The imperial legacy of international peacebuilding: the case of Francophone Africa

被引:23
|
作者
Charbonneau, Bruno [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Laurentian Univ, Sudbury, ON P3E 2C6, Canada
[2] Univ Quebec, Montreal, PQ H3C 3P8, Canada
关键词
COTE-DIVOIRE; PEACE; VIOLENCE; WAR; RESPONSIBILITY; POLITICS; CRISIS;
D O I
10.1017/S0260210513000491
中图分类号
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号
030207 ;
摘要
Comparisons of peacebuilding with historic practices of imperialism are common, but these comparisons have sustained a hegemonic antagonism between humanitarian and imperialist interpretations of international peace intervention. This article argues that this common framing externalises the problem of intervention, romanticises local resistance, and forecloses to investigation the articulation between militarised peace practices and transnational capitalist relations. To do so, the article analyses the case of Francophone Africa, thus providing a context that has been left unexplored in peacebuilding debates. By bringing back in the historicity of particular Franco-African imperial experiences into peacebuilding research, the article reveals the militarisation of politics, transnational elite networks, and the dominant intellectual predispositions that work to reproduce the legitimacy of hegemonic practices of peace' interventionism. In the last section, the article analyses the debates over the UN-French 2011 intervention in Cote d'Ivoire to reveal the connections between the ethics of humanitarian interventions and the political economy of imperialism. The article concludes that the imperial legacy of peacebuilding is found in old capabilities, new organising logics, and specific practices and power relations and that to focus on the humanitarian-imperialist antagonism caricatures the relationships between local' and international' actors.
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页码:607 / 630
页数:24
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