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With the departure of the Soviet and Cubans from Southern Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa no longer comprises a part of the West's core strategic interest. This book provides a thorough examination of one dimension of peacekeeping in Africa: ECOMOG'S role in the attempt to bring peace to Liberia and the impact of this operation on the region.
Karl P. Magyar is Professor of National Security Affairs at the US Air Force Command and Staff College in Alabama. Earl Conteh-Morgan is Associate Professor of International Studies at the University of Southern Florida in Tampa.
Preface - Notes on the Contributors - Introduction: Adapting Peacemaking Mechanisms in an Era of Global Change; E.Conteh-Morgan - International Organizations and Peacekeeping in Africa; G.Klay Kieh - The Politics and Diplomacy of the Liberian Peace Process; E.Conteh-Morgan - ECOMOG's Operations: Lessons for Peace-Keeping; K.P.Magyar - Liberia's Internal Responses to ECOMOG's Interventionist Efforts; D.Elwood Dunn - Nigerian Foreign Policy and its Participation in ECOMOG; T.Mays - Senegal's Role in ECOMOG: The Francophone Dimension in the Liberian Crisis; R.A.Mortimer - Sierra Leone's Response to ECOMOG: The Imperative of Geographic Proximity; E.Conteh-Morgan & S.Kadivar - Extra-Africa Interests in the Liberian Conflict; S.Byron Tarr - Conclusion: Liberia's Peacekeeping Lessons for Africa; K.P.Magyar - Index