Combating Criminalized Power Structures: A Toolkit: Peace and Security in the 21st Century
Editat de Michael Dziedzicen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 iul 2016
A companion volume, Criminalized Power Structures: The Overlooked Enemies of Peace, articulates a typology for assessing the threats of CPS illustrated by many case studies.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781442266346
ISBN-10: 1442266341
Pagini: 190
Ilustrații: 3 BW Illustrations, 1 Table
Dimensiuni: 157 x 225 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Seria Peace and Security in the 21st Century
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1442266341
Pagini: 190
Ilustrații: 3 BW Illustrations, 1 Table
Dimensiuni: 157 x 225 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Seria Peace and Security in the 21st Century
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Sharpen Pre-Mission Assessments to Detect Whether Cps Are Potential Spoilers
Chapter 1: Assessments and Strategic Planning, Karmen Fields and Oscar Vera
Chapter 2: Understanding Culture, James Dorough-Lewis, Jr.
Chapter 3: Social Change Leadership Communications, Dana Eyre
Part II: Mandates Should Provide Adequate Authority to Deal with CPS
Chapter 4: Mandates and Authorities, Elizabeth Andersen
Part III: The Flow of Illicit Revenue to CPS Must Be Severed
Chapter 5: Targeted Sanctions, George Lopez
Chapter 6: United Nations Panels of Experts: Identifying Sanctions Violations and the Networks Behind them, Alix J. Boucher
Chapter 7: International Watchdog Organizations, Kristi Clough
Chapter 8: International Supply Chain Controls on Looting of Natural Resources, Merriam Mashatt
Chapter 9: Governance and Economic Management Assistance Program (GEMAP), Matt Chessen and Robert Krech
Chapter 10: Customs and Border Control, Paul Acda
Part IV: Accountability Should Have A Priority Equal To Capacity Building
Chapter 11: Accountability as a Countermeasure, Scott Carlson and Michael Dziedzic
Chapter 12: Institutional Development of the Legal System, Mark Kroeker
Chapter 13: Community-based Monitoring, Lorenzo Delegues & Huma Gupta
Chapter 14: The Civil Society "Triangle," Haki Abazi
Chapter 15: Social Media Networks Marcia Byrom Hartwell
Part V: Criminal Intelligence-Led Policing Should Be Integrated Into The Mission Response
Chapter 16: Criminal Intelligence-led Operations, Bertram Welsing
Chapter 17: International Judges and Prosecutors, Michael Hartmann
Introduction
Part I: Sharpen Pre-Mission Assessments to Detect Whether Cps Are Potential Spoilers
Chapter 1: Assessments and Strategic Planning, Karmen Fields and Oscar Vera
Chapter 2: Understanding Culture, James Dorough-Lewis, Jr.
Chapter 3: Social Change Leadership Communications, Dana Eyre
Part II: Mandates Should Provide Adequate Authority to Deal with CPS
Chapter 4: Mandates and Authorities, Elizabeth Andersen
Part III: The Flow of Illicit Revenue to CPS Must Be Severed
Chapter 5: Targeted Sanctions, George Lopez
Chapter 6: United Nations Panels of Experts: Identifying Sanctions Violations and the Networks Behind them, Alix J. Boucher
Chapter 7: International Watchdog Organizations, Kristi Clough
Chapter 8: International Supply Chain Controls on Looting of Natural Resources, Merriam Mashatt
Chapter 9: Governance and Economic Management Assistance Program (GEMAP), Matt Chessen and Robert Krech
Chapter 10: Customs and Border Control, Paul Acda
Part IV: Accountability Should Have A Priority Equal To Capacity Building
Chapter 11: Accountability as a Countermeasure, Scott Carlson and Michael Dziedzic
Chapter 12: Institutional Development of the Legal System, Mark Kroeker
Chapter 13: Community-based Monitoring, Lorenzo Delegues & Huma Gupta
Chapter 14: The Civil Society "Triangle," Haki Abazi
Chapter 15: Social Media Networks Marcia Byrom Hartwell
Part V: Criminal Intelligence-Led Policing Should Be Integrated Into The Mission Response
Chapter 16: Criminal Intelligence-led Operations, Bertram Welsing
Chapter 17: International Judges and Prosecutors, Michael Hartmann
Recenzii
I learned a good deal reading these timely volumes, even on the operations in which I was intimately involved. The findings are persuasive and the recommendations are all well considered and compelling.
Criminalized Power Structures: The Overlooked Enemies of Peace persuasively documents the damage done to prospects for peace when illicit wealth meets unscrupulous political power. The case studies show the depth and breadth of that damage in place after place, while Dziedzic's analysis draws upon years of research and experience to systematically reframe our views of peace 'spoiler' motives, goals and means. The result, with its second volume, Combating Criminalized Power Structures: A Toolkit, is wise counsel for dealing with these power structures that any peacebuilding enterprise should heed if it hopes to build the peace that it seeks.
Criminalized Power Structures: The Overlooked Enemies of Peace andCombating Criminalized Power Structures: A Toolkit perform a vital service in the study of fragile states. Based on ten case histories from four continents, they demonstrate that criminalized power structures are a key element in promoting instability and describe the circumstances in which these structures can be tamed. Essential reading for policymakers and scholars.
Criminalized Power Structures: The Overlooked Enemies of Peace andCombating Criminalized Power Structures: A Toolkit provide remarkable insights into criminalized power structures in conflict and post-conflict environments. This often overlooked phenomenon can have immense effects on peacekeeping and stabilization efforts. The volumes provide an important framework and practical insights that may help policymakers to better address these issues.
At last, the subject of illicit power structures given the prominence it deserves! Here it is how to understand and implement better conflict prevention, effectively manage post-conflict situations, save millions of dollars in the process and in broader form push back against the rottenness of political corruption and criminal exploitation that permanently ruin the lives of populations in failing or failed states. Arrestingly and plainly revealed, the shameful motives that from the beginning of each international peace mission confound capacity- and institution-building are described by Mike Dzeidzic and seasoned practitioners in such compelling detail that tackling them should become the sine qua non of all future mission-planning. This is a piece of revelatory work and we deserve to hear the sound of brisk footsteps along government corridors as senior officials, grasping copies of this book, seek immediate entree to policy makers offices demanding major doctrinal changes.
Criminalized Power Structures: The Overlooked Enemies of Peace persuasively documents the damage done to prospects for peace when illicit wealth meets unscrupulous political power. The case studies show the depth and breadth of that damage in place after place, while Dziedzic's analysis draws upon years of research and experience to systematically reframe our views of peace 'spoiler' motives, goals and means. The result, with its second volume, Combating Criminalized Power Structures: A Toolkit, is wise counsel for dealing with these power structures that any peacebuilding enterprise should heed if it hopes to build the peace that it seeks.
Criminalized Power Structures: The Overlooked Enemies of Peace andCombating Criminalized Power Structures: A Toolkit perform a vital service in the study of fragile states. Based on ten case histories from four continents, they demonstrate that criminalized power structures are a key element in promoting instability and describe the circumstances in which these structures can be tamed. Essential reading for policymakers and scholars.
Criminalized Power Structures: The Overlooked Enemies of Peace andCombating Criminalized Power Structures: A Toolkit provide remarkable insights into criminalized power structures in conflict and post-conflict environments. This often overlooked phenomenon can have immense effects on peacekeeping and stabilization efforts. The volumes provide an important framework and practical insights that may help policymakers to better address these issues.
At last, the subject of illicit power structures given the prominence it deserves! Here it is how to understand and implement better conflict prevention, effectively manage post-conflict situations, save millions of dollars in the process and in broader form push back against the rottenness of political corruption and criminal exploitation that permanently ruin the lives of populations in failing or failed states. Arrestingly and plainly revealed, the shameful motives that from the beginning of each international peace mission confound capacity- and institution-building are described by Mike Dzeidzic and seasoned practitioners in such compelling detail that tackling them should become the sine qua non of all future mission-planning. This is a piece of revelatory work and we deserve to hear the sound of brisk footsteps along government corridors as senior officials, grasping copies of this book, seek immediate entree to policy makers offices demanding major doctrinal changes.