Competing Visions and Converging Realities? Justice and Security Governance in Post-Conflict Bougainville and Solomon Islands

Abstract

This article examines narratives and practices of post-conflict recovery in Bougainville and Solomon Islands respectively, with particular emphasis on the governance of justice and security. The original visions and pathways to recovery differed markedly in each case. Drawing on local strengths, including traditional leadership and customary practices of reconciliation, was integral to Bougainville’s aspirations for peacebuilding and the shaping of its post-conflict social and political order. Under the auspices of a major Australian-led regional intervention, Solomon Islands followed a more conventional state building approach that made few concessions to the significance of local non-state social institutions and actors in relation to justice and security. Despite these initial divergences, recent years have seen growing areas of convergence in both places, notably around acknowledging the importance of practical hybridity between state and non-state forms of justice and security governance.

Creative Commons License
Except where otherwise noted, content in this journal is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Published: 2024-09-01
Pages:97 to 108
Section:Special Issue: The Emergence of a Pacific Criminology
Fetching Scopus statistics
Fetching Web of Science statistics
How to Cite
Dinnen, S. (2024) “Competing Visions and Converging Realities? Justice and Security Governance in Post-Conflict Bougainville and Solomon Islands”, International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, 13(3), pp. 97-108. doi: 10.5204/ijcjsd.3653.

Author Biography

The Australian National University
 Australia

Sinclair Dinnen is a professor in the Department of Pacific Affairs at the Australian National University. He previously taught law at the University of Papua New Guinea and was a senior fellow at PNG’s National Research Institute. His research interests include law and development, crime and policing, conflict and peacebuilding, and postcolonial statehood.