dc.description.abstract | This study investigates cross border conflicts and their impact on peacebuilding in Kenya
from 1992 to 2010. Cross border conflicts are a threat to peace, human development and security
in Kenya. These conflicts increased in frequency and scale from 1992 to 2010 and this caused
increase in peacebuilding interventions in the same period. The study examines the dimension of
cross border conflicts, their internationalization and how they shape the Horn of Africa conflict
system of which Kenya belongs to. It explores the causes of cross border conflicts; peacebuilding
initiatives and also investigates the intricate relationship between these conflicts and
peacebuilding. Frameworks for analyzing cross border conflicts in modes of actors, issues and
interests in conflicts are also examined. Human needs theory has been used to explain and
predict the relationships between cross border conflicts and peacebuilding. The study adopts a
case study research design because it intensively investigates a particular unit under
consideration and locates the complex factors that account for the behaviour-patterns of the
given unit as an integrated totality; so as to obtain enough information for drawing correct
inferences. Kenya is the case study because it is a regional economic hub and plays a strategic
role of mediation in the search of peace in the Horn of Africa. Under the aegis of Inter-
Governmental Authority on Development and the African Union, Kenya successively mediated
the Sudan Comprehensive Peace Agreement and the agreement establishing the first Transitional
Federal Government of Somalia. The study concludes that there is a link between cross border
conflicts and peacebuilding. Cross border conflicts have impacted upon peacebuilding initiatives
in Kenya, and these initiatives have made crucial attempts to prevent, mitigate and resolve the
conflicts. The study makes recommendations, for instance; taking deliberate efforts to invest
more resources in cross border areas to address the proximate and underlying issues of conflicts,
hastening the process of formulating a policy framework to guide peacebuilding, paying more
attention to the link between research on cross border conflicts and the practice of peacebuilding,
mainstreaming the role of women in peacebuilding initiatives and strengthening the response
structures for conflict early warning. | en_US |