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ID187340
Title ProperPeace agreements with no peace
Other Title Informationa critical review of peace agreements in the Central African Republic
LanguageENG
AuthorNdiyun, Robert Kosho
Summary / Abstract (Note)Societies faced with authoritarian rule or conflict usually adopt different paths to peace. The course adopted by each community to guarantee stability determines the extent to which the sustainability of the peace can be assured. Every attempt to pacify a society should aim to prevent a relapse to conflict or authoritarian rule while considering the damage caused and sorting out measures to repair the harm. The history of military coups and conflicts in the Central African Republic (CAR) is well documented. Still, the attempted remedies have greatly side-lined the raison d’être of the responses in guaranteeing peace and preventing relapse to conflict. As the CAR remains politically and socially unstable, an analysis of the failure of peace agreements to ensure stability constitutes a field of inquiry that urgently necessitates a more profound investigation to save the country from recurrent hostilities and guarantee a peaceful society for the citizens. Peace includes an aspiration manifested by both the CAR authorities and non-state armed groups in the course of hostilities and on the negotiation table. Central Africans indicate an interest in peace, but such interest often manifested and materialised in peace agreements has barely been implemented.
`In' analytical NoteAfrican Security Review Vol. 31, No.3; Sep 2022: p.300-316
Journal SourceAfrican Security Review Vol: 31 No, 3
Key WordsConflict ;  Peace ;  Peace Agreement ;  Political Will ;  Implementation ;  Central African Republic ;  Impunity


 
 
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