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El. knyga: Local Ownership in International Peacebuilding: Key Theoretical and Practical Issues

Edited by (George Mason University, United Sates), Edited by (University of Otago, New Zealand)

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"This edited volume empirically examines key theoretical and practical issues relevant to the promotion of local ownership in contemporary international peacebuilding. This book attempts to provide comprehensive understanding of the issue of local ownership in international peacebuilding. By providing an empirical analysis of nine contemporary peacebuilding case studies, the volume aims to supplement contemporary academic discussions on local ownership, which have thus far mainly focused on its normativeor theoretical dimensions. The case studies included here examine the peace operations in a wide range of countries - Afghanistan, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Cambodia, Cyprus, Kenya, Uganda, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, and Sri Lanka. The book seeks to address the weaknesses of conventional studies by: (1) clarifying the key concepts of local ownership; and (2) analysing the liberal peace ideas that prevent the emergence of locally based peacebuilding ideas. The volume concludes by presenting practical proposals for addressing the limitations of contemporary local ownership promotion. Through these means, the book aims to explore a key research question from both theoretical and empirical perspectives: How can international peacebuilding facilitate effective, active local community participation? This volume will be of much interest to students of peacebuilding, development studies, global governance, peace and conflict studies, security studies and IR"--

This edited volume empirically examines key theoretical and practical issues relevant to the promotion of local ownership in contemporary international peacebuilding.

This book attempts to provide comprehensive understanding of the issue of local ownership in international peacebuilding. By providing an empirical analysis of nine case studies, the volume aims to supplement contemporary academic discussions on local ownership, which have thus far mainly focused on its normative or theoretical dimensions. The case studies included here examine the peace operations in a wide range of countries - Afghanistan, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Cambodia, Cyprus, Kenya, Uganda, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, and Sri Lanka. The book seeks to address the weaknesses of conventional studies by:,empirical review of the achievements and limitations of previous attempts to promote local ownership; examination of the key concepts of local ownership; and analysis of structural and practical challenges. The volume concludes by presenting practical proposals for addressing the limitations of contemporary local ownership promotion. Through these means, the book aims to explore a key research question from both theoretical and empirical perspectives: How can international peacebuilding facilitate effective, active local community participation?

This volume will be of much interest to students of peacebuilding, development studies, global governance, peace and conflict studies, security studies and IR.

List of figure and tables
vii
Acknowledgements viii
List of contributors
ix
1 Introduction
1(16)
Alpaslan Ozerdem
Sung Yong Lee
PART I Local ownership: development and challenges
17(76)
2 Local ownership as a strategic guideline for peacebuilding
19(20)
Hideaki Shinoda
3 Operationalising local ownership
39(16)
Timothy Donais
4 Complex challenges facing contemporary local ownership programmes: a case study of South Sudan
55(19)
Alex Mackenzie-Smith
5 Hybrid local ownership in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo: from discursive to material aspects of ownership
74(19)
Stefanie Kappler
Nicolas Lemay-Hebert
PART II Practice of local ownership promotion
93(116)
6 The dilemmas of local ownership of upper-level and grassroots peace processes in Afghanistan
95(21)
Chuck Thiessen
7 Peacebuilding and local ownership: who owned the reconciliation process in post-conflict Nicaragua?
116(19)
Manuela Nilsson
8 Nurturing local voice: the UNDP's local empowerment programmes in Cambodia
135(21)
Sung Yong Lee
Wookbeom Park
9 Ownership of international peacebuilding programmes by local governance institutions: case study of Gulu district in Northern Uganda
156(22)
Adolf Norbert Gerstl
10 Challenges to promoting local ownership in post-war Sri Lanka
178(17)
Rahmathullah Mohamed
11 Conclusion
195(14)
Sung Yong Lee
Alpaslan Ozerdem
Index 209
Sung Yong Lee is Lecturer at the National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, University of Otago, New Zealand.

Alpaslan Özerdem is Co-Director of the Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations, Coventry University, UK. He is author or editor of eight books, including most recently, Turkey and Human Security: Challenges of the 21st Century (Routledge, 2013).