh Sidhu is on the facul-ty of the Geneva Centre for Security Policy.Bushra Asif is a consultant with the SocialScience Research Council (SSRC) in NewYork. Cyrus Samii is a doctoral candidatein political science at Columbia University.

C o n t e n t s

• Introduction—W.P.S. Sidhu. • SUBNATIONAL

AND NATIONAL DIMENSIONS • Warring OverPeace in Kashmir—I. Kaur • How Independent IsAzad Jammu and Kashmir?—B. Asif • India andArmed Nonstate Actors in the Kashmir Conflict—D.S. Chandran • Pakistan and Jihadi Groups inthe Kashmir Conflict—R. Zeb • Women in theValley: From Victims to Agents of Change—K.Suri • Women and Peacebuilding in Azad Jammuand Kashmir—S. Akhtar • Sources of New Delhi’sKashmir Policy—P.R. Chari • Islamabad’s NewApproach to Kashmir—H.-A. Rizvi. • INTERNA-TIONAL DIMENSIONS • Kashmir in the Interna-tional System—A. Acharya and A. Acharya • TheInternational Community and Kashmir: MissionImpossible?—W.P.S. Sidhu • Kashmir: “The MostDangerous Place in the World”?—J. Thomson. •TOWARD SETTLEMENT • Settling the KashmirConflict: The Internal Dimension—I. Idris •Kashmir: From Persistence to Progress?—C. Samii.• APPENDIX: Chronology of the Kashmir Conflict.

2006/292 pages LC: 2005029706ISBN: 978-1-58826-432-9 hc $55/£34.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-408-4 pb $22.50/£13.95A project of the International Peace AcademyNo rights in India and Pakistan

Peacekeeping in EastTimor: The Path toIndependenceMichael G. Smith, with Moreen Dee

“A fascinating account .... succinctly capturesthe gist of how [the UN] did, and should,address the host of practical issues associatedwith transferring power from the internationalcommunity to a formerly dependent people.”

—ASIL NEWSLETTER

“A valuable addition to the literature on EastTimor. It is particularly welcome, given Smith’sprominence in the East Timor operation as animportant actor.” —ANTHONY L. SMITH,

CONTEMPORARY SOUTHEAST ASIA

Continuing the compelling narrative begunby Ian Martin in Self-Determination in EastTimor, Smith gives a lucid first-handaccount of a UN mission in the unfamiliarrole of interim government—a missiondealing with critical requirements for goodgovernance, sustainable development, andeffective military and police forces.Evaluating the lessons learned from theexperience, he highlights the urgent needfor reforms within the UN. The absence ofthose reforms, he believes, will lead to morefailed states, more refugees, more poverty,and more dead peacekeepers.

Major General Michael G. Smith(recently retired from the Australian armyafter 34 years of distinguished service) wasdeputy force commander of the UNTAETpeacekeeping force from January 2000through March 2001. He is currently chiefexecutive officer of AUSTCARE. MoreenDee is a diplomatic and military historiancontracted to the Australian Department ofForeign Affairs and Trade.

2003/213 pages LC: 2002029168ISBN: 978-1-58826-142-7 pb $16.95/£10.50An International Peace Academy Occasional Paper

20

Searching for Peace in Asia Pacific: An Overview of Conflict

Prevention and Peacebuilding ActivitiesAnnelies Heijmans, Nicola Simmonds,

and Hans van de Veen, editors

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On the Market: Strategies for a Successful Academic Job SearchSANDRA L. BARNES

“All graduate students in the social sciences and humanities should be given a copyof this book on the day that they start graduate school.... An excellent guide to planningan academic career.” —Kenneth J. Meier, Texas A&M University

“A wonderful array of wide-ranging suggestions and strategies.... Not only highlyuseful for graduate students, but also an excellent addition to departmental professionalresource libraries.” —Davita Silfen Glasberg, University of Connecticut

Features of On the Market include:

• easy-to-read checklists for navigating the search process

• clues to “reading between the lines” of job postings

• no-nonsense tips—the “dos and don’ts”—for a variety ofinterview settings

• frank discussion of both the professional and the personalaspects of any job search

• attention to the concerns of nontraditional and under-represented groups

Sandra L. Barnes is associate professor of sociology at CaseWestern University.

CONTENTS: Introduction. The Academic Job Market. Maximizing the GraduateSchool Experience. The Application Process. The Teaching Portfolio. The InterviewProcess. Other Employment Options. A Personal Fit. Considerations forNontraditional and Underrepresented Groups. Returning to the Job Market: ThePre-Tenure Search. Conclusion: Balancing the Professional and the Personal.

2007/207 pages LC: 2006037828ISBN: 978-1-58826-511-1 hc $55/£34.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-535-7 pb $22.50/£13.95 No examination copies

Addressing head-on how power and the thorny politics ofrace converge in the academy, The Black Academic’s Guide isfull of invaluable tips and hard-earned wisdom. It is theessential handbook that will help faculty survive and thrivein academia without losing their voices, or their integrity.

Kerry Ann Rockquemore is associate professor of soci-ology and African American studies and founding directorof the Black Faculty Retention Initiative at the University ofIllinois at Chicago. Tracey Laszloffy is a coach and therapistfor black and Latino faculty at predominately white institu-

tions. The two cofounded www.BlackAcademic.com, awebsite for minority scholars.

CONTENTS: How to Win Tenure—Without Losing Your Soul. Understandingthe Game. Race, Power, and the Academic System. Navigating the Rules ofEngagement. Mastering Your Technique. Tenure and Time Management. TheAcademic Office. Healthy Pathways to Publication. The Art of Efficient Teachingand Service. Playing to Win. Shifting from Habits of Survival to Strategies forSuccess. Constructive Conflicts. Building a Supportive Network. Conclusion.

May 2008/ca. 200 pagesISBN: 978-1-58826-562-3 hc $55/£34.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-588-3 pb $22.50/£13.95 No examination copies

P R O F E S S I O N A L R E S O U R C E S

The Black Academic’s Guide to WinningTenure—Without Losing Your SoulKERRY ANN ROCKQUEMORE AND TRACEY LASZLOFFY

“A critical resource for black junior faculty who are attempting to negotiate the politics of promotion and tenure at their institutions. Both sensible and effective.”

—Rainier Spencer, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

“Provides valuable information and practical tips.... This book outlines con-crete steps any junior faculty member can and should take to help them win tenure—but it is especially valuable for faculty of color.” —Krista Johnson, Agnes Scott College

äDownload an excerpt at www.rienner.com

The Morality of War: A Reader

David Kinsella andCraig L. Carr, editors

“A highly useful core text for courses in the field—as well as an invaluable reference for any serious

student of the ethics of war.”—ALBERT PIERCE

W hen and why is war justified? How,morally speaking, should wars be

fought? The Morality of War confrontsthese challenging questions, surveyingthe fundamental principles and themesof the just war tradition through thewords of the philosophers, jurists, andwarriors who have shaped it.

The collection begins with thefoundational works of just war theory,as well as those of two competing per-spectives, realism and pacifism. Subse-quent selections focus on issues relatedto the resort to war, the conduct of war,and the judgment of war crimes. Bothtraditional just war concerns and thosethat have emerged in response to con-temporary developments—such as theUS “war on terror”—are thoroughlycovered.

With articles that are crucially rele-vant to today’s world paired with con-textual introductions to each section,the reader is ideally constructed to in-form and guide students as they consid-er the morality of past and current mili-tary actions.

David Kinsella is associate profes-sor of political science at the HatfieldSchool of Government, Portland StateUniversity. Craig L. Carr is professor ofpolitical science at the Hatfield Schoolof Government.

C o n t e n t s

Introduction.•HISTORICAL AND PHILOSOPHICAL AP-PROACHES TO THE MORALITY OF WAR.Realism: Introduction. The Talks at Melos—Thucydides. Political Power and InternationalMorality—H.J. Morgenthau. Pacifism: Intro-duction. The Complaint of Peace—D.Erasmus. Last Message to Mankind—L.Tolstoy. War and Non-Resistance—B. Russell.Just War Theory: Introduction. The City ofGod—St. Augustine. War and Killing—St.Thomas Aquinas. On the Law of War—F. deVitoria. The Rights of War and Peace—H.Grotius. On the Law of War—S. Pufendorf. •RESORT TO WAR (JUS AD BELLUM). Aggres-sion and Self-Defense: Introduction. TheLegal Status of War—Y. Dinstein. Resort toCoercion—M.S. McDougal and F.P. Feliciano.

Charter of the UN. Resolution 3314: Defini-tion of Aggression—UN General Assembly.Preemption and Prevention: Introduction.The National Security Strategy of the USA.Preemption, Prevention, and Jus ad Bellum—C.L. Carr and D. Kinsella. Self-Defense andthe Use of Force—M.A. Drumbl. An Un-necessary War—J.J. Mearsheimer and S. Walt.Terrorism: Introduction. Terrorism, Rights,and Political Goals—V. Held. The Morality ofTerrorism—I. Primoratz. Terrorism WithoutIntention—D. Rodin. Intervention: Introduc-tion. A Few Words on Non-Intervention—J.S. Mill. The Moral Basis of HumanitarianIntervention—T. Nardin. The Responsibilityto Protect—G. Evans and M. Sahnoun. •CONDUCT OF WAR (JUS IN BELLO). Com-batant Rights: Introduction. Third GenevaConvention Relative to the Treatment ofPrisoners of War. Protocol I to the GenevaConventions of 1949 (Part III). Should theTicking Bomb Terrorist Be Tortured?—A.M.Dershowitz. Noncombatant Rights: Introduc-tion. Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of1949 (Part IV). Fourth Geneva ConventionRelative to the Protection of Civilian Personsin Time of War. Supreme Emergency—M.Walzer. Maintaining the Protection of Non-Combatants (Part 1)—J.T. Johnson. Block-ades and Sanctions: Introduction. Maintain-ing the Protection of Non-Combatants (Part2)—J.T. Johnson. Economic Sanctions and theJust-War Doctrine—D. Christiansen and G.F.Powers. Economic Sanctions and the “FearfulSpectacle of Civilian Dead”—J. Gordon.Technology and War: Introduction. TheHatfields and the Coys—P. Ramsey. War andPeace in the Modern World—US CatholicBishops. The Legitimization of Violence—R.Normand and C. af Jochnick. •WAR CRIMES AND JUDGMENT (JUS POST

BELLUM). War and Crime: Introduction.Charter of the International Military Tribunal(Nuremberg). The Law of the NurembergTrials—Q. Wright. Rome Statute of the ICC.Comparative Complementarity—M.A.Newton. Judgment and Enforcement: Intro-duction. Dissent from the US SupremeCourt’s Ruling in Yamashita v. Styer—Justice F.Murphy. Responsibility for Crimes of War—S. Levinson. The Politics of War CrimesTribunals—G.J. Bass.

2007/415 pages LC: 2006024725 ISBN: 978-1-58826-377-3 hc $65/£41.50ISBN: 978-1-58826-353-7 pb $26.50/£16.95

22

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African Guerrillas, 17Aiding Peace? 10Anderlini, Sanam Naraghi, 9Annual Review of Global Peace

Operations, 2006, 8Annual Review of Global Peace

Operations, 2007, 8Annual Review of Global Peace,

Operations, 2008, 8Asif, Bushra, 20

Ballentine, Karen, 11Barnes, Sandra L., 23Black Academic’s Guide to

Winning Tenure—WithoutLosing Your Soul, The, 23

Bøås, Morten, 17Bouillon, Markus E., 14Boyce, James K., 4Brenk, Malin, 19Brett, Rachel, 18Bridging the Divide, 16Brown, Kaysie, 6Brown, M. Anne, 21Building States to Build Peace, 2

Call, Charles T., 2Carr, Craig L., 22Center on International

Cooperation, 8Civil War and the Rule of Law, 3Cousens, Elizabeth M., 12Cowardly Lions, 6

Dee, Moreen, 20Demilitarizing Politics, 12Democratic Republic of Congo,

The, 17de Zeeuw, Jeroen, 5, 7Dunn, Kevin C., 17

Ending Civil Wars, 12

From Soldiers to Politicians, 5Funk, Nathan C., 15

Goodhand, Jonathan, 10Greater Than the Sum of Its

Parts? 6Grignon, François, 17

Heijmans, Annelies, 21Hellema, Marte, 19Huang, Reyko, 3Hurwitz, Agnès, 3

Iraq, 14Islam and Peacemaking in the

Middle East, 15Iyob, Ruth, 16

Jensen, Erik, 16Jeong, Ho-Won, 13Junne, Gerd, 12

Kashmir, 20Kaufman, Edy, 16

Khadiagala, Gilbert M., 16Kinsella, David, 22Kisangani, Emizet F., 17Kumer, Krishna, 7

Laszloffy, Tracey, 23Lyons, Terrence, 12

Malone, David M., 14Mekenkamp, Monique, 20Men, Militarism, and UN

Peacekeeping, 10Morality of War, The, 22

Nest, Michael, 17Nitzschke, Heiko, 11

O’Donnell, Madalene, 4On the Market, 23

Patrick, Stewart, 6Peace and the Public Purse, 4Peacebuilding in Postconflict

Societies, 13Peacekeeping in East Timor, 20People Building Peace II, 19Postconflict Development, 12Profiting from Peace, 11Promoting Democracy in

Postconflict Societies, 7

Rockquemore, Kerry Ann, 23Rothchild, Donald, 12

Rowswell, Ben, 14

Said, Abdul Aziz, 15Salem, Walid, 16Samii, Cyrus, 20Searching for Peace in Asia

Pacific, 21Searching for Peace in Central

and South Asia, 20Security and Development in the

Pacific Islands, 21Sidhu, Waheguru Pal Singh, 20Simmonds, Nicola, 21Smith, Michael G., 20Specht, Irma, 18Stedman, Stephen John, 12Sudan, 16

van de veen, Hans, 20, 21van Tongeren, Paul, 19, 20Verhoeven, Juliette, 16, 19Verkoren, Willemijn, 12

Western Sahara, 16Whitworth, Sandra, 10Women Building Peace, 9Wyeth, Vanessa Hawkins, 2

Young Soldiers, 18

Zartman, I. William, 6

I N D E X

Do No Harm: How Aid Can Support Peace—or WarMary B. AndersonISBN: 978-1-55587-834-4 pb $16.95/£10.50

The Political Economy of Armed Conflict: Beyond Greed and GrievanceKaren Ballentine and Jake Sherman, editorsISBN: 978-1-58826-172-4 pb $22.50/£13.95

Greed and Grievance: Economic Agendas in Civil WarsMats Berdal and David M. Malone, editorsISBN: 978-1-55587-868-9 pb $22.50/£13.95

Sierra Leone: Diamonds and the Struggle for DemocracyJohn L. HirschISBN: 978-1-55587-698-2 pb $16.95/£10.50

Peace in Tatters: Israel, Palestine, and the Middle EastYoram MeitalISBN: 978-1-58826-362-9 hc $55/£34.95ISBN: 978-1-58826-387-2 pb $22/£13.95

The Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh: On the Difficult Road to PeaceAmena MohsinISBN: 978-1-58826-138-0 pb $13.95/£8.50

War Economies in a Regional Context: Challenges of TransformationMichael Pugh and Neil Cooper, with Jonathan GoodhandISBN: 978-1-58826-211-0 pb $22/£13.95

Peacebuilding: A Field GuideLuc Reychler and Thania Paffenholz, editorsISBN: 978-1-55587-937-2 pb $26.95/£16.95

Exploring Subregional Conflict: Opportunities for Conflict PreventionChandra Lekha Sriram and Zoe Nielsen, editorsISBN: 978-1-58826-219-6 pb $19.95/£12.50

From Promise to Practice: Strengthening UN Capacities for the Prevention of Violent ConflictChandra Lekha Sriram and Karin Wermester, editorsISBN: 978-1-58826-112-0 pb $23.50/£14.95

Conflict Prevention: The Untapped Potential of the Business SectorAndreas Wenger and Daniel MöckliISBN: 978-1-58826-136-6 hc $45/£28.50

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