"Fixing Broken Windows"

Author: Yazīd Ṣāyigh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 29
Release: 2009
Genre: Security sector
ISBN:

As they emerge from conflict, states can rarely commence the arduous task of reconstruction and consolidate their governments until they undertake extensive restructuring of their security forces. Palestine, Lebanon, and Yemen are all fractured, quasi-democratic states with divided societies, and deep disagreement over what constitutes the national interest. Successful reform in each will require security institutions that answer to democratically-elected civilian leaders, but the U.S. and European approach has thus far focused largely on providing military training and equipment, targeted toward counterterrorist capabilities. To enable real reform, the West must adopt a comprehensive approach which treats security reform as only one part of a broader political strategy, and encourage governments and security commanders in Palestine, Lebanon, and Yemen to buy into such a strategy. Donor states should invest resources commensurate with their declared objectives, improve coordination, and standardize practices. Above all, they should make it a priority to build the institutions and procedures that are essential for democratic governance of the security sector, without which reforms become bogged down in internal power struggles. Pursuing counterterrorism in the absence of the rule of law perpetuates the undemocratic governance of the security sector and undermines state building and post-conflict reconstruction.

Squaring the Circle

Squaring the Circle
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 47
Release: 2010
Genre: Human rights
ISBN:

Security reform is one of the Palestinian Authority's most notable successes, but recent attacks on West Bank settlers, coinciding with resumed Israeli-Palestinian talks, illustrate the difficulties in sustaining such progress as long as the occupation and internal Palestinian divisions persist. This report examines the prospects for deepening West Bank security sector reform. Since Salam Fayyad was appointed prime minister in June 2007, Palestinian security forces have re-established public order in the West Bank, restored central authority and disarmed militants. The Palestinian Authority (PA) has introduced initial structural changes to reduce redundancy and empower the civilian leadership. Coordination with Israel is stronger than ever, and the scepticism of its defence establishment slowly is being overcome. The U.S. and Europe are backing the PA and helping train its forces, which they see as both a key element of any eventual Palestinian-Israeli accord and a way to strike a blow against Islamists. However, as difficulties born of the intifada era recede, Palestinian security forces have come in for greater popular scrutiny. Many in the West Bank appreciate the PA's achievements but are troubled by two key aspects.

The OECD DAC Handbook on Security System Reform Supporting Security and Justice

The OECD DAC Handbook on Security System Reform Supporting Security and Justice
Author: OECD
Publisher: OECD Publishing
Total Pages: 259
Release: 2008-02-25
Genre:
ISBN: 9264027866

The OECD DAC Handbook on Security System Reform: Supporting Security and Justice contains valuable tools to help encourage a dialogue on security and justice issues and to support a security system reform (SSR) process through the assessment, design and implementation phases.

Local Ownership and Security Sector Reform

Local Ownership and Security Sector Reform
Author: Timothy Donais
Publisher: LIT Verlag Münster
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2008
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 3825816524

The notion of "local ownership" has emerged in recent years as part of the contemporary commonsense of security sector reform (SSR). While the argument that externally driven reform processes are unsustainable is now widely accepted, the principle of local ownership has proven difficult to both define and operationalise. With contributions by leading practitioners, both "insiders" and "outsiders", Local Ownership and Security Sector Reform subjects the broader issue of local ownership to critical scrutiny, furthers the debate on what local ownership is and why it matters, and explores how ownership issues have played out in the context of specific SSR case studies.

EU Security Missions and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

EU Security Missions and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Author: Amr Nasr El-Din
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 151
Release: 2016-12-19
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1315312158

This book explores and analyses the various factors that affected the formulation of the common EU policy towards the Middle East Peace Process (MEPP), as well as the specifics of the process by which the EU created EUPOL COPPS and EUBAM Rafah. It answers two central questions: firstly, why and how did the EU decide to create and deploy these missions? Secondly, where do these two missions fit into the general EU approach to the conflict in the Middle East? Based on confidential interviews with various actors in the process, uniquely granted to the author, it reveals the mechanics of decision-making behind the scenes and argues that the EU decision to expand its role in the MEPP, through the creation of the two missions, was closely related to the EU’s defined common interests in the Middle East. Further it shows, the missions were, mainly, the result of the EU’s already established approaches to further its role in the international political arena. This text will be of key interest to scholars and students of European foreign policy, EU Politics, Middle East politics and studies, foreign policy analysis, and more broadly to international relations.

The Palestinian National Authority: Studies of the Experience and Performance 1994-2013

The Palestinian National Authority: Studies of the Experience and Performance 1994-2013
Author: Prof. Ahmad M. al-Khalidi
Publisher: مركز الزيتونة للدراسات والاستشارات
Total Pages: 618
Release: 2019-06-23
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9953500533

Almost twenty years after the Oslo Accords and the formation of the Palestinian National Authority (PA), there is a need to examine this experience in all its aspects, especially since it has not achieved its main goal: the transition from an autonomous authority to an independent state with full sovereignty over the 1967 occupied Palestinian territories (West Bank and Gaza Strip). This book is a comprehensive study of the PA and its experience. The 15 chapters analyze the aspects of the PA establishment and its legislative, judicial and presidential institutions, as well as the performance of successive governments. The book deals with the internal Palestinian situation, the security forces, the PA position towards the resistance forces, and economic, demographic, educational and health conditions in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. It also tackles the corruption in the PA, the relationship between the PA and the media, as well as its foreign policy. This book is a systematic, scientific study that forensically documents the PA experience. It has undergone the usual procedures of scientific editing, including the reviewing of texts and references.