This article conducts a comparative study of the implementation of South Sudan's two principal contemporary peace accords. It examines the structural, political, and institutional factors that have shaped their divergent trajectories. Through a focused comparison of the ARCSS and the R-ARCSS, the analysis identifies persistent obstacles to sustainable peace, including elite intransigence, security sector reform logjams, and the marginalisation of civil society. The study argues that while the R-ARCSS incorporated lessons from the ARCSS's collapse, its implementation has been undermined by similar pathologies, revealing a cyclical pattern of elite bargaining that privileges power-sharing over transformative change. The findings contribute to broader debates on hybrid peace governance and the challenges of post-conflict state-building in Africa.
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Abraham Kuol Nyuon (Ph.D) (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d895a86c1944d70ce06bee — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19475772
Abraham Kuol Nyuon (Ph.D)
Institute for Peace Research and Security Policy
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