Recent Publications
Philipp Rotmann (2008)
Sicherheit und Frieden 26 (3), pp. 164-171
Thorsten Benner, Stephan Mergenthaler, Philipp Rotmann (2008)
International Herald Tribune, 23 July 2008
Thorsten Benner, Philipp Rotmann (2008)
Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding 2 (1), March 2008, pp. 43-62
Thorsten Benner, Till Blume (2008)
Internationale Politik - Global Edition, Spring 2008, pp. 40-45
Events
13-15 May 2008
UN-NUPI seminar on peacekeeping doctrine
Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI) and the United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO), Oslo, Norway
Philipp Rotmann (moderator)
5 May 2008
Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin (WZB)
CES Berlin Dialogues discussion with Thorsten Benner (GPPi), Markus Jachtenfuchs (Hertie School of Governance, chair), Thomas Risse (FU Berlin), Ruth Wedgwood (Johns Hopkins University SAIS)
29 March 2008
International Studies Association Conference, San Francisco
Philipp Rotmann (panelist on "Multidimensional Peace-keeping and -building and the United Nations")
Related projects
Learning to Build Peace? Developing a Research Framework (March-October 2006)
Learning to Build Peace?
The United Nations, Peace Operations and Organizational Learning
February 2007 - January 2009
Project context
Multidimensional peace operations such as those in Kosovo, Timor-Leste, Liberia and Haiti have emerged as the most ambitious, complex, costly and risky task a changing United Nations has assumed after the end of the Cold War. The tremendous growth both in the number and scope of UN peace operations has multiplied the challenges to doctrine and practice in areas as diverse as public security, judicial reform, disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR), economic reconstruction and coordination of a vastly disparate set of actors both internationally and on the ground. The evolution of UN doctrine and guidance and the organization's capacity to collect and integrate lessons learned was hardly able to keep up with the rapid pace of expansion. While the issue of the UN’s (in)ability to learn ranks increasingly high on the agenda of policymakers in both New York and national capitals, we know surprisingly little on the UN’s capacity for organizational learning on peace operations, and about learning in international organizations in general.
Project objectives
For the period since the start of the implementation of the Brahimi report in 2001, the two-year project seeks to answer the following questions: How have the UN’s doctrines and guidelines on peace operations evolved? How has the UN (not) learned from past experience and new knowledge? Which factors facilitate or hinder organizational learning? To this end, we develop a framework for analysis for a detailed process tracing of organizational learning in a single case study zooming in on four different focal issues along the areas of security, governance, welfare and cross-cutting challenges:
- in the area of security, we focus on the work of UN police in providing public security and the reform, reconstitution and (re)building of local police in post-conflict settings;
- in the area of governance, our focus is on judicial reform in post-conflict environments, from the choice of interim legal frameworks to (re)building judicial systems;
- in the area of welfare, we concentrate on programs aiming at the reintegration of ex-combatants; and
- finally, the project looks into the cross-cutting challenge of mission integration, efforts to create a coherent strategic approach to planning and program delivery within DPKO-led peace operations and together with other UN actors.
The project seeks to break new ground both theoretically and empirically. Theoretically, we will develop a framework for analyzing and operationalizing organizational learning, a concept that until now has largely remained at the metaphorical level. This framework will be tailored and applied to an international organization, adding a political dimension to a field that until now has mostly focused on corporations. In doing so, we bring together approaches from International Relations with organization theory -- a literature so far underutilized for both the analysis of peacebuilding and the study of international organizations in general. At the same time, our study seeks to contribute to correcting one theoretical weakness of the existing literature on peacebuilding which (according to one prominent observer) has "paid relatively little attention to the conceptual foundations of peacebuilding itself, or the basic premises upon which these operations are based."
Empirically, the study will be one of the first to open up the "black box" of the UN peace operations bureaucracy by means of an empirically rich process-tracing of (non-)learning. At the same time, the results promise to be relevant for the practice of UN peace operations (e. g. questions on the design of learning systems at DPKO and other departments or agencies).
Project Outputs
The project's main product will be a book providing a theoretically informed, empirically rich narrative of the UN's learning record in peace operations in the post-Brahimi period. Along the way, we have been publishing a number of articles in peer-reviewed journals and policy publications as well as a number of conference papers which are available for download (see the right column on this page).
As part of an earlier project in 2006 that was also generously supported by the German Foundation for Peace Research (DSF), we developed the basic research framework on which our current work is based. Our pilot study on organizational learning in the UN peace operations bureaucracy is available for download here. For more information about the pilot project, please click here.

