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ID152383
Title ProperRentier peacekeeping in neo-patrimonial systems
Other Title Informationthe examples of Burundi and Kenya
LanguageENG
AuthorBrosig, Malte
Summary / Abstract (Note)International peacekeeping in Africa has developed dynamically in the last decade. The majority of global missions are deployed to the continent, the largest regional contingent of troops comes from Africa, and the African Peace and Security Architecture has made significant progress. Peacekeeping is Africanized today more than at any time before. However, mainstream research has insufficiently paid attention to African agency in this context. This article sheds light on the often neglected influence of African politics on international peacekeeping missions. The focus is set on the consequences of neo-patrimonial political systems, which can use international peacekeeping missions as an opportunity to generate rents. It will be shown that such a rent-seeking approach is highly problematic for the troop-contributing as well as mission-hosting countries. Instead of curbing conflict, rentier peacekeeping is prolonging and exporting it. The empirical examples used are the Burundian and Kenyan involvement in peacekeeping in Somalia.
`In' analytical NoteContemporary Security Policy Vol. 38, No.1; Apr 2017: p.109-128
Journal SourceContemporary Security Policy Vol: 38 No 1
Key WordsPeacekeeping ;  Burundi ;  Kenya ;  Rent-Seeking ;  African Politics ;  Neo-Patrimonialism


 
 
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