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  • Essay / Security Sector Reform and Sustainable Peace

    In the modern world, where democracy is advancing in countries like ours, the world is a huge battlefield. People around the world are in turmoil, looking at the free society of the United States and using it as their beacon, pointing it in the right direction, with their own contribution and their own ideals. These tumults are commonly referred to as revolutions, which usually end with the deaths of many thousands of innocent people fighting for their own right to govern themselves. These rebellions arise because of the way the previous government handled issues related to the people, such as in communist or socialist governments. In these cases, people are stuck where they were born, with no increase in social class or job title, they are placed where states require it. In a Federal Republic, as is the case in the United States, people have a choice about what they want to do with their lives, and they have their own power to do it. This is the characteristic of a government that all people want, they want to be able to have complete control over their lives, so they will spend large sums of money to achieve this, even war. When a revolution is won and the old government is thrown out, there is a question that must be answered: what to do with the old standing army. The solution is security sector reform, although this is not the only use of this practice, it is the most common. Initially, security sector reform can take the form of many different policies, which respond to different situations, and how extensive the security sector reform is. people support. We must first define the theme of security sector reform: “Strengthening the institutional framework for security sector management involves three major challenges: (a...... middle of paper .... ..r new democratic countries to form governments that have been overthrown, to promote the expansion of democracy and crush that of communism Hänggi, Heiner “Conceptualizing security sector reform and reconstruction” 6. (2004). Hendrickson, Dylan and Andrzej Karkoszka. “The Challenges of Security Sector Reform”. Security in Egypt, 2012. Wulf, Herbert. “Security Sector Reform in Developing and Transition Countries.” Security Sector Reform: Potentials and Challenges for Conflict Transformation, Berghof Handbook Dialogue Series 2 ( 2004): 16-17 Sedra, Mark “Challenging the Warlord Culture-Security Sector Reform. in post-Taliban Afghanistan." (2009).