1st Edition

Violent Conflict and Peacebuilding The Continuing Crisis in Darfur

By Johan Brosché, Daniel Rothbart Copyright 2012
    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book examines the continuing devastation in the Darfur region of Sudan, from the perspective of a multiplicity of conflicts of distinct types.

    The crisis reached its peak in 2003–2004, when certain Arab militias joined forces with the Sudan armed forces in a campaign against insurgent resistance movements. Engulfed in the tumult, Darfurians experienced systematic slaughter, sexual violence, and internal displacement on a massive scale. Although the violence has waned in recent years, the fighting continues to this day. The authors cast this crisis as a complex web of four distinct, yet interlacing, conflict types:

    • long-standing disputes between farmers and herders and between different herder communities
    • political struggles between the local elite leaders of the resistance movements, and those between traditional leaders (elders) and younger aspiring leaders
    • long-standing grievances of marginalized groups against those at the national centre of power
    • cross-border conflicts, primarily the proxy war waged between Chad and Sudan

    The crisis in South Sudan is also examined through the lens of conflict complementarity. This book will be of interest to students of African politics, genocide, political violence, ethnic conflict, war and conflict studies, peacebuilding and IR.

    Foreword Peter Wallensteen  Part 1 Violent Conflict in Darfur  1. Violence in Darfur  2. Complementary Conflicts  3. Communal Conflicts  4. Local Elites Conflicts  5. Center-Periphery Conflicts  6. Cross-Border Conflicts  7. Southern Sudan: The Continuing Crisis  Part 2: Peacebuilding in Darfur  8. International Response  9. Negotiating the Conflicts in Darfur.  Conclusion.  Simulation Exercise: Problem Solving Workshop on Darfur

    Biography

    Johan Brosché is a PhD candidate at Uppsala University, Sweden.

    Daniel Rothbart is Professor of Conflict Analysis and Resolution at the School of Conflict Analysis and Resolution, as well as Professor of Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy at George Mason University, VA.