1st Edition

Ex-Combatants and International Statebuilding Veterans as Peace Brokers in Kosovo

By Nathalie Duclos Copyright 2024
    194 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book examines the international efforts to regulate violence in Kosovo since 1999 through the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) and covers 15 years of international presence.

    The book analyses the process of implementing international policies from a sociological perspective, and looks at the adaptations and arrangements of public policies achieved through the transactions of international actors with local actors, who are at the heart of policy implementation. In particular, it analyses the disarmament, demobilisation, and reintegration of combatants (DDR) programme and shows the extent to which it was co-produced with Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) leaders co-opted by international administrators. These analyses take the opposite view to the work that considers ex-combatants as spoilers. In Kosovo, the combatant leaders acted as peace brokers, facilitating demobilisation and exercising disciplinary control over rank-and-file combatants. Their position as brokers helped them to take control of the new state being built under international administration. This book shows the importance of the relationship between ex-combatants and the state and illustrates the multiplicity of their possible trajectories, including political ones. To elucidate the dynamics of co-production in shaping DDR policies and hybridising international policies as well as in state formation, the book relies on around a hundred interviews with ex-combatants of the KLA and with international personnel, as well as on the archives of international organisations and observations in the field.

    This book will be of much interest to students of international statebuilding, peace and conflict studies, Balkan politics and international relations.

    Biography

    Nathalie Duclos is a Full Professor in Political Science at Tours University. She holds a PhD in Political Science from Sorbonne University in France (1996) and an HDR (Habilitation à diriger des recherches) at Sciences Po Paris (2015).

    Translated by Susan Taponier

    'In challenging many orthodox views on disarming combatant actors after war, Nathalie Duclos makes an extremely valuable contribution to academic and policy debates. Based on extensive field research, she demonstrates how former combatants perform important brokerage roles that help cement peace and stability. Highly recommended.'

    Roger Mac Ginty, Durham University, UK