9 - Conclusion
Local-Level Conflict and the Future of International Intervention
from Part III - Implications for Academics and Policymakers
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2025
Summary
Chapter 9 concludes the book by highlighting implications that are relevant for academic researchers as well as policymakers. The book’s findings suggest at least three areas for future research. First, a more comprehensive analysis of the sources of perceptions of bias in conflict settings would productively inform scholarship and practice. Second, future work should investigate the conditions under which communal peace aggregates up to the national level. Third, scholars should examine whether governments and their partners succeed in leveraging gains from localized peace enforcement into states with robust institutions. The book also has two important implications for the practice of peacekeeping. First, given the importance of perceptions, policymakers must ensure that peacekeepers remain impartial. International actors perceived by local populations as relatively impartial are much more effective at promoting intergroup cooperation and facilitating the peaceful resolution of communal disputes. Second, given that communal peace in the analysis relies so heavily on the presence of UN peacekeepers, the international community must consider how to design peaceful transitions out of PKOs.
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- Local Peace, International BuildersHow UN Peacekeeping Builds Peace from the Bottom Up, pp. 177 - 186Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025
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