Research

Conflict and Fragility

Reports and papers

Internal and external dilemmas of peacebuilding in Africa

23 Jan 2014 - 15:00
Source: Photo taken by Lauren Hutton

Since 1992, the United Nations has included a focus on peacebuilding as part of the international effort to assist states recovering from conflict. Lauren Hutton, Research Fellow at the Clingendael Conflict Research Unit, argues in this paper that peacebuilding programming has prioritised order above other social values, which has resulted in an emphasis on building robust state structures as the way to instil stability within a society.

Contradictions between peacebuilding and statebuilding

This trend exposes the concept and practice of peacebuilding to a range of dilemmas, particularly around the role of violence in state formation and the problematics of statehood in Africa. Due to the inherent contradictions between peacebuilding and statebuilding, the former conceptually fails to provide a framework for prioritising interventions. This creates blindness to the conflicts that are caused by prioritising the control of complexity through the tools of the state.