Policies for Building Post-conflict Peace

Policies for Building Post-conflict Peace

Author: 
Bigombe, B.
Place: 
Oxford
Publisher: 
Oxford University Press
Date published: 
2000
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Collier, P., jt. author
Sambanis, N., jt. author
Journal Title: 
Journal of African Economies
Source: 
Journal of African Economies Volume 9 Issue 3 Oct 2000 pp. 323-348
Abstract: 

Civil wars always end, but usually they restart. Globally, within the first ten years of the end of a conflict, 31% of them have resumed. African conflicts are even more prone to restart than the global average: half of African peace restorations last less than a decade. By applying theoretical frameworks to newly developed data sets of conflict, we find that the high incidence of peace collapse in Africa is not inevitable. to date, policies on the part of both the international community and post-conflict governments have been highly inefficient. Thus with better policies, the risk of peace collapse after African civil wars can be radically reduced. We outline some strategies that can assist war-to-peace transition in Africa.

Language: 

CITATION: Bigombe, B.. Policies for Building Post-conflict Peace . Oxford : Oxford University Press , 2000. Journal of African Economies Volume 9 Issue 3 Oct 2000 pp. 323-348 - Available at: https://library.au.int/policies-building-post-conflict-peace