Solomon Islands Police Perceptions of Australian and New Zealand Policing Assistance

Abstract

Police reform is a critical component of peacekeeping, peacebuilding, and reintroducing stability in countries emerging from conflict. The assumption is that without a secure environment and a security system, sustained peace, political, economic, and cultural rebuilding is impossible. Ethnic conflict in the Solomon Islands between 1998–2003 resulted in reform of the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force (RSIPF), carried out by the Australian-led Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands (RAMSI). This institutional reconfiguration has been presented by the Solomon Islands government and RAMSI as a success and the gold standard for reforms in the Pacific. Despite this, internal stakeholder perspectives on the effectiveness and appropriateness of post-conflict institutional reform are absent. This work analyses and explores reflections and experiences of reform held by RSIPF officers at the mission’s culmination. It interrogates critical reflections on the changes during reform, examines key concerns and drawbacks, and advances literature on post-conflict scholarship.

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Published: 2024-09-01
Pages:47 to 58
Section:Special Issue: The Emergence of a Pacific Criminology
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How to Cite
Harry, C. . (2024) “Solomon Islands Police Perceptions of Australian and New Zealand Policing Assistance”, International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, 13(3), pp. 47-58. doi: 10.5204/ijcjsd.3603.

Author Biography

The University of Trinidad and Tobago
 Trinidad and Tobago

Casandra Harry is an Assistant Professor at the University of Trinidad and Tobago. Dr. Harry is also an affiliate of the Queensland University of Technology Centre for Justice’s Small Island Security Governance Research Group. Her research interests are multi-disciplinary in scope spanning criminology, sociology, gender studies, and international relations. She conducts research on policing, gender relations, and police reform with a focus on the Pacific and Caribbean regions.