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ePub No Entry without Strategy: Building the Rule of Law under UN Transitional Administration download

by Carolyn Bull

ePub No Entry without Strategy: Building the Rule of Law under UN Transitional Administration download
Author:
Carolyn Bull
ISBN13:
978-9280811513
ISBN:
9280811517
Language:
Publisher:
United Nations University Press (April 30, 2008)
Subcategory:
Politics & Government
ePub file:
1819 kb
Fb2 file:
1846 kb
Other formats:
txt lrf azw lit
Rating:
4.2
Votes:
165

No Entry without Strategy book. This book investigates the challenges faced by UN transitional administrations in establishing the rule of law in Cambodia, Kosovo, and East Timor.

No Entry without Strategy book. It explores conceptual understandings of the UN's state-building agenda and speaks to broader questions about the role of external actors in disrupted states.

This book investigates the challenges faced by UN transitional administrations in establishing the rule of law . Beyond the blank slate: The UN Transitional Administration in East Timor. No entry without strategy.

This book investigates the challenges faced by UN transitional administrations in establishing the rule of law in Cambodia, Kosovo and East Timor. In so doing, it explores conceptual understandings of the UN’s state-building agenda and speaks to broader questions about the role of external actors in disrupted states. The UN’s resources for keeping the peace and building states are being strained by so much peace to keep and so many fragile states to nurture and consolidate.

No entry without strategy: Building the rule of law under UN transitional administration Carolyn Bull a United Nations University Press TOKYO u NEW YORK u PARIS Contents Acknowledgements. x Maps of Cambodia, Kosovo and East Timor . xiii 1 Introduction: The elusive goal. 1 2 Ambitions: The state-building agenda of UN transitional administrations. 16 3 Concepts: The rule of law in UN state-building missions.

No Entry Without Strategy. Building the Rule of Law under UN Transitional Administration

No Entry Without Strategy. Building the Rule of Law under UN Transitional Administration. Author: UNU. Publication date: May 2008. UN actors have confronted a fundamental dilemma: if embedding the rule of law rests on complex political and social transformations regarding conflict, power and the state, can external actors make a difference? The book investigates the challenges faced by UN transitional administrations in establishing the rule of law in Cambodia, Kosovo and East Timor.

book by Carolyn Bull. UN peace operations have struggled to ensure lasting security against violence and to build legitimate structures to redress disputes peacefully.

3 Concepts: The rule of law in UN state-building missions 6 Beyond the blank slate: The UN Transitional Administration in East Timor. 7 No entry without strategy.

3 Concepts: The rule of law in UN state-building missions. 4 The line of least resistance: The UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia. 5 State-building without a state: The UN Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo. 6 Beyond the blank slate: The UN Transitional Administration in East Timor. The Challenge of Nation-Building : Implementing Effective Innovation in the . Army from World War II to the Iraq War. by: Patterson, Rebecca.

No entry without strategy: Building the rule of law under UN transitional administration. Impossible expectations? The UN security council’s promotion of the rule of law after conflict. Tokyo: UN University Press. Bosnia: Faking democracy after Dayton (2nd e. In B. Bowden, H. Charlesworth, & J. Farrall (Ed., The role of international law in rebuilding societies after conflict: Great expectations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Fjeldstad, . Brautigam, . & Moore, M. (Ed. In US report, brutal details of two Afghan inmates’ deaths', New York Times, 20 May 2005. Tokyo: United Nations University Press. Goldsmith, Jack (2007). The Terror Presidency: Law and Justice inside the Bush Administration. Goodhand, Jonathan (2008).

Carolyn Bull, No entry without strategy, building the rule of law under UN Transitional Administration (Tokyo: United Nations University Press, 2008, 315pp, pbk) Kent E. Calder, Embattled Garrisons: Comparative Base Politics. Calder, Embattled Garrisons: Comparative Base Politics and American Globalism (Princeton University Press, 2007, 321pp. Bruno Charbonneau, France and the New Imperialism: Security Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa (Hampshire: Ashgate, 2008, 202 p. £5. 0, hb. Feargal Cochrane, Ending Wars (Cambridge: Polity, 2008, 228 p. £4. 0 hb. £1. 9 pb.

For international actors seeking to consolidate peace and democracy in disrupted states, establishing the rule of law has proven frustratingly elusive. UN peace operations have struggled to ensure lasting security against violence and to build legitimate structures to redress disputes peacefully. It has been even harder to instill principles of governance that promote accountability to the law, protect against abuse, and generate trust in the state. In championing such goals, UN state-building missions have pitched against the odds. Beyond the complicated tasks of reforming laws, judiciaries, and police forces, UN officials have confronted a fundamental dilemma: if embedding the rule of law rests on complex political and social transformations regarding conflict, power, and the state, can external actors make a difference? This book investigates the challenges faced by UN transitional administrations in establishing the rule of law in Cambodia, Kosovo, and East Timor. It explores conceptual understandings of the UN's state-building agenda and speaks to broader questions about the role of external actors in disrupted states.