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Power in Peacekeeping

Explains how peacekeeping can work effectively by employing power through verbal persuasion, financial inducement, and coercion short of offensive force.

Lise Morjé Howard (Author)

9781108457187, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 16 May 2019

274 pages, 11 b/w illus. 6 tables
22.9 x 15.1 x 1.5 cm, 0.41 kg

'… the book's main contribution is the helpful typology of three types of power and their respective casual mechanisms that explain how UN peacekeeping works.' Paul D. Williams, International Peacekeeping

United Nations peacekeeping has proven remarkably effective at reducing the death and destruction of civil wars. But how peacekeepers achieve their ends remains under-explored. This book presents a typological theory of how peacekeepers exercise power. If power is the ability of A to get B to behave differently, peacekeepers convince the peacekept to stop fighting in three basic ways: they persuade verbally, induce financially, and coerce through deterrence, surveillance and arrest. Based on more than two decades of study, interviews with peacekeepers, unpublished records on Namibia, and ethnographic observation of peacekeepers in Lebanon, DR Congo, and the Central African Republic, this book explains how peacekeepers achieve their goals, and differentiates peacekeeping from its less effective cousin, counterinsurgency. It recommends a new international division of labor, whereby actual military forces hone their effective use of compulsion, while UN peacekeepers build on their strengths of persuasion, inducement, and coercion short of offensive force.

1. Power and United Nations peacekeeping
2. Persuasion in Namibia
3. Inducement in Lebanon
4. Coercion in the Central African Republic
5. Toward a more effective use of power in peacekeeping.

Subject Areas: United Nations & UN agencies [JPSN1], International institutions [JPSN], Diplomacy [JPSD], International relations [JPS], Comparative politics [JPB]

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