Dudouet, Véronique2012-03-072012-03-072012http://hdl.handle.net/10625/48443The project undertook innovative research on content, timing, sequencing and ownership of security transitions from the perspective of conflict stakeholders who have made the shift from state challengers to peace- and state building agents. It aimed to analyse the successes and limitations of past or ongoing peacebuilding processes from the point of view of their ‘receiving end,’ by integrating the voice of insurgency movements and their demobilised militants. Nine country cases, namely, Colombia, South Africa, El Salvador, Northern Ireland, Kosovo, Burundi, South Sudan, Nepal and Aceh, were selected so that a comparative analysis exploring cross-country commonalities and local specificities could be drawn.Text1 digital file (22 p.)enNON-STATE ARMED GROUPSSECURITY TRANSFORMATIONPOST WAR PEACEBUILDINGPEACE RESEARCHCONFLICT RESOLUTIONDISARMAMENTPOLITICAL DEVELOPMENTSOCIAL CHANGECOMPARATIVE ANALYSISSECURITY SECTOR REFORMPOST-CONFLICT SOCIETIESPEACEBUILDINGPOLITICAL STABILITYCOLOMBIASOUTH AFRICAKOSOVOSOUTH SUDANNEPALNORTHERN IRELANDBURUNDIGLOBALFinal technical report / From War to Politics : Non-State Armed Groups in Transition, 2009-2011Final Technical Report