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Formal Peace and Informal War: Security and Development in Congo
โ Scribed by Zoรซ Marriage
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 193
- Series
- Routledge Explorations in Development Studies
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Northern interventions into African countries at war are dominated by security concerns, bolstered by claims of shared returns and reinforcing processes of development and security. As global security and human security became prominent in development policy, Congo was wracked by violent rule, pillage, internal fighting, and invasion. In 2002, the Global and All-Inclusive Peace was promoted by northern donors, placing a formal peace on the mass of informalised wars.
Formal Peace and Informal War: Security and Development in Congo examines how the security interests of the Congolese population have interacted with those of northern donors. It explores Congoโs contemporary wars and the peace agreed on in 2002 from a security perspective and challenges the asserted commonality of the liberal interventions made by northern donors. It finds that the peace framed the multiple conflicts in Congo as a civil war and engineered a power-sharing agreement between elite belligerents. The book argues that the population were politically and economically excluded from the peace and have been subjected to control and containment when their security rests with power and freedom.
โฆ Table of Contents
Cover
Title Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
List of
acronyms
Glossary
1 Formal peace and informal
wars
Distribution of
security
Security policy and
politics
Outline of the
book
2 Leadership versus
population
Decentralisation of violence
Informalised state reach
Global security, exclusion and differential costs
3 Rich in war: conflict over congoโs political and economic
resources
The First War: โthe war
of liberationโ
The Second War: โthe war
of occupationโ
Territorial violation and human
insecurity
4 When was this the
deal?
War-time
tactics
Agency and predictability (the limits to
violence)
5 Politics of
pillage
'Independence cha cha
cha!โ
Pillage and lack of
contract
Lack of strategic
rationality
6 Fit-up
agreement
A logic of
arms
The Global and All-Inclusive Peace
Agreement
Political
marketplace
The
fit-up
7 Hunterโs
song
Neoliberal force
Shared
interests
The confused
european
Violence of everyday
rubbish
A losing game: return to
pillage
8 Security
peace
2011: elections
again
Containment and
control
Return to conundrum: opening security
negotiations
Fin
Notes
References
Index
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Although all religions and cultures preach the gospel and virtues of peace, the history of mankind is the history of war and peace; millions have perished in international and domestic conflicts, and many wars have been fought on behalf of those same religions and people who call for peace around th