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This book examines the attitudes of political, military and
non-state actors towards the idea of a UN Emergency Peace Service,
and the issues that might affect the establishment of this service
in both theory and practice. The United Nations Emergency Peace
Service (UNEPS) is a civil society-led idea to establish a
permanent UN service to improve UN peace operations as well as to
operationalise the emerging norm of the 'responsibility to protect'
civilians from atrocity crimes. The UNEPS proposal has received
limited support. The book argues that interest in, and support for,
the UNEPS proposal is determined by perceptions that it would erode
state sovereignty, the extent to which the principles of the
proposal are consistent with actors' views on the world and
perceptions on whether UNEPS will realistically be capable of
contributing to the workings of the UN and regional peacekeeping
systems in areas that are seen to be deficient. This book makes the
case for localising the UNEPS proposal so that it is more
consistent with attitudes of those consulted for this research. It
concludes that the development of a series of less ambitious
proposals could be the first steps to creating a rapidly deployable
service with the mandate to prevent atrocity crimes. This book will
be of much interest to students of peace operations, the
Responsibility to Protect, international organisations, IR and
security studies.
This volume examines the attitudes of political, military and
non-state actors towards the United Nations Emergency Peace
Service, and explores issues that might affect support for the
establishment of UNEPS in both theory and practice. This book
explores the United Nations Emergency Peace Service (UNEPS)
proposal, which is a civil society-led idea to establish a
permanent UN peacekeeping service to overcome some of the
shortcomings facing UN peace operations as well as to
operationalise the emerging norm of the responsibility to protect
civilians from atrocity crimes. As with previous proposals for a
standing UN army or peacekeeping capacity, the UNEPS proposal has
received limited support from governments partly because of
concerns about its feasibility and the perception that such a
service would erode state sovereignty. The book argues that
interest in, and support for, the UNEPS proposal is determined by
the extent to which the norms embedded in the UNEPS proposal are
consistent with actors' views on the world.Another factor
influencing the support the proposal enjoys is the extent to which
it is perceived as realistic, achievable and capable of
contributing to the workings of the UN and regional peacekeeping
systems in areas that are seen to be deficient. The book makes a
case for localising the UNEPS proposal so that it honours and
incorporates the normative and problem-solving preferences of
respondents and other actors. Because of the diversity of
responses, this book does not commit to any concrete suggestions
for reforming the UNEPS proposal; however, it does suggest that
UNEPS' architects might consider developing a less ambitious
proposal as a first step to creating a rapidly deployable service
with the mandate to prevent atrocity crimes. It examines various
alternatives towards this end. The book concludes that because the
UNEPS proposal is intricately linked to the UN, trust in the world
organisation is an essential ingredient in generating support for
the idea. It argues that a central way of achieving this is to
ensure that the values and priorities of a wide range of
stakeholders are seen to be represented in the Organisation's
structure and workings.This book will be of much interest to
students of peace operations, the Responsibility to Protect, the
UN, International Relations and security studie in general.
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