UN peacekeeping after the pandemic: an increased role for intelligence/ Allison Carnegie

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2021Subject(s): Online resources: In: Survival: Vol.63, No.2, April-May 2021, pp.77-83 (106)Summary: United Nations peacekeepers have a tough job, and the coronavirus is making it much tougher. Effective peacekeeping requires detailed information about rebel movements, troop levels and other ground-level conditions. Peacekeepers are called upon to interpose themselves between hostile parties, monitor peace processes, implement peace agreements and pre-empt violence. All of these activities require detailed knowledge of conditions on the ground, both to enable them to effectively keep the peace and to ensure their safety.
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United Nations peacekeepers have a tough job, and the coronavirus is making it much tougher. Effective peacekeeping requires detailed information about rebel movements, troop levels and other ground-level conditions. Peacekeepers are called upon to interpose themselves between hostile parties, monitor peace processes, implement peace agreements and pre-empt violence. All of these activities require detailed knowledge of conditions on the ground, both to enable them to effectively keep the peace and to ensure their safety.

UN, COVID-19

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