![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 1 of 1 matches in All Departments
This book answers two related questions concerning civil war peace agreements. First, it explains why some peace agreements get signed while others do not get signed, and second, why do some of those agreements that get signed not hold to ultimately bring an end to protracted civil wars. In spite of the fact that most mediated settlements of civil wars are not durable, it is still important that we understand why some civil war agreements reach initial steps towards settlement, without which full and durable end of conflict is not possible. To improve our understanding of the process through which civil war agreements are concluded and why some settlements hold while others do not, this study looks at empirical evidence from three mediated sets of peace agreements. The focus is first a series of fourteen agreements that finally ended the first civil war in Liberia in 1997; second, the 1993 Arusha peace accord that failed to prevent the escalation of conflict into genocide in Rwanda; and third, a series of three agreements that were signed but did not initially hold to end the conflict in Sierra Leone. An excellent and thorough study, this book will be a welcome reference for collections in African studies, international peace studies, and political science.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Encyclopedia of Native American Jewelry…
Paula A. Baxter, Allison Bird-Romero
Hardcover
R3,345
Discovery Miles 33 450
Ties that bind - Race and the politics…
Shannon Walsh, Jon Soske
Paperback
|