Abstract

Amidst the wide consensus that building peace must be a nationally led endeavour, the notion of infrastructures for peace, or I4P, has arisen to capture the attention of policy and practice communities engaged in peacebuilding, statebuilding and development. That peace requires a robust architecture to sustain is self-evident, and yet the international community has not been quick to support I4P. Traditional approaches to peacebuilding have tended to concentrate on one-off activities and interventions rather than longer-term structures to undergird and sustain peace efforts....

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