A crowded field : competition and coordination in international peace mediation

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Authors

Lanz, David
Gasser, Rachel

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Centre for Mediation in Africa. University of Pretoria

Abstract

In recent years competition has emerged as a central theme in international mediation as an increasing number of mediation actors seek opportunities to engage in peacemaking. At the same time, mediation coordination mechanisms, such as Groups of Friends, have become standard practice in international peacemaking. This paper seeks to make sense of the dynamics of competition and cooperation in peace mediation today. To this end, it considers three case studies of post-Cold War peace processes: Sudan (North-South, 1994–2005), Kenya (2008) and Madagascar (2009, ongoing). On the basis of interviews with experts directly involved in these processes, it identifies three forces that drive competition: clashing interests between states, overlapping mandates of mediation actors, and disagreements over the normative basis of international politics. These forces risk undermining peace processes unless the mediators take steps to prevent or mitigate the negative effects of competition. This can be done through ‘hierarchical coordination’, where a recognized authority takes the lead and allocates roles to other actors, or through ‘networked-based cooperation’, where partners decide on a division of labour.

Description

The mission of the Centre is to contribute to enhancing the effectiveness of mediation in major conflicts in Africa through teaching, training, research and supporting the UN, the AU, sub-regional organisations and African governments.

Keywords

International mediation, International peacemaking

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Lanz, D & Gasser, R 2013, 'A crowded field : competition and coordination in international peace mediation', Mediation Arguments, no. 2, pp. 1-20.