Building a State without the Nation? “Peace-through- Statebuilding” in Southern Sudan, 2005-2011

  • Aleksi Ylönen Peace Research Institute Frankfurt /Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Keywords: Southern Sudan, Comprehensive Peace Agreement, Post-conflict intervention, Peace-Building, Statebuilding, Nation-Building.

Abstract

In January 2005 the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) brought Africa’s longest-running war in Southern Sudan to its formal end. Essentially a two-party power-sharing treaty between the Government of Sudan and the largest rebel organization in Southern Sudan, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A), the CPA, which provided a roadmap for peace between the main warring parties and facilitated the secession of Southern Sudan in July 2011, faced a number of challenges due to being imposed over a complex landscape of local political actors. This article analyzes the external intervention during the CPA implementation in Southern Sudan in 2005-2011. It treats state-building and nation-building as separate in order to demonstrate the limits of the current intervention aimed at building a legitimate and authoritative state. The article argues that the external intervention in Southern Sudan, characterized by “peace-through-state-building” approach, was unable to ensure peace during the period examined due to its lack of focus on nation building.

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Published
2014-04-07
How to Cite
Ylönen A. (2014). Building a State without the Nation? “Peace-through- Statebuilding” in Southern Sudan, 2005-2011. UNISCI Discussion Papers, 33, 13-34. https://doi.org/10.5209/rev_UNIS.2013.n33.44813
Section
Articles