Containing conflict in the Economic Community of West African States: lessons from the intervention in Liberia, 1990-1997

TitleContaining conflict in the Economic Community of West African States: lessons from the intervention in Liberia, 1990-1997
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication1999
AuthorsK. van Walraven
Pagination1 - 86
Date Published1999///
PublisherNetherlands Institute of International Relations
Place PublishedThe Hague
Publication Languageeng
KeywordsAfrica, civil war, Country, ECOWAS, Liberia, military intervention, West Africa
Abstract

Although ECOWAS was never intended as a regional security structure and its official mandate lies primarily in the economic realm, ECOWAS has developed a high profile with regard to cooperation on political and security issues. This has come about primarily through the intervention, under ECOWAS auspices, in the Liberian civil war. Although this intervention was protracted and controversial and suffered numerous setbacks, the countries responsible managed to see it through. The result was that the intervention force Ecomog (ECOWAS Cease-fire Monitoring Group) stayed in Liberia and finally was able, in 1997, to put a peaceful end to the civil war by way of internationally supervised elections. This study analyses ECOWAS's intervention in the Liberian civil war, with an emphasis on its role as a multilateral, third party actor. The chapters deal successively with the institutions involved in the Liberian operation; the mandates concerned and the working methods employed by, or in the cadre of, ECOWAS; and the actual practice of the intervention. The final chapter extrapolates, from Ecomog's vicissitudes, certain key factors that conditioned its successes and failures

Notes

Project conflict prevention in West Africa (CPWA) - Bibliogr.: p. 83-86. - Met noten

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/9564
Citation Key2175