Now showing 1 - 10 of 62
  • Publication
    Abbott's Immigration Policy: Open for business
    (Social Alternatives, 2016-05)

    During the two years of his prime ministership, Tony Abbott's immigration rhetoric had a constant refrain of 'stop the boats'. From his public utterances it is not clear that Mr Abbott has any firm and unchanging views on economic immigration provided that the immigrants arrive by plane. For his two-year incumbency, this paper reviews the areas of immigration numbers; 457 and other temporary visas; refugees and asylum seekers; and trends in the views of the Australian public on immigration. It also examines some of the claimed economic impacts of immigration and the role of free trade agreements in deregulating in-flows as well as the immigration reports of the Productivity Commission. Finally, it scrutinises Abbott's changing views on multiculturalism contrasting them with those of his successor Malcolm Turnbull.

  • Publication
    The African Union's Role in Peacekeeping: Building on Lessons Learned from Operations
    (2013)
    Badmus, Isiaka Alani
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    ;
    With the transformation of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) into the African Union (AU) in 2002, Africa witnessed the emergence of a new form of multilateralism with a new set of norms and values governing intra-African diplomacy and security relations. At the heart of this evolving intra-African security cooperation is the construction of an African Peace and Security Architecture (APSA). The APSA is a proactive security regime that seeks to address African conflicts and governance deficits with respect to improving opportunities for unhindered socio-economic development. This new pan-African approach to regional peace and security management is envisioned to promote human security. It is against this backdrop that this thesis examines the African Union's (AU) role as a conflict management and peace consolidation actor in Africa, especially the way in which it relates to its peacekeeping operations. Overall, the thesis investigates AU peacekeeping carried out to manage post-Cold War African conflicts. The purpose of this research endeavour is to analyse these operations to better understand the lessons that can be learned from them in order to build on these positively and thereby improve the outcomes of AU peace operations in the future. Accordingly, the AU peace operations in Burundi (AMIB), Somalia (AMISOM), and the hybrid peacekeeping operation in Darfur (UNAMID) are examined in this thesis to evaluate their effectiveness (or otherwise) in relation to whether they can deliver a more secure path to durable peace in Africa. Furthermore, the thesis examines how well these operations fit within the broad context of the APSA.
  • Publication
    Probing the roles of governance and greed in civil strife in West Africa
    (Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2010) ;
    Ogunmola, Oyedele A
    Purpose - This chapter aims to explore the causes of civil war in West Africa, including the perspectives of those directly involved. both those involved voluntarily and those involved against their will. To this end, we examine the three contiguous war-afflicted coastal countries of Sierra Leone, Liberia and Ivory Coast and as a counterweight, Ghana which has escaped civil war. Methodology - Brief country case studies are used to explore the motivations of leaders and followers which often diverge. This chapter examines four West African countries: • Sierra Leone and Liberia, which have suffered classic brutal, 'third war' civil wars (Holsti, K. (Ed.). (1996). Wars of the third kind. In: The state, war and the state of war. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). • Ivory Coast, once seen as the West African 'beacon of stability' (Royce, E. (2003). Testimony. US House of Representatives Subcommittee on Africa, 2nd February, p. 12) but now suffering a seventh year of civil conflict. • Ghana, the counter case, which has so far survived multiple military coups without descending into national conflagration.
  • Publication
    The No-Nonsense Guide to Conflict and Peace
    (New Internationalist Publications Ltd, 2006)
  • Publication
    Why Reconciliation Failed in Thailand
    (2019-02-11)
    Satidporn, Wichuda
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    This dissertation seeks to explain why successive Thai governments have failed in maintaining peace through conducting reconciliation processes. Relying on a public survey and quantitative analysis, it argues that the reconciliation process conducted by several governments during the past decade failed because trust building–both in terms of trust in national institutions and trust among the people–has been ignored. The neglect of the Thai governments to invest time and other resources in building trust has made the term reconciliation unpopular and created perceptions of the reconciliation process as being conducted as a means for the people holding state power to defeat the people of opposing groups rather that a means of resolving conflict problems and reconciling society. This dissertation thus recommends that the government as one of the most important political institutions for the facilitation of a reconciliation process must seek the ways to increase its trustworthiness in the eyes of the public. Interactive channels must also be made available to the people to communicate together, to build understanding, and to exchange opinions; especially channels for broad-based discussions about the pathway to transform the conflicts and the future of this country in order to build trust between the people. Without these recognitions and mechanisms, the political conflicts in Thailand could not been transformed to durable peace.
  • Publication
    Post-Conflict Recovery and Peacebuilding in Nepal: Exploration of Economic and Social Reintegration of Maoist Ex-Combatants
    (2015)
    Subedi, Dambaru Ballav
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    This thesis examines economic and social reintegration of Maoist ex-combatants and its impact on peacebuilding in Nepal. It applies a constructivist Grounded Theory approach to research in terms of both data collection and analysis. Data collection was carried out using key informant interviews and focus group discussions with both ex-combatant and non-combatant respondents. The interviews and focus group discussions were carried out in the Jhapa, Morang, Sunsari, Chitwan, Kathmandu, Lalitpur, Dang, Banke and Kailali districts between September and December 2011, and between December 2012 and March 2013. The research conducted for this thesis established that the complex political environment that emerged, following the signing of the peace agreement on 21 November 2006, has had implications for the ways in which different sets of policy were developed to manage ex-combatants in Nepal. As a result, a hybrid DDR model, which is called "unconventional DDR" in this thesis, emerged.
  • Publication
    The International Criminal Court and Conflict Transformation: An Assessment of the Impact of the International Criminal Court's Interventions on the Peace Processes in Côte d' Ivoire, Kenya, and Uganda
    (2017)
    Malu, Linus Nnabuike
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    ;
    Branagan, Marty
    This thesis examines how the International Criminal Court (ICC) has impacted on the peace processes in Côte d' Ivoire, Kenya and Uganda. It explores how the prosecution of those who bear the greatest responsibility for the gravest crimes committed in these countries may have negatively or positively impacted on the process of making peace after prolonged civil war and postelection violence. The deployment of international justice mechanisms, such as the ICC may be justified on several grounds, including the argument that such involvement in conflict and post-conflict situations could assist in ending wars, and in promoting peace. But this belief has not been properly studied to understand whether international justice actually contributes positively or negatively to the peace process, and by what means any such relationship is activated. It is not yet clearly determined whether it is the retributive or restorative or the truth-telling functions of the Court that have had most impact on the peace process. Drawing upon interviews with national experts in these three countries, this study provides evidence-based responses to these questions, and reviews the controversies surrounding the involvement of international justice mechanisms in conflict and post-conflict situations. Relying on an analytical framework that is based on four variables: deterrence, victims' rights, reconciliation, and accountability to the law, it argues that the ICC's intervention has had multiple impacts on the situations across these countries, and that, despite some acknowledged arguments to the contrary, the ICC does promote peace processes through deterrence and the promotion of accountability to the law. However, there is minimal evidence that the ICC effectively contributes to peace processes in these countries through the promotion of reconciliation and victims' rights.
  • Publication
    Cosmopolitanism, National Interest, Selfishness and Australian Aid
    (Social Alternatives, 2015-01)

    Australia is a rich country, which, if it is to be seen as meeting the cosmopolitan criteria for a good international citizen, has a responsibility to assist the poorer countries of the world. Each new federal government looks to the aid program to imprint its own ideology and judges whether aid funding is in the light of overall national needs. The Abbott Government is party to this revisionism. AusAID has been abolished, incorporated within the Department of Foreign Affairs; the aid budget has been slashed with new geographical and sectoral foci introduced alongside a heavy stress on the national interest. Aid for trade and economic policy conditionality are back in fashion. Yet much of the Abbott Government's allegedly new framework represents a return to the concerns of earlier Coalition governments. Regrettably, this change to a less cosmopolitan and more selfish Australia has attracted very little public concern or debate.

  • Publication
    Demography, migration and conflict in the Pacific
    (Sage Publications Ltd, 2005)
    This article explores the relationships between demography and internal conflict in the Pacific Island countries, focusing on the three subregions Polynesia, Micronesia and Melanesia. These countries confront distinctive challenges and opportunities because of their unique cultures and non-militarized status, combined with very small size and remote locations. The use of the MIRAB model of island economies based on migration, remittances, aid and bureaucracy is extended to examine its impact on social cohesion and the avoidance of internal conflict. For Polynesia, MIRAB is found to be a sustainable development strategy. Continuous emigration from Polynesia serves to reduce population pressure and communal tensions. Further, remittance income supports the Polynesian economies, and this also reduces the potential for conflict. For Micronesia, except Kiribati and Nauru, migration access to the USA is assured. In contrast, for the Melanesian countries, there is minimal emigration, rapid population growth and considerable intercommunal tension, which has resulted in several coups and one 'failed state'. Demographic pressure created by rapid population growth results in a lack of employment opportunities for youths (who provide the majority of participators in civil unrest and conflicts) rather than in direct pressure on land and other natural resources.
  • Publication
    Islamist Militancy in Bangladesh: An Examination of its Causes and Likely Trajectory (2009 to 2019)

    All over the world, there is now a rising tide of radical ‘Islamist’ movements, which, especially since 9/11, have turned militant. Since then, terrorist attacks against civilian populations both in the West and within Muslim countries themselves have become almost daily occurrences. Several countries have been directly or indirectly affected by Islamist militancy. In Bangladesh, Islamist militants killed 156 people in the 1990s, and the country experienced at least 48 smallscale attacks that killed over 120 people between 2015 and 2016. The July 2016 attack at the Holey Artisan Café in Dhaka killed approximately 20 foreigners, while an abortive attack six days later killed two. These and other similar incidents confirmed the presence of external militant outfits in the country and the severity of the challenge. Based on an exhaustive review of the relevant literature and two stints of fieldwork in Bangladesh involving 71 in-depth interviews of highly credentialled individuals, this project seek to investigate not only the causes of radicalization but also how radicalization has unfolded since 2009. This thesis looks at both local and global factors that have served to provoke young Bangladeshis, many of whom are from relatively well-educated backgrounds, to become religiously belligerent and eventually to turn into terrorists. Ideology, it is argued, plays a pivotal role in the radicalization process and justifies violence. Most importantly, ideology proffers solutions to the micro and macro causes of commonly identifiable youth disaffection. This study mainly focuses on the Islamic State and Al Qaeda’s exploitation of religious beliefs and their construction of a mobilising, apocalyptic narrative that strikes a chord with the young, middle-class Muslims. Both organisations target them for recruitment. The thesis ends by proffering what is called a Pyramid Root Cause model,’ which attempts to tie all the causative variables of radicalization into a connected explanation of what has been happening in Bangladesh over the last decade.