edited by Peter
Reddy
With a bold vision and a
distinctive message, Reddy stipulates that international peacekeeping can be
designed and implemented using the principles of restorative justice. To prove
this, Reddy discusses the congruence of crime, armed conflict and violent
disorder, critiquing restorative justice and its nuanced character as a
suitable application to complex civil wars. This book provides a comprehensive
survey of peace operations and then focuses on the cases of Somalia and
Bougainville. The comparison between their societal contexts, their conflicts,
peace operations and final outcomes are crucial to this argument. Furthermore,
this shows how the constraining, maximising and emergent values of restorative
justice can be applied in a peacekeeping setting, from the overall command
level through to the behaviours of deployed peacekeepers - with direct
contemporary application. This sharp study makes for evocative reading as it
introduces the new concept of regeneration as key to any restoratively arranged
peace operation. Military, police, NGO and civilian peacekeeper practitioners,
as well as academic theorists, can use this unique work to produce better and
more lasting results for conflict ridden communities.