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INTERNATIONAL EFFORTS (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   118782


Afghanistans political system: international efforts, internal resources, and untapped reserves / Ergashev, Bahodyr   Journal Article
Ergashev, Bahodyr Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
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2
ID:   125105


Insurgents of the sea: institutional and economic opportunities for maritime piracy / Daxecker, Ursula; Prins, Brandon   Journal Article
Daxecker, Ursula Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract While piracy may evoke romanticized visions of swashbuckling, rum swigging, and skirt chasing pirates hoisting the Jolly Roger, maritime piracy has changed substantially by taking advantage of modernization and substantial upgrading of the weapons, vessels, and weapons it employs. In addition, as documented by the International Maritime Bureau (IMB), the frequency of pirate attacks has increased significantly, with more than 2,600 piracy incidents occurring since 2004. The authors argue that piracy is a result of permissive institutional environments and the lack of legal forms of employment in states' fishing sectors. The authors investigate these arguments empirically using data for all countries with coastlines in the 1995-2007 period. The empirical analyses show that state weakness and reductions in fisheries production values affect piracy as expected. These findings suggest that international efforts in combating piracy should center on improving the institutional environments and labor opportunities driving maritime piracy.
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3
ID:   124439


Introduction to the DDR forum: rethinking the reintegration of former combatants / Berdal, Mats; Ucko, David H   Journal Article
Berdal, Mats Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Over the past two decades, international efforts to support the socio-economic adjustment of ex-combatants to the uncertain and often messy realities of postwar situations, have presented donor countries, NGOs and international organizations with complex, often formidable, institutional and logistical challenges. Many of these have been exhaustively and often expertly covered in the still burgeoning literature on disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR). While they continue to merit scholarly and policy attention, the underlying focus of this special issue of International Peacekeeping is less on what we in the past have referred to as the mechanics of DDR - that is, how best to plan, organize, coordinate and fund DDR activities - than on the context and politics of reintegrating ex-combatants following protracted periods of armed conflict and civil war.
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