Comparative Case Studies in Conflict Resolution: Negotiation, Mediation, and Peacebuilding
MTA
Successes and Failures from Northern Ireland to the Balkans and Beyond
2nd Edition
This book offers a comprehensive analysis of conflict resolution through comparative case studies, emphasizing negotiation, mediation, and peacebuilding in politically violent settings. It argues that durable peace agreements arise from the alignment of negotiation design, mediator strategy, and long-term peacebuilding efforts. The text systematically examines various cases, from Northern Ireland and Bosnia to South Africa, Colombia, and Myanmar, to distill practical choices that lead to breakthroughs or breakdowns. Each chapter follows a consistent structure, detailing conflict backgrounds, actor mapping, negotiation timelines, pivotal decisions, agreement design features, and implementation challenges, complemented by reflective questions for practitioners.
The book highlights three core mediator roles: the convener, who creates the conditions for talks; the facilitator, who manages the process and communication; and the enforcer, who uses leverage to compel movement. It stresses the critical importance of understanding underlying interests, fundamental needs, and dynamic power balances, distinguishing them from stated positions to enable creative solutions. The design of durable peace is explored through three pillars: inclusive and legitimate institutions (such as power-sharing), robust security provisions (including DDR programs and security sector reform), and credible transitional justice mechanisms (like truth commissions and accountability processes). These elements are presented not as a checklist but as lenses through which to analyze the complex interplay of factors in each conflict.
The case studies reveal nuanced lessons. Northern Ireland exemplifies inclusive bargaining and robust power-sharing architecture, despite implementation hurdles. Bosnia demonstrates the trade-offs of externally imposed peace and the challenges of complex institutional design. South Africa showcases managed transitions and constitutional negotiation as a tool for fundamental societal transformation. Colombia highlights victim-centered justice and comprehensive reintegration in a protracted conflict, alongside the perils of public referenda. Cases like Sri Lanka and Nagorno-Karabakh serve as cautionary tales, illustrating how ceasefires without strong political constituencies or genuine enforcement mechanisms can lead to recurrent violence or frozen conflicts, often exacerbated by external patrons with conflicting interests.
Ultimately, the book synthesizes key takeaways for practitioners: the necessity of integrated design across negotiation, agreement, and implementation; the delicate balance between inclusivity and efficiency; the fluid roles of mediators and the need for leverage; the inseparability of security and political commitments; the distinction between ceasefires and true peace agreements; the complexities of transitional justice; and the paradoxes of international engagement. It concludes that peacebuilding is not a technical exercise but a political process requiring humility, adaptability, and a deep understanding of context, emphasizing that durable peace is built from within, one compromise at a time.
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View booksMay 13, 2026
80,196 words
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