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ID158104
Title ProperLimits and unintended consequences of UN peace enforcement
Other Title Informationthe force intervention brigade in the DR Congo
LanguageENG
AuthorTull, Denis M
Summary / Abstract (Note)Recent scholarship has discerned an increasing tendency of the UN Security Council to push the boundaries of UN peacekeeping beyond traditional doctrine by equipping peace operations with ever more robust and even peace enforcement mandates. The first and most frequently cited example of this turn is the so-called Force Intervention Brigade (FIB) in the DR Congo. Yet, a comprehensive account of the FIB experience is still missing. Authorized in March 2013 to launch offensive military operations against insurgent groups, the FIB may come to epitomize a sea change in the transition from robust peacekeeping to a qualitatively different kind of UN peace operation. Thus, studying the FIB can offer important insights about the advantages and challenges that may be in store for the UN, should the organization indeed turn towards peace enforcement. The articles analyses the origins, performance and consequences of the FIB in terms of conflict resolution and state-building. It also examines its organizational impact on the UN peace operation in which it was embedded (Monusco). It finds that the FIB has not proven to be the game changer. Instead, it had unintended negative consequences both on state-building and the performance of UN peacekeepers.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Peacekeeping Vol. 25, No.2; Apr 2018: p.167-190
Journal SourceInternational Peacekeeping Vol: 25 No 2
Key WordsDR Congo ;  Unintended Consequences ;  Force Intervention Brigade ;  UN Peace Enforcement


 
 
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