This book emerged from a multinational research project originally called “New Actors and Innovative Approaches to Peacebuilding.” With the support of the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Relations, six research institutions embarked in 2014 on a two-year effort to investigate the role of the rising powers in the Global South in aiding and supporting other countries to attain and sustain peace. The institutions were the African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD) in Durban; the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Jakarta; the Istanbul Policy Center (IPC) in Istanbul; the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI) in Oslo; the School of International Service of American University in Washington DC; and the United Service Institution of India (USI) in New Delhi. We explicitly sought to create an opportunity for critical thinkers from rising powers and more traditional thought-centers to shed light on their own government’s practices and approaches, and to bring those ideas into international fora. The project sought to answer one central question: What exactly is new and innovative about the peacebuilding approach of the new actors from the Global South, and what results are they having? Building on this question, we sought to achieve three more specific objectives: 1. To provide a structured analysis of the values, content, and impact of recent peacebuilding initiatives of rising powers, comparing them to one another and to approaches by Western donors and international organizations. 2. To offer new theoretical claims about the role of the rising powers in peacebuilding, rooted in empirical work. 3. To make key policy audiences aware of alternative approaches and their empirical records and theoretical underpinnings. The latter objective reflects the policy goals of the project, whereby the partners sought to educate one another in their own concept and activities, and then to stimulate exchanges of ideas about these approaches with more traditional centers of thought regarding peacebuilding. Ultimately, the project sought to influence the exchange of ideas among rising powers in the Global South and between Northern and Southern centers of policy. We held insightful (and fun) seminars in Jakarta, Istanbul, Addis Ababa (in conjunction with the African Union), New York, Washington DC, Brussels, and The Hague to advance these policy aims. This book reflects the outcome of the former two project objectives. It captures the inputs of the project partners and a few additional intellects, offering in-depth, comparative studies of the rising powers, with case examples, aimed at also contributing to mid-level theoretical generalizations about these phenomena. We hope you enjoy the results.
Publisher
Springer NatureNotes
Charles T. Call and Cedric de Coning join the project participants in thanking the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Relations for their support to the “Rising Powers and Peacebuilding Project” (www.risingpowerandpeacebuilding.org). We are also grateful for the material and in-kind support received from American University’s School of International Service, including its Office of Financial Operations and Office of Sponsored Projects. The editors also thank Katy Collin, Manu Ramkumar, Holly Christensen, and Brandon Sims for their research and other assistance. We thank also Indonesia’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations and Yvonne Mewengkang for organizing a project-related event in March 2016. We offer a special deep thanks to Chris Brandt, whose excellent management of the project helped meetings, research deadlines, finances, and the process of editing the chapters conclude remarkably smoothly. Adriana Abdenur wishes to thank the National Council of Technological and Scientific Development and its Senior Post-Doctoral Scholarship Program, and the Centro de Pesquisa e Documentação de História Contemporânea do Brasil at Fundação Getúlio Vargas for supporting her role in this research. Lina Alexandra and Marc Lanteigne would like to express our appreciation for the extensive support given by institutions in Myanmar and Indonesia that contributed to this research. We would like to thank current and former officials of the Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, especially Dr. Hassan Wirajuda (2001–2009); the Institute for Peace and Democracy (IPD); the former Indonesian Ambassador to Myanmar, Dr. Sebastianus Sumarsono (2008–2013); the Indonesian National Election Commission; Indonesian parliament member (Commission I); and The Habibie Center. In Myanmar, we would like to thank the Embassies of Indonesia (especially its then-Ambassador Dr. Ito Sumardi), India, Japan, Norway, Switzerland; officials in the Strategic Studies and Training Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA); Myanmar Human Rights Commission; representatives of the Myanmar Armed Forces (Tatmadaw); the commissioners from the Myanmar National Election Commission; and academics and researchers in the Yangon University, the Myanmar Development Research Institute (MDRI)/Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Myanmar Institute of Strategic and International Studies; the Mingalar Myanmar and the Shalom (Nyein) Foundation. P K Singh would like to thank Ambassador Amar Sinha, IFS, Secretary, Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, and former Indian Ambassador to Afghanistan, and the staff of the Indian Embassy in Afghanistan for their support to the USI team in carrying out their field work in Afghanistan and to the Afghan nationals in their Government and in civil society for giving us their time, friendship and valuable inputs for our project. Shakti Sinha would like to acknowledge the support of the United Services Institution of India (New Delhi), in particular its Director, Lt Gen P.K. Singh (retd.) for the opportunity to work on this subject, and the American University-NUPI-USI project for its support. Auveen E. Woods and Onur Sazak would like to thank our interviewees in Turkey and Somalia who were gracious with their time and knowledge.Handle
http://hdl.handle.net/1961/auislandora:78036