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COMPREHENSIVE PEACE AGREEMENT - CPA (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   124738


Armed-group amnesty and military integration in south Sudan / Warner, Lesley Anne   Journal Article
Warner, Lesley Anne Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Since the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in 2005, the government of South Sudan has sought to neutralise the threat that armed groups pose to stability through their integration into the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), rather than coercion. Although successful in part, this approach has nevertheless led to the continued proliferation of armed groups. In this article, Lesley Anne Warner analyses how the government of South Sudan and the SPLA have administered the amnesty and integration process, concluding that military integration is a process that is managed, but not yet fully mastered.
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2
ID:   130392


There it will be better: Southern Sudanese in Khartoum imagining a new 'home' away from 'home' / Schultz, Ulrike   Journal Article
Schultz, Ulrike Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract At the time of the research, Khartoum was a multi-ethnic and multinational metropolis of 8 million people. A considerable part of the population consists of Southern Sudanese migrants and displaced persons that came during the 20 years plus of civil war in South Sudan to the capital. These people were categorised after the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), as displaced people regardless as to whether they come to the capital as labour migrants, students or because of the war to the capital. The notion of displacement assumes that they are people who are 'out of place': thereby assuming a former situation of being in place, a place that can be called 'home'. After the CPA from 2005, this frequently only imagined home became a real place for the IDP's to which they are supposed to go back. Yet, many migrants and displaced people are reluctant to move to Southern Sudan. Their decision about going to the South or staying in Khartoum depends not only on the opportunities and perspectives in their respective 'home' areas but also on the perceptions of belonging and identity. The imaginations and aspirations about the future life in South Sudan, which I analyse in this article, reflect this ambivalent positioning.
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