1st Edition

Routledge Handbook of African Peacebuilding

Edited By Bruno Charbonneau, Maxime Ricard Copyright 2022
308 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

308 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

308 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Africa lies at the centre of the international community’s peacebuilding interventions, and the continent’s rich multitude of actors, ideas, relationships, practices, experiences, locations, and contexts in turn shapes the possibilities and practices of contemporary peacebuilding. This timely new handbook surveys and analyses peacebuilding as it operates in this specifically African context.... Read more

Introduction: Whose Peacebuilding? Power, Politics, Practices

Bruno Charbonneau and Maxime Ricard

Part I: Institutions

1. From Peacekeeping to Peacebuilding: Towards a UN Peace Continuum

Alexandra Novosseloff

2. The United Nations and the African Union: Partners or Rivals in Peace Operations?

Arthur Stein and Marie-Joëlle Zahar

3. Peacebuilding via Security Sector Reform and Governance? The Case of West Africa

Niagalé Bagayoko and Eboe Hutchful

4. Preventing Conflict-Induced Forced Displacement in Africa: UNHCR, the AU and the Rhetoric and Realities of 'Root Causes'

Marina Sharpe

Part II: Themes and Debates

5. African Mediation in High-Intensity Conflict: How African?

Laurie Nathan

6. Justice and Reconciliation in Africa: The Emergence of the African Union Transitional Justice Policy

Tim Murithi

7. The Politics of Knowledge and an African Transitional Justice: Analysing Africa as a Constitutive Outside

Ulrike Lühe and Briony Jones

8. Local Peacebuilding: The Reflexive Encounter Between a Subaltern View and a Practitioner in Côte D’Ivoire

Jeremy Allouche and Patrick Zadi Zadi

9. Women, Gender and Peacebuilding in Africa

Nina Wilén

10. Development and Peacebuilding

Jonathan M. Sears

11. Peacebuilding and Democracy in Africa

Daniel Eizenga

12. The Climate Crisis and Its Challenges for African Peacebuilding

Bruno Charbonneau, Peter Läderach, Marc-André Boisvert, Tatiana Smirnova,

Grazia Pacillo, Alessandro Craparo, and Ignacio Madurga

Part III: Case Studies

13. Peace by Delegation? The G5 Sahel’s Quest to Build Sustainable Peace

Ousmane Diallo

14. Counterinsurgency and Peacebuilding in Somalia and Mali

Bruno Charbonneau and Louise Wiuff Moe

15. Peacebuilding in The Gambia: Sustaining the Gains and Addressing Potential Threats to the Process

Festus Kofi Aubyn

16. The Politics of Transitional Justice and Peacemaking in a Non-Transition Context: The Case of South Sudan

Kuyang Harriet Logo

17. Peacebuilding in Guinea-Bissau: Challenges and the Way Forward to Sustaining Peace and Security

Fiifi Edu-Afful and Ruth Adwoa Frimpong

18. Stability for Whom and for What? The Ivorian Peacebuilding Experience Under Alassane Ouattara

Maxime Ricard

Conclusion: African Peacebuilding for Whom and What? Bringing the People Back In

Cyril Obi

Afterword

Biography

Bruno Charbonneau is Full Professor of International Studies and Director of the Centre for Security and Crisis Governance (CRITIC) at Canada’s Royal Military College Saint-Jean.

Maxime Ricard is West Africa Researcher at the Institute for Strategic Research (Institut de recherche stratégique de l’École militaire, IRSEM, France) and holds a PhD in political science from Université du Québec à Montréal. He is also Associate Researcher at the Centre FrancoPaix of the Raoul-Dandurand Chair in Canada.

This handbook as a whole will be of greatest interest to scholars who study peacebuilding processes in Africa. Individual chapters could be valuable sources of insight and citation for scholars working on specific subjects, whether certain tasks (e.g. security sector reform) or the countries that are the foci of case studies. I am sceptical that Western policy makers and many UN officials will respond positively to the critiques of their efforts that run throughout the handbook. This is not to say that criticisms from the Global South perspective are invalid, but they run counter to orientations that still reflect the liberal model of peacebuilding.

-- Paul F. Diehl, Independent Scholar