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Designing Peace - 9780812247756

Un libro in lingua di Neophytos Loizides edito da Univ of Pennsylvania Pr, 2015

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Why do some societies choose to adopt federal settlements in the face of acute ethnic conflict, while others do not? Neophytos Loizides examines how acrimoniously divided Cyprus has not managed to unify by adopting a federal and consociational arrangement.

Loizides asserts that institutional innovation is key in designing peace processes. Analyzing power-sharing in Northern Ireland, the return of displaced persons in Bosnia, and the preparatory mandate referendum in South Africa, he shows how divided societies have implemented novel solutions despite conditions that initially seemed prohibitive. Turning to the Balkans and the Middle East, Loizides chronicles the relative absence of successful federal and consociational arrangements among societies evolving from the "post-Ottoman space." He then investigates the breakthrough that led to the exhumations of the missing after 2003 in Cyprus to observe that a society's choice of narratives and institutions can overcome structural constraints, demonstrating that neither elites nor broader society must be held hostage to the past.

To effect lasting and positive change, Loizides encourages stakeholders in divided societies to be prepared to identify, redesign, and implement innovative new institutions. Examining successful peace mediations and identifying the shared experience and commonalities between Cyprus and other divided societies promises not only to inform the tackling of the Cyprus problem but also to provide transferable knowledge with broader implications for the fields of peace studies and conflict resolution.

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