Security Sector Transformation in Post Conflict Societies
Author: N Cooper and M Pugh
Date: 2002
Size:
68 pages
(530 KB)
Access full text: available online
Since the end of the Cold War, the attitude of development organisations towards the security sector has changed and personal security is now recognised as a key concern of the poor in weak states. In addition, repressive or corrupt security structures can undermine the stability crucial to maximising the benefits of aid programmes. Consequently, a number of agencies have engaged with the issue of security sector reform and the idea is now largely accepted as something broader than solely the military.
This paper, from the Centre for Defence Studies, argues that wider and more innovative reform – security sector ‘transformation’ – would be a way of addressing the issues of socio-political dynamics of civil-military relations, as well as taking account of the political economy of conflict. It concludes with a number of detailed recommendations that the UK might address and points out that, while in developed states there are signs that policy coordination has increased, there is still a risk that policy can be co-opted by special interest groups, notably military-industrial actors, whose interests may not always coincide with security sector reform in conflict prone societies.
Identifying the challenges to security-sector reform as: Resource manipulation, weapon’s proliferation, the emphasis on coercion in international interventions and the diverse contexts of war torn societies, the paper delineates the role that transformative strategies can play in preventing conflicts and promoting post-conflict peace building as follows:
To achieve its goals, the paper divides a range of policies into two categories:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Cooper, N. and Pugh, M. 2002, 'Security Sector Reform in Post-conflict Societies', Working Paper no. 5, Centre for Defence Studies, London.
Author:
Michael Pugh
, shelley.butler@kcl.ac.uk