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            NGOs Mediating Peace

            Promoting Inclusion in Myanmar’s Nationwide Ceasefire Negotiations

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            Author(s)
            Palmiano Federer, Julia
            Collection
            Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)
            Language
            English
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            Abstract
            This book explores the role of nongovernmental mediators in promoting “inclusive peace” to negotiating parties in Myanmar’s Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) negotiations from 2011-2015. The influx of NGO mediators directly engaging with the negotiating parties and promoting the inclusivity norm coupled with the salience of discourse around “all-inclusiveness” at the end of the NCA process forms a puzzle around the agency that NGO mediators wield in influencing political outcomes, despite their lack of political and material leverage. The author argues that NGO mediators can effectively promote norms, using mediation processes as a site of norm diffusion. Bespoke international conflict resolution NGOs have become key mediation actors, within the last three decades through creating the niche world of “private diplomacy” and acting as "norm entrepreneurs" at the same time. As informal third parties, these NGO mediators directly engage with politically sensitive actors or convene unofficial peace talks. As NGOs, they are part of an epistemic community of mediation practice, professionalizing the field and producing knowledge on what peace mediation is and what it ought to be. This dual identity as both NGOs and mediators nicely sets them up with a unique agency to promote and diffuse norms. These norms often reflect the liberal peacebuilding paradigm promoted from the Global North, such as inclusion, gender equality and transitional justice, with the view that these norms are not ends in themselves but as necessary ingredients for effective mediation. The book further questions whether NGOs should promote norms in the first place. The outcome of the NCA process presents a critical and cautionary tale of promoting a presumed universal norm into a given locale and expecting a certain outcome without understanding how an external norm interacts with existing normative frameworks. The book illustrates that while NGO mediators do possess the “normative agency” to effectively promote norms to negotiating parties, my empirical research analyses how their promotion of the “inclusivity” norm to the negotiating parties in Myanmar’s NCA paradoxically resulted in exclusionary outcomes: only half of the armed groups in the ethnic armed groups’ negotiating bloc signed, and civil society was effectively crowded out from meaningful participation despite lofty rhetoric. This is an open access book.
            URI
            https://doab-dev.siscern.org/handle/20.500.12854/196284
            Keywords
            peace mediation; peace negotiations; nongovernmental mediators; NGO; United Nations; conflict resolution; critical peace research; private diplomacy; unofficial peacemaking; agentic constructivism; Myanmar studies; Asian security policy
            DOI
            10.1007/978-3-031-42174-7
            ISBN
            9783031421747, 9783031421730
            Publisher
            Springer Nature
            Publisher website
            http://www.springernature.com/oabooks
            Publication date and place
            Cham, 2024
            Grantor
            • Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung
            Imprint
            Palgrave Macmillan
            Series
            Twenty-first Century Perspectives on War, Peace, and Human Conflict,
            Classification
            International relations
            Diplomacy
            Pages
            218
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              This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871069.

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