Evaluating the peacemaking effectiveness of SADC
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Date
2018
Authors
Motsamai, Dimpho
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Abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to contribute to research on how peacemaking interventions
by the Southern African Development Community (SADC) in member states experiencing
recurrent political conflicts should be evaluated, and how their effectiveness can be
measured.
Peacemaking is understood as a varied approach to resolving conflicts, encompassing
negotiation, diplomatic engagement, and mediation. Mediation refers to third party facilitation
aimed at resolving conflicts. The main argument is that SADC mediation–
which forms the core of its approach to peacemaking – is not oriented towards transforming
conflicts. Most, if not all, of the political conflicts SADC has mediated have
recurred in one form or another. These include conflicts in Lesotho, the recipient of the
most SADC interventions to date in any member state since SADC’s formation, as well
as Zimbabwe, whose political situation remained precarious five years after SADC mediation.
Moreover, SADC lacks formal criteria for evaluating the efficacy of its mediation
efforts. This has also been limited by the way in which it problematises conflicts,
and conceptualises their resolution.
This study applies the concept of systemic conflict transformation (SCT) as a conceptual
framework for evaluating SADC’s mediation efforts in Lesotho and Zimbabwe. It
finds that SADC was effective in managing those crises in the short term, but that the
link between short-term progress and the longer-term transformation of conflicts was
underemphasised in its mediation mandates. This is attributed to the absence of a comprehensive
peacebuilding framework; an inadequate institutional interface between
SADC and the countries in which it mediates; and an over-reliance on ‘track one’ diplomacy
that excludes non-state and developmental partners from its peacemaking processes.
The study concludes that the main condition driving SADC’s effectiveness in achieving
conflict transformation is the degree to which it draws a distinction between achieving
the objectives of its broader peacemaking mandate, and those outlined in the specific
mediation mandate. It further concludes that the efficacy of SADC’s mediation efforts
should therefore be evaluated against its broader regional mandate to promote democracy,
stability, and development in its member states, regardless of the specificities of the
given mediation.
Description
A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management of the
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
March 2018
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Citation
Motsamai, Dimpho (2018) Evaluating the peacemaking effectiveness of SADC, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, https://hdl.handle.net/10539/26089