TY - BOOK AU - Braithwaite,John AU - Dinnen,Sinclair AU - Allen,Matthew AU - Braithwaite,Valerie AU - Charlesworth,Hilary TI - Pillars and shadows: statebuilding as peacebuilding in Solomon Islands SN - 9781921666797 AV - JZ5584.S575 P55 2010eb online U1 - 305.80099593 22 PY - 2010/// CY - Canberra, ACT, Australia PB - ANU E Press KW - Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands KW - fast KW - Peace-building KW - Solomon Islands KW - Nation-building KW - Ethnic conflict KW - History KW - Politics and government N1 - Title from PDF title page (ANU E Press, viewed June 9, 2011); Includes bibliographical references; Peacebuilding Compared and the Solomons conflict --; Historical background to the conflict --; Descent into armed conflict --; Peace processes --; Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands --; Reconciliation and reintegration --; What layers of identity were involved in the conflict? --; Interpreting the conflict in summary --; Peacebuilding strengths and weaknesses --; Statebuilding that contained conflict but shelved specifics that fuelled conflict N2 - This volume of the Peacebuilding Compared Project examines the sources of the armed conflict and coup in the Solomon Islands before and after the turn of the millennium. The Regional Assistance Mission to Solomon Islands (RAMSI) has been an intensive peacekeeping operation, concentrating on building 'core pillars' of the modern state. It did not take adequate notice of a variety of shadow sources of power in the Solomon Islands, for example logging and business interests, that continue to undermine the state's democratic foundations. At first RAMSI's statebuilding was neither very responsive to local voices nor to root causes of the conflict, but it slowly changed tack to a more responsive form of peacebuilding. The craft of peace as learned in the Solomon Islands is about enabling spaces for dialogue that define where the mission should pull back to allow local actors to expand the horizons of their peacebuilding ambition.--Publisher description UR - http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt24hf05 ER -