Improving International Peacebuilding Efforts: The Example of Human Rights Culture in Kosovo. Improving International Peacebuilding Efforts: The Example of Human Rights Culture in Kosovo.

Improving International Peacebuilding Efforts: The Example of Human Rights Culture in Kosovo‪.‬

Global Governance 2004, July-Sept, 10, 3

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Descripción editorial

Kosovo today is a house of cards. One false move and the house will fall down. Should the international troops--in particular the U.S. and British troops--pull out of Kosovo, it will collapse into communal violence. (1) The international security presence in Kosovo has generally succeeded in preventing the outbreak of another violent armed conflict but has accomplished little else beyond that. This is not surprising. Militaries can help prevent war, but they alone cannot build a sustainable peace. (2) The cessation of hostilities through the use of military force does not, in and of itself, resolve the strategic dilemmas, structural imbalances, and open wounds of unaddressed abuses and interpersonal hostilities. As David Lake and Donald Rothschild stress in their exhaustive study of ethnic conflict, a "stable peace can arise only as effective institutions of government are reestablished, the state begins again to mediate between distrustful ethnic groups, and the parties slowly gain confidence in the safeguards contained in the new ethnic contracts." (3) Peacebuilding requires the efforts of a host of civilian actors focused on institution building, interpersonal reconciliation, and social transformation over the long term. More than 250 well-intentioned nongovernmental and governmental organizations have flooded into Kosovo offering a range of resources and promises. (4) Elections have been held, (5) homes have been rebuilt, schools have reopened, and roads have been repaved. Police and judges have been trained, and the Ad Hoc Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia is well under way in its investigations into war crimes committed in Kosovo. Nonetheless, not one of the larger international goals that brought the international community to Kosovo in the first place has been reached. Kosovo is decidedly not a multiethnic and secure society, and equal access to basic human rights protections remains illusory. (6) Local police and administrative and judicial systems are still unable to operate independent of international oversight and, instead of joining government, many of the "best and brightest" in Kosovo have withdrawn from participation altogether. That the citizenry of Kosovo--Serb and Albanian alike--perceive no legitimate governance structure and process only magnifies pervasive feelings of insecurity and unfairness.

GÉNERO
Política y actualidad
PUBLICADO
2004
1 de julio
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
31
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Lynne Rienner Publishers
TAMAÑO
288,4
KB

Más libros de Global Governance

Mapping the Un-League of Nations Analogy: Are There Still Lessons to be Learned from the League? Mapping the Un-League of Nations Analogy: Are There Still Lessons to be Learned from the League?
2005
Policy Coherence for Sustainable Infrastructure in Developing Countries: The Case of Oecd-Country Public Financing for Large Dams (Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development) (Report) Policy Coherence for Sustainable Infrastructure in Developing Countries: The Case of Oecd-Country Public Financing for Large Dams (Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development) (Report)
2009
International Authority and State Building: The Case of Bosnia and Herzegovina. International Authority and State Building: The Case of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
2004
Globalization Rules: Accountability, Power, And the Prospects for Global Administrative Law (Essay) Globalization Rules: Accountability, Power, And the Prospects for Global Administrative Law (Essay)
2008
The G-20 and International Economic Governance: Hegemony, Collectivism, Or Both?(Group of 20) (Report) The G-20 and International Economic Governance: Hegemony, Collectivism, Or Both?(Group of 20) (Report)
2009
Future Prospects for the United Nations (Irrelevant Or Indispensable? the United Nations in the 21st Century) (The Parliament of Man: The Past, Present, And Future of the United Nations) (The United Nations and Its Future in the 21st Century) (The United Nations, Peace and Security) (The United Nations: Confronting the Challenges of a Global Society) (Book Review) Future Prospects for the United Nations (Irrelevant Or Indispensable? the United Nations in the 21st Century) (The Parliament of Man: The Past, Present, And Future of the United Nations) (The United Nations and Its Future in the 21st Century) (The United Nations, Peace and Security) (The United Nations: Confronting the Challenges of a Global Society) (Book Review)
2007