Impartiality is a guiding principle in United Nations peace operations that has helped legitimize multilateral intervention in dozens of armed conflicts around the world. In practice, it has long been associated with passive monitoring of cease-fires and peace agreements. In the twenty-first century, however, its meaning has been stretched to allow for a range of forceful, intrusive, and ideologically prescriptive practices, all in the name of building durable
peace. In Intrusive Impartiality, Marion Laurence explains how these new ways of being "impartial" emerge, how they spread within and across missions, and how they become
institutionalized across UN peace operations. Laurence argues that new peacekeeping practices are not only products of top-down pressures from member states or instructions from the UN Secretariat; they often emerge from tacit knowledge and unconscious decisions about how to follow orders or comply with social rules. By foregrounding the creativity and agency of the field staff who are responsible for translating mandates into action, Laurence shows that new definitions and practices of
impartiality are products of contestation, learning, and the interplay between top-down pressures and bottom-up drivers of change in UN peace operations. Drawing on original data
gathered through extensive fieldwork, Laurence uses evidence from UN missions in Sierra Leone, Côte d'Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and from UN headquarters in New York, to provide an innovative framework for studying authority and change in global governance. In doing so, Intrusive Impartiality sheds light on controversial changes in peacekeeping practice and yields valuable insights about the practical and ethical dilemmas that confront UN peacekeepers.
Industry Reviews
"What does 'impartiality' mean in the context of peace operations? In this superb volume, Marion Laurence breaks new ground by examining impartiality not as a fixed norm, but as an evolving set of practices performed--and continuously reinterpreted, for better or worse--by peacekeeping practitioners on the ground. Her account is fascinating, convincing, and wonderfully clear." -- Roland Paris, Director of the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs,
University of Ottawa
"This book is practice theory at its best: building on rich case studies based on comprehensive fieldwork and a solid research design, Laurence provides an innovative and thought-provoking take on the nexus between practices and norms. To the benefit of scholars and practitioners alike, she brilliantly demonstrates that the practice of impartiality in United Nations peace operations is evolving in partial disconnect with international norms and institutions."
-- Vincent Pouliot, James McGill Professor in the Department of Political Science, McGill University