List of Figures
List of Tables
Note on Contributors
Preface
1: SHARATH SRINIVASAN AND SARAH M. H. NOUWEN: Introduction: Peace
and Peacemaking in Sudan and South Sudan
2: NASREDEEN ABDULBARI: The Interlinkage between Understandings of
Self-Determination and Understandings of Peace
3: WENDY JAMES: Making Peace on Paper Only: A View from the Blue
Nile
4: DOUGLAS H. JOHNSON: Abyei, the CPA, and the War in Sudan's New
South
5: PETER DIXON: Strategic Peacebuilding and the Sudanese Peace
Process
6: BENEDETTA DE ALESSI: Peacemaking, the SPLM/A's Political
Transition During the CPA Era and Conflict in the Sudans
7: EDWARD THOMAS: Fiscal Policy and Sudan's 2005 Comprehensive
Peace Agreement
8: LAURA M. JAMES: Economic Provisions of the CPA: Selective
Implementation and Long-Term Consequences
9: NADA MUSTAFA ALI: Gender and Disarmament, Demobilization, and
Reintegration in Post-Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) South
Sudan
10: DANIEL LARGE: China and the CPA: Developing Peace in Sudan?
11: BRENDAN BROMWICH: Natural Resources, Conflict and Peacebuilding
in Darfur: The Challenge to Detraumatise Social and Environmental
Change
12: PARTHA MOMAN: A Flawed Formula for Peacemaking and Continued
Violence in Darfur: The Abuja Negotiations, 2004-2006
13: ROSALIND MARSDEN: Peacemaking in Darfur and the Doha Process:
The Role of International Actors
14: SOPHIA DAWKINS: Why Negotiate? Why Mediate? The Purpose of
South Sudanese Peacemaking
15: ALY VERJEE: How Mediators Conceive of Peace: The Case of IGAD
in South Sudan, 2013-15
16: MAREIKE SCHOMERUS AND ANOUK S. RIGTERINK: South Sudan's long
crisis of justice: Merging notions of lack of socio-economic
justice and criminal accountability
17: ALEX DE WAAL: Concluding Reflections: Sudan's Comprehensive
Peace Agreement: Theories of Change
Index
Sarah M. H. Nouwen is Reader in International Law and Co-Deputy
Director of the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law at the
University of Cambridge, and a fellow of Pembroke College,
Cambridge. She worked in Sudan for the Netherlands Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, as a consultant for the Department for
International Development and as a legal advisor to the African
Union High-Level Implementation Panel on Sudan. She is the author
of Complementarity in the
Line of Fire: The Catalysing Effect of the International Criminal
Court in Uganda and Sudan (Cambridge University Press, 2013) and an
Editor-in-Chief of the European Journal of International Law. Laura
James
is Senior Middle East analyst at Oxford Analytica, a political risk
consultancy firm. Previously, she was an affiliated lecturer
teaching Middle East politics at the University of Cambridge and an
independent consultant specializing in the interface between
political and economic issues in the Middle East and Africa. She
spent five years in Khartoum, working as an economic adviser for
the UK Department for International Development (DFID) and the
European Union. She was also an adviser to the
mediation team on the South Sudanese secession negotiations. Before
that, she worked as a Middle East analyst with the Economist
Intelligence Unit (EIU). Sharath Srinivasan is Co-Director of
the
University of Cambridge's Centre of Governance and Human Rights,
David and Elaine Potter Lecturer in the Department of Politics and
International Studies, and a Fellow of King's College, Cambridge.
He lived in Sudan and worked for the International Rescue Committee
in the early 2000s, and has researched on Sudan ever since. He is a
member of Council for the British Institute in Eastern Africa and a
Fellow of the Rift Valley Institute. He is the author of the
forthcoming book, When Peace
Kills Politics: International intervention and unending war in the
Sudans (Hurst & Co).
The book is essential reading for dedicated scholars of the two
countries and long-serving practitioners working in the area of
peacemaking.
*Jamie Pring, Sudan Studies*
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