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Reviving Alternative Conflict Resolution Approaches in Proxy Wars: The Case of Libya

Pastor Vidal, Pablo LU (2024) p.1-9
Abstract
Libya has lived in a state of fragmentation since 2011 after the fall of the al-Qaddafi regime and in a state of dual and confronting administrations since 2014, exacerbated in 2022. During the last decade, successive conflict resolution attempts have been instilled, without much success. This policy brief reviews these conflict resolution attempts and argues that the current situation can be resolved by bringing other new perspectives in foreign policy-making. A particular focus is given to the political actors and the main personalities that control the future of Libyan politics.

This policy brief argues that previous fora looking for a peaceful resolution have been unsuccessful due to the lack of human rights and bottom-up... (More)
Libya has lived in a state of fragmentation since 2011 after the fall of the al-Qaddafi regime and in a state of dual and confronting administrations since 2014, exacerbated in 2022. During the last decade, successive conflict resolution attempts have been instilled, without much success. This policy brief reviews these conflict resolution attempts and argues that the current situation can be resolved by bringing other new perspectives in foreign policy-making. A particular focus is given to the political actors and the main personalities that control the future of Libyan politics.

This policy brief argues that previous fora looking for a peaceful resolution have been unsuccessful due to the lack of human rights and bottom-up approaches in foreign policy-making. Peaceful resolution efforts have mostly focused on the interests of fragmented elites that have managed to coopt institutions and create parallel administrations, in both East and West. Alternative conflict resolution approaches for the future of Libya should learn from previous lessons and voice the interests of the Libyan population. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Human rights, Mänskliga rättigheter
pages
9 pages
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Euromesco Policy Brief N. 139
id
eb0f852e-e644-4aa4-84fb-c02e43930f63
alternative location
https://www.euromesco.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Policy-Brief-N%C2%BA139.pdf
date added to LUP
2024-04-19 14:45:46
date last changed
2024-04-22 09:14:12
@misc{eb0f852e-e644-4aa4-84fb-c02e43930f63,
  abstract     = {{Libya has lived in a state of fragmentation since 2011 after the fall of the al-Qaddafi regime and in a state of dual and confronting administrations since 2014, exacerbated in 2022. During the last decade, successive conflict resolution attempts have been instilled, without much success. This policy brief reviews these conflict resolution attempts and argues that the current situation can be resolved by bringing other new perspectives in foreign policy-making. A particular focus is given to the political actors and the main personalities that control the future of Libyan politics.<br/><br/>This policy brief argues that previous fora looking for a peaceful resolution have been unsuccessful due to the lack of human rights and bottom-up approaches in foreign policy-making. Peaceful resolution efforts have mostly focused on the interests of fragmented elites that have managed to coopt institutions and create parallel administrations, in both East and West. Alternative conflict resolution approaches for the future of Libya should learn from previous lessons and voice the interests of the Libyan population.}},
  author       = {{Pastor Vidal, Pablo}},
  keywords     = {{Human rights; Mänskliga rättigheter}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{1--9}},
  title        = {{Reviving Alternative Conflict Resolution Approaches in Proxy Wars: The Case of Libya}},
  url          = {{https://www.euromesco.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Policy-Brief-N%C2%BA139.pdf}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}