RISS 학술연구정보서비스

검색
다국어 입력

http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.

변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.

예시)
  • 中文 을 입력하시려면 zhongwen을 입력하시고 space를누르시면됩니다.
  • 北京 을 입력하시려면 beijing을 입력하시고 space를 누르시면 됩니다.
닫기
    인기검색어 순위 펼치기

    RISS 인기검색어

      Repression in Conflict-Affected States: The Role of United Nations Peace Operations.

      한글로보기

      https://www.riss.kr/link?id=T17163815

      • 저자
      • 발행사항

        Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2024

      • 학위수여대학

        The University of Arizona Government and Public Policy

      • 수여연도

        2024

      • 작성언어

        영어

      • 주제어
      • 발행국

        United States of America

      • 학위

        Ph.D.

      • 페이지수

        239 p.

      • 지도교수/심사위원

        Advisor: Braithwaite, Jessica Maves.

      • 0

        상세조회
      • 0

        다운로드
      서지정보 열기
      • 내보내기
      • 내책장담기
      • 공유하기
      • 오류접수

      부가정보

      다국어 초록 (Multilingual Abstract)

      Since the inception of the United Nations, peace operations have been employed to respond to wars, political violence, and fragile political contexts. For the first 42 years, from 1948 to 1990, these consisted of enforcement peacekeeping operations and small-footprint individual representatives of United Nations components, or Good Offices Engagements. Since 1990, special political missions have filled a gap between these intervention options. These missions consist of international and domestic personnel in the field, tasked with mandates ranging from human rights monitoring to election observation to security sector reform. As the United Nations moves away from peacekeeping, political missions are increasingly replacing engagements around the world. However, the literature on peace operations has lagged behind. In this dissertation, I addresses the gap by engaging with recent work on political missions and identifying how longstanding peacekeeping literature applies to political missions. Further, we know little about the impact of these political missions on important outcomes, like violent state repression. In Chapter 3, I find that political missions and peacekeeping are determined especially by domestic factors, and this is particularly true for sequencing between mission types - replacement of peacekeeping with political missions is significantly driven by the length of United Nations engagement in host countries. In Chapter 4, I find tentative evidence that political missions can reduce the severity and incidence of government-perpetrated killings, like peacekeeping. Political missions seem to operate in somewhat different environments from peacekeeping, which then impacts their ability to constrain state use of violence against civilians. In Chapter 5, I build on some existing work to define nonviolent repression and locate it within the concept of positive peace in conflict-affected states; I identify how peacekeeping operations and political missions differently affect the severity of this repression, finding that peacekeeping is effective at improving conditions for civil society but political missions have unclear effects. These chapters especially contribute to the literature on United Nations peace operations by applying lessons from the existing literature on peacekeeping to political missions; these chapters add to work on repression by discussing nonviolent repressive tactics and developing a principal-agent framework around constraints on repressive agents. The findings about similar violent repression reducing effects of political missions as peacekeeping is a positive, but the minimal effect on nonviolent repression highlights an area that the UN and academics should consider more closely moving forward.
      번역하기

      Since the inception of the United Nations, peace operations have been employed to respond to wars, political violence, and fragile political contexts. For the first 42 years, from 1948 to 1990, these consisted of enforcement peacekeeping operations a...

      Since the inception of the United Nations, peace operations have been employed to respond to wars, political violence, and fragile political contexts. For the first 42 years, from 1948 to 1990, these consisted of enforcement peacekeeping operations and small-footprint individual representatives of United Nations components, or Good Offices Engagements. Since 1990, special political missions have filled a gap between these intervention options. These missions consist of international and domestic personnel in the field, tasked with mandates ranging from human rights monitoring to election observation to security sector reform. As the United Nations moves away from peacekeeping, political missions are increasingly replacing engagements around the world. However, the literature on peace operations has lagged behind. In this dissertation, I addresses the gap by engaging with recent work on political missions and identifying how longstanding peacekeeping literature applies to political missions. Further, we know little about the impact of these political missions on important outcomes, like violent state repression. In Chapter 3, I find that political missions and peacekeeping are determined especially by domestic factors, and this is particularly true for sequencing between mission types - replacement of peacekeeping with political missions is significantly driven by the length of United Nations engagement in host countries. In Chapter 4, I find tentative evidence that political missions can reduce the severity and incidence of government-perpetrated killings, like peacekeeping. Political missions seem to operate in somewhat different environments from peacekeeping, which then impacts their ability to constrain state use of violence against civilians. In Chapter 5, I build on some existing work to define nonviolent repression and locate it within the concept of positive peace in conflict-affected states; I identify how peacekeeping operations and political missions differently affect the severity of this repression, finding that peacekeeping is effective at improving conditions for civil society but political missions have unclear effects. These chapters especially contribute to the literature on United Nations peace operations by applying lessons from the existing literature on peacekeeping to political missions; these chapters add to work on repression by discussing nonviolent repressive tactics and developing a principal-agent framework around constraints on repressive agents. The findings about similar violent repression reducing effects of political missions as peacekeeping is a positive, but the minimal effect on nonviolent repression highlights an area that the UN and academics should consider more closely moving forward.

      더보기

      분석정보

      View

      상세정보조회

      0

      Usage

      원문다운로드

      0

      대출신청

      0

      복사신청

      0

      EDDS신청

      0

      동일 주제 내 활용도 TOP

      더보기

      주제

      연도별 연구동향

      연도별 활용동향

      연관논문

      연구자 네트워크맵

      공동연구자 (7)

      유사연구자 (20) 활용도상위20명

      이 자료와 함께 이용한 RISS 자료

      나만을 위한 추천자료

      해외이동버튼