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Organizing Peacebuilding

An Investigation of Interorganizational Coordination in International Post Conflict Reconstruction Efforts

by Anna Herrhausen (Author)
©2009 Thesis 252 Pages

Summary

Coordination between different United Nations (UN) entities has become an issue of increasing concern for scholars and practitioners. With the UN taking on ever more ambitious roles in countries emerging from conflict, no single unit can master the task of post-conflict reconstruction alone. However, efforts at reorganizing the way the UN works in peacebuilding have not yielded the desired result of ensuring a more effective UN presence. To offer fresh inputs for the debate, Organizing Peacebuilding looks at coordination from a theoretical perspective. It develops a framework for interorganizational coordination and applies it to the UN and to two selected case examples, the UN missions in Kosovo and Afghanistan. The research suggests that in order to improve coordination, the UN should acknowledge its network character and cultivate those social and structural control mechanisms which facilitate coordination in networks.

Details

Pages
252
Year
2009
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631592045
Language
English
Keywords
United Nations Peacekeeping Integrated Missions Coordination
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2009. 251 pp., num. tables and graphs

Biographical notes

Anna Herrhausen (Author)

The Author: Anna Herrhausen holds a B.A. in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics (PPE) from Oxford University and a Master of International Affairs (MIA) from Columbia University. Organizing Peacebuilding is her doctoral dissertation submitted at Freie Universität Berlin. Interested in both the private and the public sectors, the author currently works in the Group Social Opportunities unit of Allianz SE.

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Title: Organizing Peacebuilding