Research Summaries

Back Public Service Provision as Peace-Building: How Do Autonomous Efforts Compare to Internationally Aided Interventions?

Fiscal Year 2013
Division School of International Graduate Studies
Department National Security Affairs
Investigator(s) Piombo, Jessica R.
Barma, Naazneen H.
Sponsor Office of Naval Research (Navy)
Summary The proposed project seeks to improve both the theory and practice of how peace is achieved in post-conflict countries by disentangling the related goals of peace- and state-building. It does so by focusing on the ability of three post-conflict states to provide public services at the local level and by attempting to understand how externally led peace-building interventions compare with more autonomous and domestically motivated peace processes in achieving sustainable peace and improvements in state capacity. To these ends, we propose a study that varies the "degree of aidedness" of peace- and state-building initiatives, selecting country cases that enable both a cross-national comparison (Cambodia and Laos) and an intertemporal comparison (Uganda in two distinct time periods). We further enhance our analytical leverage by focusing on outcomes at the subnational and sectorial levels, where the tangible results of peace- and state-building can be best observed. The proposed research thus supports the Minerva Initiative topic 2, "Models of societal resilience and change," and we will deliver a series of policy implications of interest to the United States government and other agencies involved in national defense and the internation peace-building endeavor.
Keywords
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Data Publications, theses (not shown) and data repositories will be added to the portal record when information is available in FAIRS and brought back to the portal