Throughout this book, Elias O. Opongo challenges Western-led liberal peacebuilding perspectives in Northern Uganda, exposing their contextual limits. He, therefore, advocates for community-based, culturally rooted alternatives that speak to the realities of the people. Drawing on Acholi traditions and local agency, this book offers a decolonial framework for sustainable peace, making it essential reading for scholars and practitioners rethinking global peace interventions. It is a suitable piece for diverse range of disciplines, and particularly those that touch on conflicts, security, and peacebuilding models.