Foreword by Bruce Russett 1. Introduction Roy Licklider2. Mixed Motives? Explaining the Decision to Integrate Militaries at Civil War's End Caroline HartzellPart I: Early Adopters3. Sudan 1972-1983 Matthew LeRiche4. Military Integration from Rhodesia to ZimbabwePaul Jackson5. Merging Militaries: The Lebanese Case Florence Gaub Part II: Autonomous Development6. From Failed Power Sharing in Rwanda to Successful Top-Down Military Integration Stephen Burgess 7. From Rebels to Soldiers: An Analysis of the Philippine Policy of Integrating Former Moro National Liberation Front Combatants into the Armed Forces Rosalie Arcala Hall8. South Africa Roy Licklider Part III: International Involvement9. Half-Brewed: The Lukewarm Results of Creating an Integrated Military in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Judith Verweijen10. Merging Militaries: Mozambique Andrea Bartoli and Martha Mutisi11. Bosnia-Herzegovina: From Three Armies to One Rohan Maxwell12. Bringing the Good, the Bad and the Ugly into the Peace Fold: The Republic of Sierra Leone's Armed Forces after the Lome Peace AgreementMimmi Soderberg Kovacs13. Military Integration in Burundi, 2000-2006 Cyrus Samii Part IV: Alternative Perspectives14. The Industrial Organization of Merged Armies David Laitin15. Military Dis-Integration: Canary in the Coal Mine? Ronald R. Krebs16. So What? Roy Licklider ReferencesContributorsIndex