Blue HelmetCongratulations on your silver book award!

Synopsis

Blue Helmet: My Year as a UN Peacekeeper in South Sudan tells the story of a country, a conflict, and the institution of peacekeeping through the eyes of a senior American military officer working on the ground in one of the most dangerous countries on the planet. South Sudan is rich in natural resources, and its fertile soil could make it the breadbasket of East Africa. Yet it remains the poorest and most corrupt country in the region, plagued by disease, famine, and ethnic strife. Abductions, sexual violence, death, and displacement affect tens of thousands of people each year.

Edward H. Carpenter pulls readers into his world, allowing them to experience the powerful, poignant realities of being a peacekeeper in South Sudan. In the process, the author reveals how the United Nations really conducts its missions: what it tolerates and how it often falls short of achieving the aims of its charter—equal rights, justice, and economic advancement for all people—with the use of armed forces limited to serving those common interests by keeping the peace and preventing the scourge of war. It is a story that is eye-opening, unsettling, and always compelling.

Global leaders may fairly claim that they have done everything they can to help South Sudan help itself: they’ve dispatched thousands of peacekeepers and provided billions of dollars in aid. So why is the UN still struggling to fulfill its mandate to protect civilians and safeguard the delivery of humanitarian assistance? What could be done better? Bringing the reader to the forefront of action, Blue Helmet answers these questions and raises others about how modern peacekeeping missions are organized and overseen, shedding light on some of the contradictions at the heart of peacekeeping.

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Author Bio

Edward H. Carpenter is a retired lieutenant colonel who served with the US Marines in Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, and Japan. He deployed with the United Nations in South Sudan as Chief of Policy and Plans for the mission’s 14,000 peacekeepers. With firsthand experience of the futility of war and the importance of effective peacebuilding, he has authored numerous articles, with bylines in the Washington Post, World Politics Review, and War on the Rocks. A former Chief of Naval Operations Strategic Studies Group fellow with graduate degrees in creative writing from Harvard and philosophy from the University of Melbourne, Edward has taught as an Adjunct Professor at the University of Maryland and a Military Professor at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, and has been recognized with the Navy League’s Alfred Thayer Mahan Award for Literary Achievement. He now uses his writing and speaking skills to advocate for UN reforms and for the end of organized violence as an international norm—and his abilities as an educator and editor to help other writers find their voices and shape their stories. Edward’s home is wherever his wife Jayde is working, which is often in Melbourne, Australia. His work can be found at www.ehcarpenter.com

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