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Afghanistan: Building a State to Keep the Peace

Afghanistan: Building a State to Keep the Peace / I. Introduction 1. Common Misperceptions a. Did the Conflict destroy the State? b. Was it an Ethnic Conflict? c. Was the UN too Dominant? 2. Unusual Characteristics a. UN not in the Driver's Seat b. Not a Settlement, but a Process c. No Transitional Justice Component d. Simultaneous Arming and (half-hearted) Demobilization II. Background 1. History of the State 2. Civil Society 3. Political Society III. The Path to the Bonn Agreement 1. Previous UN Involvement 2. Consequences of the "Brahimi Report'' 3. Present UN involvement and the Bonn Agreement a. Events Leading to Bonn b. The Negotiations in Bonn c. UNAMA's Mandate IV. Instruments of the Bonn Process 1. Interim Authority and Emergency Loya Jirga 2. Constitutional Process a. The Drafting Process b. The Constitutional Loya Jirga c. The Constitution 3. Elections a. Presidential Elections b. Parliamentary Elections V Further Obstacles to the Reconstruction Process 1. Financial Commitments 2. Security and Narcotics 3. The Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission and Transi- tional Justice 4. Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration (DDR) a. Conceptual Issues b. DDR in the Afghan Context c. International Support for DDR d. Critique of the International Effort VI. Conclusion I. Introduction The American decision http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law Online Brill

Afghanistan: Building a State to Keep the Peace

Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law Online , Volume 9 (1): 84 – Jan 1, 2005

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
eISSN
1875-7413
DOI
10.1163/187574105X00093
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

/ I. Introduction 1. Common Misperceptions a. Did the Conflict destroy the State? b. Was it an Ethnic Conflict? c. Was the UN too Dominant? 2. Unusual Characteristics a. UN not in the Driver's Seat b. Not a Settlement, but a Process c. No Transitional Justice Component d. Simultaneous Arming and (half-hearted) Demobilization II. Background 1. History of the State 2. Civil Society 3. Political Society III. The Path to the Bonn Agreement 1. Previous UN Involvement 2. Consequences of the "Brahimi Report'' 3. Present UN involvement and the Bonn Agreement a. Events Leading to Bonn b. The Negotiations in Bonn c. UNAMA's Mandate IV. Instruments of the Bonn Process 1. Interim Authority and Emergency Loya Jirga 2. Constitutional Process a. The Drafting Process b. The Constitutional Loya Jirga c. The Constitution 3. Elections a. Presidential Elections b. Parliamentary Elections V Further Obstacles to the Reconstruction Process 1. Financial Commitments 2. Security and Narcotics 3. The Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission and Transi- tional Justice 4. Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration (DDR) a. Conceptual Issues b. DDR in the Afghan Context c. International Support for DDR d. Critique of the International Effort VI. Conclusion I. Introduction The American decision

Journal

Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law OnlineBrill

Published: Jan 1, 2005

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