CRITICALLY EXAMINING HOW WESTERN-FUNDED NGO INTERVENTIONS HAVE SHAPED
POST-CONFLICT RECOVERY IN NORTHERN UGANDA, ELIAS O. OPONGO ARGUES THAT
THE LIBERAL PEACE AGENDA-FOCUSED ON DEMOCRACY PROMOTION, MARKET
REFORMS, AND HUMAN RIGHTS-OFTEN MARGINALIZES LOCAL AGENCY AND
UNDERMINES CULTURALLY ROOTED APPROACHES TO PEACEBUILDING.
Drawing on extensive fieldwork and grounded theory, Opongo explores
how these externally driven models disconnect from the lived realities
of conflict-affected communities. He introduces RELATIONAL
CONSTRUCTIONISM as a framework that emphasizes participatory,
context-sensitive, and indigenous approaches-such as the Acholi _Mato
Oput_ ritual-that center dialogue, reintegration, and restorative
justice.
The book also critiques the role of international actors, particularly
the International Criminal Court (ICC), whose interventions can clash
with local reconciliation efforts. Opongo's findings in Northern
Uganda offer critical insights for other post-conflict African
contexts dominated by donor-driven peacebuilding. He calls for a
decolonial shift toward frameworks that restore African agency, reduce
dependency, and prioritize community-led solutions for sustainable
peace. This book is essential reading for scholars, practitioners, and
policymakers seeking more inclusive, grounded, and transformative
peacebuilding models in Africa and beyond.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781666966060
Publisert
2026
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter