New Armies from Old : Merging Competing Military Forces after Civil Wars /
Negotiating a peaceful end to civil wars, which often includes an attempt to bring together former rival military or insurgent factions into a new national army, has been a frequent goal of conflict resolution practitioners since the Cold War. In practice, however, very little is known about what wo...
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Washington, DC :
Georgetown University Press,
[2014]
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Foreword / by Bruce Russett
- Introduction / Roy Licklider
- Mixed motives? Explaining the decision to integrate militaries at civil war's end / Caroline Hartzell
- Early adopters
- Sudan 1972-1983 / Matthew LeRiche
- Military integration from Rhodesia to Zimbabwe / Paul Jackson
- Merging militaries: the Lebanese case / Florence Gaub
- Autonomous development
- From failed power sharing in Rwanda to successful top-down military integration / Stephen Burgess
- From rebels to soldiers: an analysis of the Philippine policy of integrating former Moro National Liberation Front combatants into the armed forces / Rosalie Arcala Hall
- South Africa / Roy Licklider
- International involvement
- Half-brewed: the lukewarm results of creating an integrated military in the Democratic Republic of the Congo / Judith Verweijen
- Merging militaries: Mozambique / Andrea Bartoli and Martha Mutisi
- Bosnia-Herzegovina: from three armies to one / Rohan Maxwell
- Bringing the good, the bad and the ugly into the peace fold: the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces after the Lomo Peace Agreement / Mimmi Soderberg Kovacs
- Burundi / Cyrus Samii
- Alternative perspectives
- The industrial organization of merged armies / David Laitin
- Military dis-integration: canary in the coal mine? / Ronald Krebs
- So what? / Roy Licklider.