Abstract
United Nation’s Peacekeeping Operations have been contested since
the first blue helmets arrived in the Gaza Strip in 1956. Peacekeeping
Operations can be divided into three temporal categories, each with
their own challenges: Cold War, post-Cold War, and twenty-first
century. This article analyzes these three periods of peacekeeping in
order to profer advice as to how UN Peacekeeping should be
undertaken in the future. Considering that UN member states are shying
away from the financial burdens of peacekeeping and that the twentyfirst
century has been marked by states’ desire to engage only in
conflicts directly in line with national interests, I suggest that the
United Nations should return to limited-mandate peacekeeping
missions. By combining limited-mandate missions with a greater focus
on conflict prevention, the United Nations may continue to play an
important role in global peacekeeping.