Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office

05/08/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/08/2024 08:18

Dissolving conflict. Local peace agreements and armed conflict transitions

Dissolving conflict. Local peace agreements and armed conflict transitions

Local peace agreements work on a broad range of issues and engage a multitude of diverse actors.

From:Foreign, Commonwealth & Development OfficePublished9 February 2022
Document Type: Journal ArticleTheme: Governance and ConflictAuthors: Pospisi, J.

Abstract

The lessening likelihood and the often-sobering outcomes of comprehensive national peace processes directed attention to local peacemaking in recent years. Difficult to distinguish and define, local peace agreements work on a broad range of issues and engage a multitude of diverse actors. Local peace agreements construct a world of peacemaking that contradicts an ordered and levelled understanding of conflict. Instead, they reveal hybrid conflictscapes that are enmeshed in ways analytically hard to distinguish. In such an environment, local peace agreements can employ various functions: they can connect and strategise relationships between actors, mitigate and manage conflict settings, or disconnect localities or communities from the broader conflict landscape. In doing so, they do not necessarily work towards a linear and sequenced resolution of a conflict but towards dissolving it by undermining the conflict's logics and conditions.

This article is an output of the Peace and Conflict Resolution Evidence Platform (PEACEREP) programme.

Citation

Jan Pospisil. Dissolving conflict. Local peace agreements and armed conflict transitions, Peacebuilding 2022 DOI: 10.1080/21647259.2022.2032945

Links

Dissolving conflict. Local peace agreements and armed conflict transitions

Published 9 February 2022