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Dangerous Diplomacy: Bureaucracy, Power Politics, and the Role of the Un Secretariat in Rwanda (Hardcover)

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Description


Dangerous Diplomacy reassesses the role of the UN Secretariat during the Rwandan genocide. With the help of new sources, including the personal diaries and private papers of the late Sir Marrack Goulding-an Under-Secretary-General from 1988 to 1997 and the second highest-ranking UN official during the genocide-the book situates the Rwanda operation within the context of bureaucratic and power-political friction existing at UN Headquarters in the early 1990s. The book shows how this confrontation led to a lack of coordination between key UN departments on issues as diverse as reconnaissance, intelligence, and crisis management. Yet Dangerous Diplomacy goes beyond these institutional pathologies and identifies the conceptual origins of the Rwanda failure in the gray area that separates peacebuilding and peacekeeping. The difficulty of separating these two UN functions explains why six decades after the birth of the UN, it has still not been possible to demarcate the precise roles of some key UN departments.

About the Author


Herman Tutehau Salton is Associate Professor of Politics, Philosophy, and Economics (PPE) at the Asian University for Women, a liberal arts college in Chittagong, Bangladesh, with a support foundation in Cambridge, Massachusetts, that promotes gender empowerment and draws students from across South-East Asia. He teaches and publishes in the areas of international politics, international law, human rights, and the United Nations.

Product Details
ISBN: 9780198733591
ISBN-10: 0198733593
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Publication Date: October 10th, 2017
Pages: 310
Language: English