An Expanded Mandate for Peace Building
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The State Department Role in Peace Diplomacy, Reconstruction, and Stabilization
By Dane F. Smith Jr.Contributors Frederick D. Barton, Karin von HippelApr 30, 2009
This first of two related reports examines the evolution of peace building in the U.S. State Department. It begins with a sketch of the role of diplomacy in peace building. It reviews the leadership role of the secretary of state. It proceeds to an examination of multi-bureau involvement in the reconstruction and stabilization efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq. It assesses the central role of individual geographic bureaus in particular conflicts and the special peace-building tasks of several functional bureaus. The bulk of the report is devoted to a description and evaluation of the Office of the Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization. The author concludes that traditional peace-building diplomacy, led by the geographic bureaus, has been uneasily and incompletely yoked with the work of the Coordinator’s Office, and he advances suggestions for reform.
Publisher CSISProgramsRegions
