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| It Ain't Just Killin' Applying influence, working with civil and private agencies, dealing with non-combatants. |
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#1 | ||
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Moderator
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Concord, MA
Posts: 3,043
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The discreet charms of the international go-between Quote:
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#2 |
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Council Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Montreal
Posts: 1,568
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Non-state third-party mediators, third-party assisted back-channels, and so-called second track diplomacy can perform a very valuable role in supporting conflict resolution efforts.
Having done quite a bit of the latter, however, there are potential drawbacks too that practitioners need to be aware of. One is the problem of a multiplicity of unofficial channels, credible commitment, and poor signal-to-noise ratios: it is not always clear who is speaking for whom, and how much backing political ideas actually do or do not have. Moreover, they can at times undercut each other, or undercut more official "real" negotiations. (The Annan mission didn't have this problem in Kenya, of course, both because of his profile and becuase everyone knew that was the main game in town.) The second is the danger that international community will support NGO and second track efforts simply because they can't think of anything better to do—and in the process abandon them with equal ease, or use them as an excuse not to undertake the difficult diplomatic heavy lifting themselves. On a side note, I few weeks ago I ran an Arab-Israeli negotiations simulation with Chatham House in the UK. Most of the participants were current or former officials/negotiators, with a healthy sprinkling of subject matter academic experts. Half way through we had to suspend one subset of the simulation—the simulated negotiations had become real that one of the teams wanted to call back to their capital for instructions. ![]() Here is an unpublished post-mortem of one of the projects I was involved with here, on the Palestinian refugee issue. |
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#3 |
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Council Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Michigan
Posts: 799
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.. both sides are interested in a peaceful resolution, and there is a potential for a mutually acceptable long term outcome. If one side is committed to, say, the death of every member of the other side, they will only participate in the conflict resolution processes as a useful charade to keep outsiders out.
I believe conflict resolution can have a useful role in many disputes. But it seems that many people have expectations it cannot possibly fulfill. I can't conceive of conflict resolution processes serving any useful purpose in situations such as Zimbabwe, Darfur or Rwanda. The trick is to know when it is and isn't appropriate.
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John Wolfsberger, Jr. An unruffled person with some useful skills. |
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