Dear colleagues,


I am pleased to announce the publication of my new book, which might be of
interest to those on the list.



*Peacebuilding and Natural Resource Governance After Armed Conflict: Sierra
Leone and Liberia*

*By Michael D. Beevers*



Palgrave Macmillan

225 pages



Information can be found at https://www.springer.com/us/book/9783319631653
<https://www.palgrave.com/us/book/9783319631653#aboutBook>





*Summary*

This book argues that a set of persuasive narratives about the links
between natural resource, armed conflict and peacebuilding have strongly
influenced the natural resource interventions pursued by international
peacebuilders. The author shows how international peacebuilders active in
Liberia and Sierra Leone pursued a collective strategy to transform
“conflict resources” into “peace resources” vis-à-vis a policy agenda that
promoted “securitization” and “marketization” of natural resources.
However, the exclusive focus on securitization and marketization have been
counterproductive for peacebuilding since these interventions render
invisible issues connected to land ownership, environmental protection and
sustainable livelihoods and mirror pre-war governing arrangements in which
corruption, exclusion and exploitation took root. Natural resource
governance and peacebuilding must go beyond narrow debates about
securitization and marketization, and instead be a catalyst for
trust–building and cooperation that has a local focus, and pursues an
inclusive agenda that not only serves the cause of peace, but the cause of
people.



*Reviews*

“At the turn of the last century, high-value natural resources like
diamonds and timber helped fund devastating wars in Liberia and Sierra
Leone. Many academics and practitioners concluded that effective
peacebuilding would require the reform of these sectors. In a carefully
conceived study based on years of fieldwork, Michael Beevers argues that
the peacebuilding community embraced, emphasized and operationalized this
idea in ways that simplified a complex reality, concentrated power in the
state, and marginalized alternative views and competing priorities. The
ironic end result, Beevers claims, is that the tensions and disagreements
that preceded the outbreak of violent conflict have, in some cases, been
ignored, and, in other cases, been restored. Beevers makes a significant
contribution to the evolving concept of environmental peacebuilding.”
(Richard Matthew, University of California, Irvine, USA)

“With this meticulously researched book, Michael Beevers threads the needle
to make substantial contributions to both scholarship and practice. His
case analysis of post-conflict Liberia and Sierra Leone advances evolving
theory around environmental peacebuilding, taking tangible steps beyond the
field’s early deductive days. At the same time, his explication of dominant
post-conflict natural resource management approaches reveals specific
shortcomings that should help shape future efforts.” (Geoffrey Dabelko,
Ohio University and the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars,
USA)

“Drawing from thorough research in Sierra Leone and Liberia, Michael
Beevers offers an insightful critique of the dangerous oversimplification
of ‘conflict resources’ and ‘greed war’ narratives. An important
contribution to the peacebuilding literature.” (Philippe Le Billon,
University of British Columbia, Canada)



Best,

Michael



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Michael D. Beevers

Associate Professor and Chair, Department of Environmental Studies

Contributing Faculty, Department of International Studies

Dickinson College (USA)

[email protected]

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