Negotiating Peace

Negotiating Peace

Author: Renée Jeffery

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2021-03-18

Total Pages: 313

ISBN-13: 1108952089

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In the past two decades, peace negotiators around the world have increasingly accepted that granting amnesties for human rights violations is no longer an acceptable bargaining tool or incentive, even when the signing of a peace agreement is at stake. While many states that previously saw sweeping amnesties as integral to their peace processes now avoid amnesties for human rights violations, this anti-amnesty turn has been conspicuously absent in Asia. In Negotiating Peace: Amnesties, Justice and Human Rights Renée Jeffery examines why peace negotiators in Asia have resisted global anti-impunity measures more fervently and successfully than their counterparts around the world. Drawing on a new global dataset of 146 peace agreements (1980–2015) and with in-depth analysis of four key cases - Timor-Leste, Aceh Indonesia, Nepal and the Philippines - Jeffery uncovers the legal, political, economic and cultural reasons for the persistent popularity of amnesties in Asian peace processes.


Contemporary Peacemaking

Contemporary Peacemaking

Author: J. Darby

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2008-06-11

Total Pages: 411

ISBN-13: 0230584551

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Contemporary Peacemaking draws on recent experience to identify and explore the essential components of peace processes. The book is organized around five key themes in peacemaking: planning for peace; negotiations; violence on peace processes; peace accords; and peace accord implementation and post-war reconstruction.


Lawyering Peace

Lawyering Peace

Author: Paul R. Williams

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2021-12-16

Total Pages: 313

ISBN-13: 1108478239

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How do parties to peace negotiations actually build durable peace and what conundrums must they solve to achieve durable peace?


The Oxford Handbook of Gender and Conflict

The Oxford Handbook of Gender and Conflict

Author: Fionnuala Ní Aoláin

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 673

ISBN-13: 0199300984

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The authors focus on the multidimensionality of gender in conflict, yet they also prioritise the experience of women given both the changing nature of war and the historical de-emphasis on women's experiences.


Human Rights and Conflict

Human Rights and Conflict

Author: Julie Mertus

Publisher: US Institute of Peace Press

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 586

ISBN-13: 9781929223770

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'Human rights and conflict' is divided into three parts, each capturing the role played by human rights at a different stage in the conflict cycle.


On the Law of Peace

On the Law of Peace

Author: Christine Bell

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2008-09-25

Total Pages: 410

ISBN-13: 0199226830

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This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the use of peace agreements from a legal perspective. The book describes and evaluates the development of contemporary peace agreement practice, and the documents which emerge. It sets out what is in essence an anatomy of peace agreement practice, and locates this practice with reference to the role of law. The last fifteen years have seen a proliferation of peace agreements. These peace agreements have been produced as a result of complex peace processes involving multi-party negotiations between the main protagonists of conflict, often with the involvement of international actors. They document attempts to end conflict, and this book argues that they play an underestimated role in a political process that centrally revolves around law. Understanding peace agreements is important to understanding contemporary peace processes. Law plays two key roles with respect to peace agreements: first, to the extent that peace agreements themselves form legal documents, law plays a role in the 'enforcement' or implementation of the peace agreement; second, international law has a relationship to peace agreement negotiation and content, in an enabling or regulatory capacity. The aim of the book is to evaluate the role which law plays both in enforcing peace agreements and through a normative framework which constrains the ways in which they operate. This evaluation reveals a deeper link between the legal status of peace agreements and their normative regulation as mutually shaping, in what is argued to be a developing lex pacificatoria - or law of the peace makers. This lex pacificatoria stands as an account of the way in which international law shapes and is shaped by peace agreements, in ways which impact on contemporary debates about the force of international law.