Date: 2020
Type: Book
Making and breaking peace in Sudan and South Sudan : the comprehensive peace agreement and beyond
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2020, Proceedings of the British Academy
NOUWEN, Sarah Maria Heiltjen, JAMES, Laura, SRINIVASAN, Sharath (editor/s), NOUWEN, Sarah Maria Heiltjen, JAMES, Laura, SRINIVASAN, Sharath, Making and breaking peace in Sudan and South Sudan : the comprehensive peace agreement and beyond, Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2020, Proceedings of the British Academy
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/69421
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
Sudan's Comprehensive Peace Agreement of 2005 ended over two decades of civil war and led to South Sudan's independence. Peacemaking that brought about the agreement and then sought to sustain it involved, alongside the Sudanese, an array of regional and western states as well as international organisations. This was a landmark effort to create and sustain peace in a war-torn region. Yet in the years that followed, multiple conflicts continued or reignited, both in Sudan and in South Sudan. Peacemaking attempts multiplied. Authored by both practitioners and scholars, this volume grapples with the question of which, and whose, ideas of peace and of peacemaking were pursued in the Sudans and how they fared. Bringing together economic, legal, anthropological and political science perspectives on over a decade of peacemaking attempts in the two countries, it provides insights for peacemaking efforts to come, in the Sudans and elsewhere.
Table of Contents:
-- Preface -- Part 1. Introduction: Peace and Peacemaking in Sudan and South Sudan, Sharath Srinivasan and Sarah M. H. Nouwen -- Part 2. The Interlinkage between Understandings of Self-Determination and Understandings of Peace, Nasredeen Abdulbari -- Part 3. Making Peace on Paper Only: A View from the Blue Nile, Wendy James -- Part 4. Abyei, the CPA, and the War in Sudan's New South, Douglas H. Johnson -- Part 5. Strategic Peacebuilding and the Sudanese Peace Process, Peter Dixon -- Part 6. Peacemaking, the SPLM/A's Political Transition During the CPA Era and Conflict in the Sudans, Benedetta De Alessi -- Part 7. Fiscal Policy and Sudan's 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement, Edward Thomas -- Part 8. Economic Provisions of the CPA: Selective Implementation and Long-Term Consequences, Laura M. James -- Part 9. Gender and Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration in Post-Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) South Sudan, Nada Mustafa Ali -- Part 10. China and the CPA: Developing Peace in Sudan?, Daniel Large -- Part 11. Natural Resources, Conflict and Peacebuilding in Darfur: The Challenge to Detraumatise Social and Environmental Change, Brendan Bromwich -- Part 12. A Flawed Formula for Peacemaking and Continued Violence in Darfur: The Abuja Negotiations, 2004-2006, Partha Moman -- Part 13. Peacemaking in Darfur and the Doha Process: The Role of International Actors, Rosalind Marsden-- Part 14. Why Negotiate? Why Mediate? The Purpose of South Sudanese Peacemaking, Sophia Dawkins -- Part 15. Concluding Reflections: Sudan's Comprehensive Peace Agreement and Theories of Change?, Aly Verjee -- Part 16. South Sudan's long crisis of justice: Merging notions of lack of socio-economic justice and criminal accountability, Mareike Schomerus and Anouk S. Rigterink -- Part 17. Concluding Reflections: Sudan's Comprehensive Peace Agreement: Theories of Change, Alex De Waal -- Index
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/69421
ISBN: 9780197266953
Publisher: Oxford University Press