Text Browser Navigation Bar: Main Site Navigation and Search | Current Page Navigation | Current Page Content
U.S. Army War College >> Strategic Studies Institute >> Publications >> Sustaining the Peace After Civil War
U.S. Army War College >> Strategic Studies Institute >> Publications >> Details
Authored by Dr. T. David Mason.
Since the end of World War II, there have been four times as many civil wars as interstate wars. For a small subset of nations civil war is a chronic condition: about half of the civil war nations have had at least two and as many as six conflicts. This book presents an analytical framework that has been used to identify a set of factors that make civil war more or less likely to recur in a nation where a civil war has recently terminated. The outcome of the previous civil war--whether it ended in a government victory, a rebel victory or a negotiated settlement--as well as the duration and deadliness of the conflict affect the durability of the peace after civil war. The introduction of peacekeeping forces, investment in economic development and reconstruction, and the establishment of democratic political institutions tailored to the configuration of ethnic and religious cleavages in the society also affect the durability of peace after civil war. The book closes by applying these propositions in an analysis of the civil war in Iraq: what can be done to bring the Iraq conflict to an earlier, less destructive, and more stable conclusion?

The Challenge of Drug Trafficking to Democratic Governance and Human Security in West Africa

Sharing Power? Prospects for a U.S. Concert-Balance Strategy

Egypt's New Regime and the Future of the U.S.-Egyptian Strategic Relationship

Making Strategic Sense of Cyber Power: Why the Sky Is Not Falling

Governance, Identity, and Counterinsurgency: Evidence from Ramadi and Tal Afar
Middle East and North Africa
Military Strategy and Policy
Iraq
National Military Strategy