NYU Center on International Cooperation | July 2024 | 6 Glossary Recovery and The RPBA is a joint approach of the UN, the World Bank, and the Peacebuilding European Union to identify and address immediate and medium- Assessment term recovery and peacebuilding requirements while laying the (RPBA) foundations for the elaboration of a longer-term recovery and peacebuilding strategy in a country facin. [...] The UN defines the security sector as “… the structures, institutions and personnel responsible for the management, provision and oversight of security in a country,” to include “defence, law enforcement, corrections, intelligence services and institutions responsible for border management, customs and civil emergencies” as well as the “actors that play a role in managing and overseeing the design. [...] In Somalia, the UN has devised a series of joint programs to strengthen the capacity and accountability of state institutions to recover territory; stabilize and provide basic safety and security (police component); ensure the alignment of laws (including on the reorganization of the judiciary) with the Constitution and international standards; and ensure that more Somalis have access to fair and. [...] Box 4: Nationally-led SSR efforts in The Gambia In The Gambia, through the Global Focal Point for the Rule of Law (GFP) and the Inter- Agency Task Force (IATF) on SSR, as well as funding through the Peacebuilding Fund (PBF),45 the UN supported the conduct of a government-led46 inclusive SSR assessment that informed the development of the country’s first security sector policies and strategies,47 a. [...] It focused on the implications of the upcoming closure of the UN mission and the need to factor the costs of sustaining the associated security transition in the country’s first medium-term expenditure framework (MTEF), broadening the scope of the review to the entire security sector.
- Pages
- 69
- Published in
- United States of America
Table of Contents
- UNITED NATIONS AND WORLD BANK COLLABORATION IN SECURITY AND JUSTICE SECTORS LINKAGES TO DEVELOPMENT 1
- Acknowledgements 3
- Glossary 4
- Abbreviations 9
- Authors 12
- Table of Contents 13
- Executive Summary 15
- Lessons Learned 16
- Recommendations 16
- Introduction and Methodology 19
- 1.1 What do we mean by security and justice sectors reform and governance 19
- 1.2 Why is reform and governance of the security and justice sectors important for development 20
- Lessons Learned 29
- 2.1 Lessons from United Nations engagement 30
- 2.2 Lessons from World Bank Engagement 34
- 2.3 Lessons from UN-World Bank partnerships 41
- Recommendations 50
- Recommendations for the UN and World Bank to do jointly together 50
- Recommendations for joint United Nations-World Bank action 52
- Conclusion 55
- Appendix 1 List of individuals consulted for this report 56
- Appendix 2 Impact of A New Agenda for Peace on the Sustainable Development Goals 58
- Endnotes 59