Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11144/4395
Title: The UN in conflict resolution: the case of East Timor
A ONU na resolução de conflitos: o caso de Timor-Leste
Authors: Garcia, Francisco Proença
Dias, Mónica
Duque, Raquel
Keywords: Peace Studies
International Organizations
Peacekeeping Operations
Governance and State Building
Timor-Leste
Estudos de Paz
Organizações Internacionais
Operações de Manutenção da Paz
Governação e Construção do Estado
Timor-Leste
Issue Date: Nov-2019
Publisher: OBSERVARE. Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa
Abstract: The involvement of the United Nations in East Timor can be divided into four periods, including the anti-colonial period (1955-1974), the reaction period (1975-1982), the attenuation period (1983-1998) and the commitment period (from 1999). It is about this last period that this paper will focus by analysing the decisive steps of the UN, as a multilateral organization with a security mandate, in resolving the Timorese conflict and peacebuilding in that territory. This analysis will be guided by the proposals of the document "An Agenda for Peace" presented in 1992 by Boutros Boutros-Ghali, then Secretary-General of the United Nations, and the expectations he created in the field of peace operations. We are particularly interested in looking at the design of post-conflict peacebuilding missions and assessing the extent to which the (expected) capital gains from these operations compared to conventional peacekeeping missions would come to fruition or not. Thus, it is important to examine how the main missions were carried out, with special focus on the different actors, as well as to make a critical balance with some historical distance. In this context, it seems to us that the case of East Timor will be a good example to understand the need for a new approach to peacebuilding, as advocated in this Report, but which at a distance of more than 25 years becomes even more evident. The perception of peace as a continuous process that involves a whole sustainability network, and that depends above all on fostering and developing competences for peace (involving multiple and distinct actors facing constant coordination and negotiation challenges), therefore allows demanding greater commitment on the part of the Security Council, but also on that of the General Assembly in carrying out this difficult task in the context of the new world (dis) order.
Peer Reviewed: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11144/4395
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.10.2.1
ISSN: 1647-7251
Appears in Collections:OBSERVARE - JANUS.NET e-journal of International Relations. Vol.10, n.2 (November 2019- April 2020)

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