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    No Representation, No Peace: The African demand for a reformed Security Council

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    Author(s)
    Nalbandian, Elise
    Mofya, Brenda
    Kacheche, Lusungu
    Ataya, Rosalie
    Mura, Virginia
    Publication date
    2026-02-12
    Subject
    Conflict and disasters
    Governance and citizenship
    Humanitarian
    Keywords
    UN security council reform
    Veto power abolition
    Multilateralism and global governance
    Democratic Republic of the Congo
    Western Sahara
    AU-UN cooperation mechanisms
    
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    Publisher(s)
    Oxfam International
    Document type
    Briefing note
    Description

    No Representation, No Peace exposes how Africa’s exclusion from permanent membership on the UN Security Council continues to undermine global peace and security. Drawing on case studies from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Western Sahara, the report shows how decisions taken without African representation have fuelled implementation failures, sidelined local voices, and entrenched injustice. It presents Africa’s unified Common Position—rooted in the Ezulwini Consensus and championed by the African Union’s Committee of Ten—which calls for at least two permanent seats for Africa with full veto rights, five non‑permanent seats, and sweeping reforms to make the Council more democratic, transparent, and accountable. Aligning with Oxfam’s Vetoing Humanity findings, the briefing outlines a six‑point agenda to secure Africa’s permanent voice, abolish the veto, strengthen AU–UN cooperation, and centre women and affected communities in peace processes. It is a call to correct historical injustice and build a fairer multilateral system.

    Pages
    13
    DOI
    10.21201/2026.000121
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10546/621781
    Additional Links
    http://policy-practice.oxfam.org.uk/publications/no-representation-no-peace-the-african-demand-for-a-reformed-security-council-621781
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.21201/2026.000121
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