Easily na - Routledge
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36<br />
PeaCe aNd CoNFliCT sTudies<br />
Cass Series on Peacekeeping<br />
Series edited by Michael Pugh,<br />
University of Bradford, UK<br />
This series examines all aspects of<br />
peacekeeping, from the political, operatio<strong>na</strong>l<br />
and legal dimensions to the developmental<br />
and humanitarian issues that must be dealt<br />
with by all those involved with peacekeeping<br />
in the world today.<br />
Forthcoming<br />
Peace Operations and<br />
Organised Crime<br />
Enemies or Allies?<br />
Edited by James Cockayne and Adam Lupel, both<br />
at Inter<strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>l Peace Institute, New York, USA<br />
This volume examines the relationship between<br />
inter<strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>l peace operations and organised crime –<br />
which in some cases are clear enemies, and in others,<br />
tacit allies.<br />
Selected Contents: Foreword Terje Rød-Larsen<br />
1. Introduction: Rethinking the Relationship between Peace<br />
Operations and Organized Crime James Cockayne and Adam<br />
Lupel 2. Framing the Issue: UN Responses to Corruption and<br />
Crimi<strong>na</strong>l Networks in Postconflict Settings Victoria K. Holt and<br />
Alix J. Boucher 3. Symbiosis between Peace Operations and<br />
Illicit Business in Bosnia Peter Andreas 4. Problems of Crime<br />
Fighting by ‘Inter<strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>ls’ in Kosovo Cornelius Friesendorf<br />
5. Understanding Crimi<strong>na</strong>lity in West African Conflicts William<br />
Reno 6. Peace Operations and Inter<strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>l Crime: The Case<br />
of Somalia Roland Marchal 7. Organized Crime, Illicit Power<br />
Structures, and Threatened Peace Processes: The Case of<br />
Guatemala Patrick Gavigan 8. Winning Haiti’s Protection<br />
Competition: Organized Crime and Peace Operations Past,<br />
Present, and Future James Cockayne 9. Peacekeepers among<br />
Poppies: Afghanistan, Illicit Economies, and Intervention Vanda<br />
Felbab-Brown 10. Organized Crime and Corruption in Iraq<br />
Phil Williams 11. Closing the Gap between Peace Operations<br />
and Postconflict Insecurity: Towards a Violence Reduction<br />
Agenda Robert Muggah and Keith Krause 12. Conclusion:<br />
From Iron Fist to Invisible Hand – Peace Operations, Organized<br />
Crime, and Intelligent Inter<strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>l Law Enforcement James<br />
Cockayne and Adam Lupel<br />
December 2010: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />
Hb: 978-0-415-60170-2: £75.00<br />
For more information, visit:<br />
www.routledge.com/9780415601702<br />
Forthcoming in 2011<br />
UN Peace Operations and<br />
Post-Conflict Reconstruction<br />
Learning Lessons From Haiti<br />
Eirin Mobekk, University of Bradford, UK<br />
This book looks at UN Peace Operations in Haiti and<br />
why they went so dramatically wrong first time around,<br />
resulting in much deep-seated conflict.<br />
Selected Contents: 1. UN Peace Operations: An Overview<br />
2. Haiti and the Need for Multilateral Interventions<br />
3. Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration (DDR)<br />
4. Security Sector Reform 5. Justice and Reconciliation<br />
6. Exter<strong>na</strong>l Democracy Promotion 7. Sustai<strong>na</strong>ble Economic<br />
Development 8. Conclusion<br />
June 2011: 234 x 156: 224pp<br />
Hb: 978-0-415-48086-4: £75.00<br />
For more information, visit:<br />
www.routledge.com/9780415480864<br />
Forthcoming in 2011<br />
Peacekeeping in<br />
the 21st Century<br />
Cosmopolitanism and the Globalization<br />
of Security<br />
Tom Woodhouse and Oliver Ramsbotham, both<br />
at University of Bradford, UK<br />
This book provides a comprehensive survey of the<br />
current levels of peace-keeping forces at global, regio<strong>na</strong>l,<br />
sub-regio<strong>na</strong>l and <strong>na</strong>tion-state levels. The authors offer a<br />
census of peace-keeping capacity in the first decade of<br />
the twenty-first century and chart plans to develop this<br />
capacity. This provides an assessment of global capability<br />
for implementing the human security agenda that has<br />
recently emerged and been endorsed by the UN Security<br />
Council and member states.<br />
The book also has a normative dimension that identifies<br />
discourses about peace-keeping, peacebuilding and<br />
conflict prevention in the context of the <strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>l, regio<strong>na</strong>l<br />
and global locations in which they occur. This provides a<br />
qualitative and quantitative assessment of the likelihood<br />
of a new peace-keeping model emerging, based on<br />
cosmopolitan peace-keeping theory and practice.<br />
Selected Contents: 1. The Twenty First Century Conflict<br />
Environment 2. Peacekeeping Surveyed: Current Missions,<br />
Mandates and Challenges 3. America and the Caribbean<br />
4. Asia and Asia-Pacific 5. Africa 6. Europe 7. Russia and<br />
Central and Eastern Europe 8. Middle East 9. Cosmopolitan<br />
Peacekeeping and 21st-Century Conflict<br />
June 2011: 234 x 156: 240pp<br />
Hb: 978-0-415-44051-6: £85.00<br />
Pb: 978-0-415-44052-3: £23.99<br />
For more information, visit:<br />
www.routledge.com/9780415440523<br />
Forthcoming in 2011<br />
Rethinking the Liberal Peace<br />
Exter<strong>na</strong>l Models and Local Alter<strong>na</strong>tives<br />
Edited by Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh, Sciences Po,<br />
Paris, France<br />
This book presents a critical a<strong>na</strong>lysis of the liberal peace<br />
project and offers possible alter<strong>na</strong>tives and models.<br />
Selected Contents: 1. Introduction: Assumptions and<br />
Illusions Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh Part 1: Theory and<br />
Critiques of Liberal Peace 2. Becoming Liberal, Unbecoming<br />
Liberalism: Liberal-Local Hybridity via the Everyday as a Response<br />
to the Paradoxes of Liberal Peacebuilding Oliver P. Richmond<br />
3. Peace, Self-Gover<strong>na</strong>nce and Inter<strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>l Engagement:<br />
A Postcolonial Ethic of Liberal Peacebuilding Kristoffer Lidén<br />
4. The Liberal Peace: State-building, Democracy and Local<br />
Ownership David Chandler Part 2: Liberal Democracy<br />
5. Democracy and Security: A Shotgun Marriage? Robin<br />
Luckham 6. What’s Law Got To Do With It? The Role of Law<br />
in Post-Conflict Democratization and Its (Flawed) Assumptions<br />
Michael Schoiwhohl 7. No Such Thing as Cosmopolitanism:<br />
Field-Dependent Consequences in Inter<strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>l Administrative<br />
Gover<strong>na</strong>nce and Crimi<strong>na</strong>l Justice Nicholas Dorn Part 3:<br />
Market Liberalism 8. Curing Strangeness in the Political<br />
Economy of Peacebuilding: Traces of Liberalism and Resistance<br />
Michael Pugh 9. Economic Dimensions of the Liberal Peace<br />
and its Implications for Conflict in Developing Countries Syed<br />
Mansoob Murshed Part 4: Case Studies 10. Reconstructing<br />
Post-2006 Lebanon: A Distorted Market Christine Sylva<br />
Hamieh and Roger Mac Guinty 11. Is Liberal Democracy<br />
Possible in Iraq? Amal Shlash and Patrick Tom 12. Conflicted<br />
Outcomes and Values: (Neo)Liberal Peace in Central Asia and<br />
Afghanistan Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh 13. Conclusion: Whither<br />
Liberal Peace? Shahrbanou Tadjbakhsh. Bibliography<br />
February 2011: 234 x 156: 208pp<br />
Hb: 978-0-415-60055-2: £75.00<br />
For more information, visit:<br />
www.routledge.com/9780415600552<br />
Forthcoming<br />
Conflict and Peacebuilding<br />
in Sri Lanka<br />
Caught in the Peace Trap?<br />
Edited by Jo<strong>na</strong>than Goodhand, School of Oriental<br />
and African Studies, University of London, UK,<br />
Jo<strong>na</strong>than Spencer, University of Edinburgh, UK<br />
and Benedikt Korf, University of Zurich - Irchel,<br />
Switzerland<br />
Series: <strong>Routledge</strong> Contemporary South Asia Series<br />
The period between 2001 and 2006 saw the rise and<br />
fall of an inter<strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>lly supported effort to bring a<br />
protracted violent conflict in Sri Lanka to a peaceful<br />
resolution. A ceasefire agreement, signed in February<br />
2002, was followed by six rounds of peace talks, but<br />
growing political violence, disagreements over core<br />
issues and a fragmentation of the constituencies of the<br />
key parties led to an eventual breakdown. This book<br />
brings together a unique range of perspectives on this<br />
problematic and ultimately unsuccessful peace process.<br />
Selected Contents: 1. Caught in the Peace Trap? On the<br />
Illiberal Consequences of Liberal Peace in Sri Lanka Jo<strong>na</strong>than<br />
Goodhand and Benedikt Korf 2. Government-LTTE Peace<br />
Negotiations in 2002-2005 and the Clash of State Formation<br />
Projects Jayadeva Uyangoda 3. The Indian Factor in the<br />
Peace Process and Conflict Resolution in Sri Lanka S.I.<br />
Keethaponcalan 4. Superpowers and Small Conflicts: The<br />
United States and Sri Lanka Jeffrey Lunsted 5. The Military<br />
Dy<strong>na</strong>mics of the Peace Process and Its Aftermath Chris Smith<br />
6. Would the Real Dutugemunu Please Stand Up? The Politics<br />
of Sinhala Natio<strong>na</strong>list Authenticity and Populist Discontent<br />
David Rampton with Asanga Welikala 7. Whose War? Whose<br />
Peace? The LTTE and the Politics of the North East Liz Philipson<br />
8. The Genealogy of Muslim Political Voices in Sri Lanka Nick<br />
Lewer and Mohammed Ismail 9. Politics of Market Reforms<br />
and the UNF-led Negotiations Sunil Bastian 10. Aiding Peace?<br />
An Insider’s View of Donor Support for the Sri Lankan Peace<br />
Process, 2000-2005 Adam Burke and Anthea Mulakala<br />
11. Muddling the Peace Process: The Political Dy<strong>na</strong>mics of the<br />
Tsu<strong>na</strong>mi, Aid and Conflict Georg Frerks and Bart Klem 12. In<br />
the Balance? Civil Society and the Peace Process 2002-2008<br />
Oliver Walton with Paikiasothy Sarrabanmuttu 13. Reflections<br />
on an Illiberal Peace: Stories from the East Jo<strong>na</strong>than Spencer<br />
November 2010: 234 x 156: 272pp<br />
Hb: 978-0-415-46604-2: £80.00<br />
For more information, visit:<br />
www.routledge.com/9780415466042<br />
Complimentary exam Copy e-inspection New in Paperback Companion Website<br />
relaTed jourNal<br />
Conflict, Security<br />
& Development<br />
Editor: Dylan Hendrickson, King’s<br />
College London, UK<br />
Conflict, Security<br />
and Development<br />
provides an a<strong>na</strong>lytical<br />
and empirically<br />
informed treatment<br />
of the linkages<br />
between issues<br />
of security and<br />
development in<br />
contemporary<br />
inter<strong>na</strong>tio<strong>na</strong>l<br />
relations. It places<br />
emphasis on the<br />
need to examine issues of security and<br />
development in their mutual interaction<br />
rather than as separate areas of academic<br />
enquiry and policy-making.<br />
For more information on the jour<strong>na</strong>l, including<br />
subscription information, please visit:<br />
www.tandf.co.uk/jour<strong>na</strong>ls/ccsd