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Goulding: The Evolution of United Nations Peacekeeping

Tags: un and global governance lecture 2, papers

Questions

  • what if we created a reserve fund for peacekeepers instead of a reserve troop list?
  • how does the six types goulding identifies prevent the reemergence of a state?

Summary

1990’s article that talks about how peacekeeping has evolved

  • originally peacekeeping was loosely derived from post-WW1 siutations

  • remarks that legitimacy is the UN’s key identifer

  • notes how unifil became a quasi-permanent force due to its ineffectiveness

  • identifies 5 principals of peacekeeping

    • must be seen as UN lead and controlled -> concerns over legitimacy
    • must require the consent of all parties -> peacekeeping missions do not work without consent
    • peacekeepers must be impartial
    • troops are provided on a voluntary basis
    • use of force is kept to minimal
  • also identifies 6 types of peacekeeping operations

    1. preventative deployment - one party requests, troops act as early warning
    2. traditional peacekeeping - monitoring ceasefires, buffer zones, etc
    3. operations to help implement a comphrenesive settlement
    4. humanitarian corridors
    5. UN replacing a collapsed state
    6. ceasefire enforcement - similar to 2, but with force
  • goulding points out that funding is always a problem

  • goulding argues for a more codified rules of usage of force

  • greatest tool of the UN is credibility and legitimacy, thus the sec gen cannot deploy force to all places, but also must not appear overty cautious