Book

Reconstructing Security After Conflict in Sierra Leone

Process and consequences

Security in Sierra Leone has been transformed since the end of the war in 2002, the intervention of the international community (particularly the UN and the UK) and the work of Sierra Leonean government officials who have kept reforms going over a long period of time. As a result, Sierra Leone is frequently seen as the example of 'security sector reform' (SSR).

Paul Jackson and Peter Albrecht in their book Reconstructing Security after Conflict: Security Sector Reform in Sierra Leone look at the group of reforms that eventually produced SSR in Sierra Leone, tracing the evolution from fire-fighting to increasingly medium-term programmes within an overall framework of long-term commitment to Sierra Leone. They show how this evolution happened and analyze some of the consequences of the actions taken. They also investigate how the experience of Sierra Leone was critical to the development of policies that came to be known as SSR.

The book, published by Palgrave Macmillan as part of the book series New Security Challenges, is based on more than two year's research including the formation of a working group of key actors involved in the process itself, both from the UK and Sierra Leone, and a comprehensive programme of discussions, seminars and interviews with many people involved in the process of SSR. It is the first comprehensive study of what happened in Sierra Leone between the late 1990s and the elections in 2007.

DIIS Experts

 Peter Albrecht
Global security and worldviews
Senior Researcher
+45 3269 8772
Reconstructing security after conflict
security sector reform in Sierra Leone