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Decolonizing Ngo Peacebuilding and Liberal Peace Agenda in Northern Uganda

Contributor(s): Opongo, Elias O (Author)

ISBN: 9781666966053

Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic

Hardcover
$120.00
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Pub Date: February 19, 2026

Dewey: 303.6609667

LCCN: 2025032959

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.63" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 1.12 lbs) 256 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Critically examining how Western-funded NGO interventions have shaped post-conflict recovery in Uganda, this book argues that the liberal peace agenda often marginalizes local agency and undermines culturally rooted approaches to peacebuilding.

Brief description: Elias O. Opongo is Professor of Peace Studies and International Relations and Director of the Centre for Research, Training, and Publications (CRTP) at Hekima University College in Nairobi, Kenya.

Review Quotes:

"Throughout this book, Elias O. Opongo challenges Western-led liberal peacebuilding perspectives in Northern Uganda, exposing their contextual limits. He, therefore, advocates for community-based, culturally rooted alternatives that speak to the realities of the people. Drawing on Acholi traditions and local agency, this book offers a decolonial framework for sustainable peace, making it essential reading for scholars and practitioners rethinking global peace interventions. It is a suitable piece for diverse range of disciplines, and particularly those that touch on conflicts, security, and peacebuilding models." --Susan M. Kilonzo, Professor of Sociology of Religion, Maseno University, Kenya

"In the last decade or so, African scholars in particular, and Black scholars more generally have seen an increase in the popularization of decolonizing knowledge. Opongo's book, however, does not employ decolonization as a fashionable motif, but instead truly explores and interrogates decolonizing the NGO peacebuilding project. Using Northern Uganda as his case, Opongo shows how efforts to build and sustain peace can be successful when conflicts are read in their long durée, when they foreground local knowledge and traditions, and if the communities involved are respected as knowers and experts. At the same time, this book highlights a critically nuanced discussion of many taken-for-granted concepts such as democracy, human rights, international NGO, neoliberalism, security sector reforms, and even peace. For this reason, this book is an important reading from a respected scholar, delivered in an accessible style, that will be appreciated by scholars across political science, history, religion, peace and security and African studies." --Akosua Adomako Ampofo, Professor of African and Gender Studies, University of Ghana, Ghana

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