Abstract

In June 2015, a special un panel issued the latest in a series of reports on the reform of un peace operations. The report includes a large number of recommendations that constitute major policy changes as well as those concerned with addressed administrative and disciplinary problems associated with peacekeeping deployment. This article focuses on four significant sets of recommendations dealing with the former set: mandate reform, expanding collaborative activities with other actors, taking preventive action, and accelerating rapid reaction. For each of these, we discuss some of the barriers to implementation and associated limitations. The conclusion is that the suggested reforms might be adopted on an inconsistent and case-by-case basis with the risk that they will appear once again in a future un report.

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