Envoy Envy? Competition in African Mediation Processes and Ways to Overcome It

IF 0.9 Q3 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS International Negotiation-A Journal of Theory and Practice Pub Date : 2021-06-03 DOI:10.1163/15718069-BJA10039
D. Lanz
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

This article seeks to make sense of the dynamics of competition in African mediation processes and to outline approaches for effective cooperation between mediators. To this end, it analyzes four cases of recent peace processes: Sudan (1994–2005), Kenya (2008), Madagascar (2009–2013) and South Sudan (2013–2015). The article identifies four driving forces of competition among mediators: clashing interests of states involved in mediation, overlapping mediation mandates, incompatible norms guiding conflict resolution, and mediators’ lack of performance. These factors risk undermining peace processes unless the involved mediators and guarantors take active steps to mitigate the negative effects of competition. This can be done through ‘hierarchical coordination,’ where a recognized authority takes the lead and allocates roles to other actors, or through ‘collaborative cooperation,’ where partners have unity of purpose and decide on a division of labor based on comparative strengths.
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特使Envy?非洲调解进程中的竞争及其克服途径
本文试图了解非洲调解进程中的竞争动态,并概述调解人之间有效合作的方法。为此,它分析了最近和平进程的四个案例:苏丹(1994-2005年)、肯尼亚(2008年)、马达加斯加(2009-2013年)和南苏丹(2013-2015年)。这篇文章确定了调解人之间竞争的四种驱动力:参与调解的国家利益冲突、调解任务重叠、指导冲突解决的规范不兼容以及调解人缺乏表现。除非有关调解人和担保人采取积极措施减轻竞争的负面影响,否则这些因素有可能破坏和平进程。这可以通过“层级协调”来实现,即由公认的权威机构牵头并将角色分配给其他参与者,也可以通过“协作合作”来实现。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: International Negotiation: A Journal of Theory and Practice examines negotiation from many perspectives, to explore its theoretical foundations and to promote its practical application. It addresses the processes of negotiation relating to political, security, environmental, ethnic, economic, business, legal, scientific and cultural issues and conflicts among nations, international and regional organisations, multinational corporations and other non-state parties. Conceptually, the Journal confronts the difficult task of developing interdisciplinary theories and models of the negotiation process and its desired outcome.
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