ABSTRACT

For most post-conflict countries, the transition to peace is daunting. In countries with high-value natural resources – including oil, gas, diamonds, other minerals, and timber –the stakes are unusually high and peacebuilding is especially challenging. Resource-rich post-conflict countries face both unique problems and opportunities. They enter peacebuilding with an advantage that distinguishes them from other war-torn societies: access to natural resources that can yield substantial revenues for alleviating poverty, compensating victims, creating jobs, and rebuilding the country and the economy. Evidence shows, however, that this opportunity is often wasted. Resource-rich countries do not have a better record in sustaining peace. In fact, resource-related conflicts are more likely to relapse.

Focusing on the relationship between high-value natural resources and peacebuilding in post-conflict settings, this book identifies opportunities and strategies for converting resource revenues to a peaceful future. Its thirty chapters draw on the experiences of forty-one researchers and practitioners – as well as the broader literature – and cover a range of key issues, including resource extraction, revenue sharing and allocation, and institution building. The book provides a concise theoretical and practical framework that policy makers, researchers, practitioners, and students can use to understand and address the complex interplay between the management of high-value resources and peace.

High-Value Natural Resources and Post-Conflict Peacebuilding is part of a global initiative led by the Environmental Law Institute (ELI), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the University of Tokyo, and McGill University to identify and analyze lessons in natural resource management and post-conflict peacebuilding. The project has generated six edited books of case studies and analyses, with contributions from practitioners, policy makers, and researchers. Other books in the series address land; water; livelihoods; assessing and restoring natural resources; and governance.

chapter 1|16 pages

High-value natural resources

A blessing or a curse for peace?

part 1|136 pages

Extraction and extractive industries

chapter 2|3 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|24 pages

Bankrupting peace spoilers

Can peacekeepers curtail belligerents' access to resource revenues?

chapter 4|19 pages

Mitigating risks and realizing opportunities

Environmental and social standards for foreign direct investment in high-value natural resources

chapter 6|34 pages

Reopening and developing mines in post-conflict settings

The challenge of company-community relations

chapter 7|25 pages

Diamonds in war, diamonds for peace

Diamond sector management and kimberlite mining in Sierra Leone

part 2|66 pages

Commodity and revenue tracking

chapter 9|2 pages

Introduction

chapter 10|21 pages

The Kimberley Process at ten

Reflections on a decade of efforts to end the trade in conflict diamonds

chapter 11|7 pages

The Kimberley Process Certification Scheme

A model negotiation?

chapter 12|6 pages

The Kimberley Process Certification Scheme

The primary safeguard for the diamond industry

chapter 13|6 pages

A more formal engagement

A constructive critique of certification as a means of preventing conflict and building peace

chapter 15|10 pages

Excluding illegal timber and improving forest governance

The European Union's Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade initiative

part 4|169 pages

Allocation and institution building

chapter 21|3 pages

Introduction

chapter 22|16 pages

High-value natural resources, development, and conflict

Channels of causation

chapter 23|24 pages

Petroleum blues

The political economy of resources and conflict in Chad

chapter 24|29 pages

Leveraging high-value natural resources to restore the rule of law

The role of the Liberia Forest Initiative in Liberia's transition to stability

chapter 25|24 pages

Forest resources and peacebuilding

Preliminary lessons from Liberia and Sierra Leone

chapter 26|22 pages

An inescapable curse?

Resource management, violent conflict, and peacebuilding in the Niger Delta

chapter 27|23 pages

The legal framework for managing oil in post-conflict Iraq

A pattern of abuse and violence over natural resources

chapter 28|23 pages

The capitalist civil peace

Some theory and empirical evidence

part 5|161 pages

Livelihoods

chapter 29|3 pages

Introduction

chapter 30|24 pages

Counternarcotics efforts and Afghan poppy farmers

Finding the right approach

chapter 31|11 pages

The Janus nature of opium poppy

A view from the field

chapter 32|26 pages

Peace through sustainable forest management in Asia

The USAID Forest Conflict Initiative

chapter 35|8 pages

Lurking beneath the surface

Oil, environmental degradation, and armed conflict in Sudan

chapter 36|51 pages

Building or spoiling peace?

Lessons from the management of high-value natural resources