Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at post-conflict.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Post-conflict.
Examples
-
Post-conflict states should be prepared to share sovereignty with the international community in appropriate ad-hoc arrangements.
June Books 2) Option Lock, by Justin Richards yiskah 2010
-
Post-conflict aid also helps to restore financial and human capital, though perhaps 11% (a surprisingly precise figure) gets diverted to military expenditure
June Books 2) Option Lock, by Justin Richards yiskah 2010
-
Post-conflict, Mahmoud's story is part of the great patchwork of recovery the incoming governors of Libya will need to knit together -- after all, they need a full participating citizenry to build the new Libya.
Sarah Holewinski: You're a Widow in Libya... Now What? Sarah Holewinski 2011
-
Post-conflict countries like Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea and Rwanda have dropped the "basket case" label that dogged their recoveries to become viable investment destinations, the latter through pro-business reforms, the former three through resource wealth and improved political stability.
Spelling Out Growth Peter Guest 2011
-
Post-conflict settlements are more durable in repressive states than democratic ones (Angola vs Sri Lanka)
June Books 2) Option Lock, by Justin Richards yiskah 2010
-
Post-conflict, "there will be an unacceptable situation on the ground, no matter how this particular phase" wraps up, because Israel and Hamas are like "that Monty Python sketch with the 100 meter dash with runners for no sense of direction."
-
Post-conflict nations can grow quickly, thanks to rebuilding efforts: After the first Iraq war in 1991, Kuwait's economy grew 30% annually on average from 1992 to 1994, according to Capital Economics.
Politics Cloud Libya's Economic Hopes Andrew Peaple 2011
-
Post-conflict changes of government present situations in which weakened states are in need of outside assistance, and citizens and their leaders are more prone than usual to entertain the need for structural changes in their societies, economies, or armies.
-
Post-conflict states, where clinics can be set up quickly, the rule of law or the legal regime or the health regime is weak, and persons can exploit that.
-
Post-conflict states, where clinics can be set up quickly, the rule of law or the legal regime or the health regime is weak, and persons can exploit that.
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.