<p><strong>'To some, UN Police are the most useful tool in post conflict situations. Others argue that the diverse, disparate nature of UN Police components in peacekeeping operations makes them unfit for purpose. Hunt's methodological approach to monitoring and evaluating UN Police performance has the real potential to assist in developing a clearer understanding of the effectiveness of international policing and in identifying areas that require strengthening and support, or even a total rethink.'</strong> -- <em>Andrew Hughes, APM, Commissioner (retd.) - Police Adviser to the UN and Director of the Police Division, DPKO, 2007-09</em></p><p><strong>'Hunt's innovative study tackles two key questions in contemporary peace operations: what impact do these missions have on host societies and how might they be improved? Using detailed research on the roles of civilian police in UN missions and the case of UNMIL in Liberia in particular, Hunt makes the case that the key to effective policing lies in organizational learning and that this can be facilitated by a reformed approach to monitoring and evaluation. This book offers students and practitioners of peace operations much food for thought on how to design monitoring and evaluation frameworks that capture the complexity of contemporary peace operations and their interactions with the host society.</strong>'-- <em>Paul D. Williams, George Washington University, USA</em></p><p><strong>'Charles Hunt's work is not only highly relevant for academics, it is also inspiring for programme managers and M&E practitioners questioning the limits of conventional systems and ''hungry for guidance'' on how to improve them.' </strong>--<em>Stefan Rummel-Shapiro, Senior M&E Advisor, United Nations Peace Building Support Office (UN-PBSO)</em></p>
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Biographical note
Charles T. Hunt is a lecturer in International Security in the School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland, Australia. He is co-editor of Making Sense of Peace and Capacity-Building Operations (2010) and co-author of Forging New Conventional Wisdom Beyond International Policing (2013).