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Jowell, Marco. Peacekeeping In Africa

Author
Jowell, Marco
Published On
January 24, 2023
Original Date
2018
Coercive
Bibliographic

Jowell, Marco. Peacekeeping In Africa: Politics, Security and The Failure of Foreign Military Assistance. I. B. Tauris, 2018.

Marco Jowell has spent a decade working in peacekeeping training in East Africa - initially as one of the foreign 'Technical Advisers' at the Peace Support Operations(PSO) training centre in Kenya, the International Peace Support Training Centre(IPSTC) and subsequently as a strategic adviser to the Rwanda Peace Academy. Using first-hand experience, he considers how military forces from a variety of African states - with great differences in history, language and political systems and with militaries with different cultures and capabilities - can conduct complicated multinational peacekeeping operations. He shows how regional peacekeeping training centers provide an environment for African elites, predominately military, to interact with each other through shared training and experiences. This process of interaction, or socialization, improves skills but also encourages cohesion so that future African-led missions will be managed by well-trained officers who are comfortable and willing to work within a regional or Pan-African framework. Jowell shows that part of the aim of peacekeeping training centers is to foster a Pan-African 'outward' looking ideology or disposition as well as improving technical ability. This book will be essential reading for all involved with African military and security studies and analysts of peacekeeping training and operations.

Excerpt from book description culled from Bloomsbury.com

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