Peace Operations Seen From Below
UN Missions and Local People
Paper: 978 1 56549 224 0
Price: $27.50  

Publisher: Kumarian Press
June 2006 , 295 pp., 5 1/2" x 8 1/3"
* Explores many ways local populations think about and respond to peacekeepers
* Timely reflection on nature of peacekeeping operations, occupation, and conflict resolution or escalation
* Engagingly written, suitable for undergraduate level courses

Cambodia, Somalia, Mozambique, El Salvador, Bosnia, Haiti, Sierra Leone: all have been the subject of interventions by UN peacekeeping forces sent to stabilize these societies torn by political and ethnic conflict. Yet little is known or has been investigated about how local inhabitants interact with and respond to peacekeepers in their midst. In Peace Operations Seen From Below, Béatrice Pouligny argues that much of what is being rebuilt in societies emerging from war —or in some cases what is continuing to be destroyed—often lies in the “ordinary” daily lives of both local populations and the staff of UN peacekeeping missions.

Pouligny’s close analysis of UN interventions, based on first hand observation of how local people intermingle with UN soldiery and civilians, sheds light on a neglected but crucial dimension of international peace enforcement. By foregrounding the experiences of “ordinary” people, she renders visible those who are often hidden within the fog of both war and peace.


Table of Contents:
1) Introduction: The United Nations between War and Peace; 2) The Various Faces of Local Populations; 3) Peacekeepers and Local Societies: The Encounter and its Effects; 4) “Intervention and Sovereignty”: The View from Below; 5) Strategies of Local Actors; 6) Forgotten Promises: How the UN Pretends to Achieve Peace


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Reviews & Endorsements:
"Fills a gap in the current literature on UN peacekeeping... well written, well researched... a new way of thinking in regards to peace operations."
- Eirin Mobekk, University of Bradford, UK
"Instead of examining reconstruction and peacekeeping from the view of political elites or in terms of the demobilization of armed groups, Peace Operations Seen From Below forcefully puts for the claim that the essence of rebuilding lies in the societies that emerge from the war, and the daily "ordinary" lives of both civilian populations and the staff of UN missions. A wealth of research and numerous case studies illustrate this examination of the common people caught up in the midst of strife, and their role in brining armed clashes to a close."
- Midwest Book Review