From Soldiers to Citizens: Demilitarization of Conflict and SocietyAshgate Publishing, Ltd., 28/03/2013 - 208 من الصفحات Demilitarization of conflict and society is crucial to building sustainable peace in countries emerging from the scourge of civil war. As longstanding conflicts come to an end, processes which facilitate the potentially volatile transition from formal peace to social peace are critically important. At the heart of the exercise is the necessity of transforming the culture and the instruments of war - demilitarization - including disarming, demobilizing and reintegrating (DDR) former combatants into society. This volume represents the first in-depth and comprehensive discussion of reintegration of former combatants in war to peace transitions. In addition to a systematic reflection and review of existing literature on DDR, the authors devised and applied a field research methodology to studying the reintegration of former combatants in Angola with potentially significant implications on the design and implementation of DDR programmes. The volume is written for academics, students and practitioners focusing on war to peace transitions and post-conflict issues. |
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... majority of cases where DDR programs have been deployed, devastated political, social and economic structures are all that are left after war. In fact, in many countries that have experienced protracted armed conflicts, state weakness ...
... majority of the demobilized would want to return to agriculture was short-sighted as the socio-economic history of the country teaches us that the Mozambican household economy was always varied... those who manage to subsist on the ...
... majority do not. For this majority, adequate reinsertion assistance can be a powerful incentive to leave the militias [our emphasis] (Bouta 2005, 28). Finally, to focus our attention on reintegration in contexts of devastated ...
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المحتوى
7 | |
Demilitarization in the Angolan Context | 33 |
Variables Trends Correlations | 109 |
Reconceptualizing Reintegration | 137 |
Bibliography | 177 |