Ethics after intervention: should warlords be empowered as statesmen?
vol. 16, n. 1 (2017) • Ethic@ - Revista Internacional de Filosofia Moral
Autor: Daniel Duarte Flora Carvalho
Resumo:
Since the end of the Cold War, when the number of peacekeeping and peacebuilding interventions considerably increased, the debate about their ethics raised as an important aspect regarding both its ends and its means. Literature was roughly divided between those who advocated for an approach centred on global actors, liberal peace and cosmopolitanism and those who stood for the role of local actors and indigenous solutions for the problems in question. In this regard, the relationship that the International Community usually held with warring parties in civil conflict came to the fore. This essay looks forward to providing insights about the role that warlords can play in facilitating and hindering internationally-led peace process. Using Burundi and Somalia as case-studies, it is argued that warlords can only commit to liberal and cosmopolitan ethics after the state institutions have been built and solidified.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5007/1677-2954.2017v16n1p109
Texto Completo: https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/ethic/article/view/1677-2954.2017v16n1p109/34749
Palavras-Chave: Civil War,Intervention,State-building,Post-co
Ethic@ - Revista Internacional de Filosofia Moral
ethic@ - An international Journal for Moral Phylosophy - uma publicação do Núcleo de Ética e Filosofia Política da UFSC, tem como objetivo principal publicar trabalhos inéditos (artigos, resenhas, entrevistas, traduções), com excelência e vanguarda na área de Filosofia Moral Moderna e Contemporânea.