1st Edition
Post-conflict Reconstruction and Local Government
1. Local government and decentralisation in post-conflict contexts
Paul Jackson
2. Taking stock of Rwanda’s decentralisation: changing local governance in a post-conflict environment
Benjamin Chemouni
3. Beneath the veneer: decentralisation and post-conflict reconstruction in Rwanda
Niamh Gaynor
4. The role of decentralisation in post-conflict reconstruction in Sierra Leone
Andrew Nickson and Joel Cutting
5. Mediating the margins: the role of brokers and the Eastern Provincial Council in Sri Lanka’s post-war transition
Jonathan Goodhand, Bart Klem and Oliver Walton
6. Decentralisation, security consolidation and territorial peacebuilding: is Colombia about to close the loop?
Markus Schultze-Kraft, Oscar Valencia and David Alzate
7. Educational decentralisation in post-conflict societies: approaches and constraints
Giuditta Fontana
8. Local government dissolution in Karachi: chasm or catalyst?
Alison Brown and Saeed Ahmed
9. Decentralisation as a post-conflict state-building strategy in Northern Ireland, Sri Lanka, Sierra Leone and Rwanda
Gareth J. Wall
10. Decentralisation and local governance in post-conflict contexts: a practitioner’s perspective
Shipra Narang Suri
Biography
Paul Jackson is a political economist working on post-conflict reconstruction. He is Professor of African Politics in the International Development Department at the University of Birmingham, UK, and currently a Visiting Fellow in the Centre for Gender and African Studies at the University of the Free State, South Africa. His extensive experience on governance in Sierra Leone led him into conflict analysis and security sector reform. He is currently an advisor to the Governance and Social Development Resource Centre and programme leader on the Sustainable Development Programme for the British Academy.
Gareth J. Wall oversees the research and knowledge management activities of the Commonwealth Local Government Forum, focusing on ensuring good practice lessons from CLGF programmatic work and from our ministerial and local government membership to inform policy and practice across the Commonwealth. He is concurrently undertaking doctoral research on deliberative democracy for human development in the International Development Department at the University of Birmingham, UK, and the Institute of Development Studies, Kolkata, India.






