Publication

Jan 2014

Using Sierra Leone's and Liberia's armed forces reform as an example, this paper examines why some countries have more successful post-conflict reconstruction programs than others. Overall, the author argues that the reason Sierra Leone was more successful than Liberia was because the post-conflict ruling regime in the country better reflected the distribution of power between forces on the ground, something which led to a consultative process and a moderate reform program that had the support of key local actors.

Download English (PDF, 18 pages, 614 KB)
Author Ato Kwamena Onoma
Series UNU-Wider Working Papers
Issue 12
Publisher World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER)
Copyright © 2014 UNU-WIDER
JavaScript has been disabled in your browser