Christopher Clapham’s research while affiliated with Lancaster University and other places

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Publications (1)


Rwanda: The Perils of Peacemaking
  • Article

March 1998

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54 Reads

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96 Citations

Journal of Peace Research

Christopher Clapham

External mediation in civil conflicts since the end of the Cold War has rested on a standardized conflict resolution mechanism, which differs significantly from the state-centric mechanism prevalent during the Cold War. This accords a broadly equal standing to all parties to the conflict, and seeks to reach a settlement acceptable to them all. This, in turn, calls for a ceasefire, followed by either of two mechanisms designed to create a liberal constitutional order, guaranteed by internationally supervised elections. In the Rwanda conflict of 1990-94, conscientious implementation of this mechanism not only failed to avert genocide, but even helped to create the conditions that made it possible. This failure illustrates important weaknesses in the mechanism itself, notably the way in which mediators become implicit participants in the conflict, and the divorce of a mechanistic approach to conflict resolution from the political prerequisites for a successful settlement.

Citations (1)


... However, with the important exception of the failed UN Operation in the Congo (ONUC) in 1960-64, peacekeeping operations of the Cold War era mainly consisted of small groups of military observers in charge of monitoring the observance of ceasefires, typically in inter-state disputes. In general, insurgencies were treated as internal issues, and leaders of rebel groups were not invited by international actors to the negotiation table (Clapham 1998). An exception was made for conflicts that were seen as part of the decolonisation process: in the 1970s and 1980s, Western states got involved in attempts to negotiate an end to the conflicts in Zimbabwe and Namibia (Stedman 1991, Melber andSaunders 2007). ...

Reference:

The Resolution of Civil Wars: Changing International Norms of Peace-Making and the Academic Consensus
Rwanda: The Perils of Peacemaking
  • Citing Article
  • March 1998

Journal of Peace Research