Civil affairs
We work to strengthen social and civic conditions for
countrywide peace.
Civil Affairs is one of the largest
civilian components in UN Peacekeeping. As of February 2012, there are 1009
authorized Civil Affairs posts in 17 UN Field Missions worldwide.
Usually deployed at the local level
in field offices around the host country, Civil Affairs components facilitate
the implementation of peacekeeping mandates sub-nationally and work to
strengthen social and civic conditions necessary for peace. Civil Affairs
Officers are often the primary interface between the mission and local
interlocutors.
A Civil Affairs
policy directive from the Departments of Peacekeeping Operations and Field
Support sets out three core roles that are performed by these components,
depending on the mandate of the mission and the evolving situation on the
ground.
Role one: Cross-mission representation, monitoring and facilitation at the
local level
This tends to be the primary role of
Civil Affairs Officers, performed in most missions and usually throughout its
whole life cycle. Civil Affairs Officers monitor the progress of the peace
process and mandate implementation at the local level; they provide mission
leadership with information about the local environment, carry out conflict
analysis and early warning about local conflict, including in relation to
efforts to protect civilians. Through this role, civil affairs staff can help
ensure regional and local considerations are integrated into national
negotiations or priority-setting processes.
Role two: Confidence-building, conflict management and support to
reconciliation
Conflict management,
confidence-building and supporting the development of political space are
integral to UN Peacekeeping and central to civil affairs work. Through
this role, Civil Affairs actively support the development of social and civic
conditions conducive to sustainable peace and popular engagement and confidence
in the peace process. Civil Affairs usually undertake these activities in
partnership with other mission components as well as UN agencies, local and
international partners.
Role three: Support to the restoration and extension of state authority
Over the last few years, the need to
stabilize weak states emerged more and more strongly as a critical requirement
to keeping and building peace. This has therefore become an area of work in
which Civil Affairs Officers have been increasingly engaged through the support
to state institution and to good governance practices at the sub-national
level.
Quick Impact Projects
In addition to the three core roles described
above, Quick Impact Projects (QIPs) programmes are often managed by Civil
Affairs components. The primary objective of QIPs in UN Peacekeeping is to
build confidence in the mission, its mandate and the peace proce (click here to read more...)
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