Constitution-Mediation Nexus
Constitutional questions rarely wait politely outside a peace process. Federalism, interim government, security-sector authority, citizenship, electoral rules, resource sharing, and minority protection all appear in mediation rooms long before a constitution-making body is ready to draft. The constitution-mediation nexus names that overlap: the place where a peace process and a constitution-making process shape the same political settlement.
Definition
The constitution-mediation nexus is the interaction between two professional tracks that often run in parallel but answer the same foundational questions. Peace mediation is usually organized around stopping violence, keeping parties in talks, and reaching a political settlement the parties can carry. Constitution-making is organized around the legal and institutional order that will outlive the talks. The tracks meet whenever a mediation decides something about the future state, or whenever a constitutional process inherits choices the mediation made under pressure.
The nexus does not ask mediators to become constitutional designers. It asks them to see when constitutional issues have entered the room. Constitution-making can be pre-empted by settlement language that looked temporary when it was drafted. A clause that gives a movement territorial autonomy, a transitional veto, or guaranteed seats in a constitutional committee may get the parties through the week. Later it can be read as the architecture of the state.
This is why the Berghof and UN mediation-support literature treats the overlap as a distinct coordination problem. The two tracks have different habits. Mediation works with confidentiality, controlled ambiguity, staged concession, and the need to keep armed actors at the table. Constitution-making works with public authority, participation, legal coherence, and a claim to permanence. Neither logic is wrong. Trouble starts when each track assumes the other will solve the cost it has deferred.
Why It Matters
The nexus gives practitioners a way to see when a peace process is silently drafting the future constitution. That visibility matters because many settlement failures are not failures of text alone. They are failures of sequence. The mediation needed enough constitutional language to hold a bargain, but the constitution-making track later needed room to decide questions the mediation had already frozen.
The problem appears most sharply in transitions where no single forum has full legitimacy. A mediation table can include armed and political actors who can stop the war but cannot speak for the whole country. A constitution-making body can include a wider public but still lack the leverage to make armed groups comply. A national dialogue may bridge the two and still need a ratification route, a drafting mandate, and an implementation path. The nexus names that joint design problem instead of letting each institution describe only its own mandate.
It also blocks a familiar dodge. A mediation team may tell itself it is only writing interim arrangements, but interim arrangements can become permanent through inertia. A constitution-making adviser may treat the political deal as outside her lane, while the deal already contains the legal commitments her process will be asked to formalize. Once the overlap is named, neither team can pretend the other’s choices will not bind its own work.
The field disagrees about how much constitutional design belongs inside mediation. One camp warns that mediators who settle federalism, electoral rules, or transitional vetoes before a public constitutional process has begun can narrow the democratic space the constitution is meant to open. Another camp answers that leaving those questions untouched may make a settlement impossible, because parties often need credible guarantees before they stop fighting. The practical position is not to keep the tracks pure. It is to make every transfer between them explicit.
How It Is Recognized
The signature is a peace process making constitutional choices before, beside, or after a formal constitution-making track.
- The mediation text allocates constituent power. It creates or constrains a constitutional assembly, drafting committee, referendum route, transitional charter, or basic-law process.
- Temporary settlement clauses look permanent. Seats, vetoes, autonomy arrangements, or security guarantees written for a transition have no exit trigger and begin to look like the standing constitutional order.
- The same issue appears in two rooms. Federalism, resource sharing, minority protection, land, security-sector control, or citizenship is discussed in both mediation and constitution-making channels, often with different participants.
- The inclusion routes diverge. Armed parties shape the mediation, while civil society, parties, courts, professional associations, customary authorities, women’s networks, or territorial constituencies shape the constitutional forum. The question is not only who is included, but where their inclusion has authority.
- Ambiguity changes function. A phrase useful in mediation because it holds incompatible positions together becomes dangerous in constitution-making because a court, drafting body, or referendum campaign has to assign legal meaning to it.
- The sequence itself becomes contested. Parties argue not only about the substance of constitutional reform but about whether the question should be decided in the peace agreement, in a national dialogue, by an interim legislature, by a constitutional commission, or by referendum.
A clean recognition test is simple: if a mediation decision narrows what a later constitution-making body can decide, the nexus is active. If a constitution-making process depends on armed or political commitments made in mediation, it is active there too.
How It Is Measured
The nexus is measured through a sequence audit, not a score. Practitioners ask which track is deciding which question, with what authority, and with what effect on the other track.
| Dimension | Diagnostic question |
|---|---|
| Issue location | Which constitutional questions are being handled in mediation, which are deferred, and which are assigned to a separate body? |
| Authority route | What gives the mediation text, national dialogue, constitutional commission, legislature, court, or referendum the authority to bind the next step? |
| Prejudice control | Does the agreement protect final constitutional claims from being accidentally settled, or does it quietly decide them? |
| Inclusion route | Which actors have voice in the mediation channel, which have voice in the constitutional channel, and which decisions can each channel actually affect? |
| Time horizon | Is each clause transitional, permanent, or explicitly subject to later constitutional review? |
| Exit trigger | If a transitional arrangement is meant to fall away, what event retires it without requiring the protected actor to surrender it voluntarily? |
| Legal fit | Does the settlement language fit the existing constitutional order, or does it require a legal break the process has not authorized? |
| Implementation chain | Which body turns the mediated bargain into constitutional text, legislation, institutional appointments, or public ratification? |
The audit should expose decisions that have crossed the boundary without being named. A mediated commitment to “appropriate decentralization” may be safe if it preserves options. A mediated commitment to a named federal map may already have decided the constitutional question. The difference is not vocabulary. It is whether the later process still has room to deliberate.
Adjacent Concepts
The nexus sits between agreement design and mediation process architecture. Framework Agreement is often where the boundary is first written: a framework can settle principles, assign a constitution-making route, or protect questions from prejudice. Comprehensive Peace Agreement may then carry the full transition architecture, including constitutional timelines, implementation bodies, and guarantees.
Power-Sharing Agreement is the most direct neighbor because many power-sharing clauses are constitutional in effect. A cabinet quota, territorial-autonomy formula, mutual veto, or security-sector composition rule can begin as reassurance and end as constitutional structure. The nexus asks whether that inheritance is intended, bounded, and reviewable.
National Dialogue is the common bridge. A dialogue can feed constitutional principles into a drafting process, serve as the deliberative front end of a constitution-making track, or fail because its outputs have no route to authority. Inclusivity Architecture supplies the channel discipline: whose voice reaches which decision, with what force.
Lex Pacificatoria explains why this matters beyond one case. Peace-agreement language travels. A constitutional formula borrowed from one process may look familiar enough to use and still carry assumptions that do not fit the next transition. Mandate Creep names the danger when a mediation team quietly becomes a constitutional design body without mandate, competence, or public accountability.
Related Articles
Sources
- Berghof Foundation and United Nations Mediation Support Unit, Constitutions and Peace Processes: A Primer, 2020. The primer is the core practitioner reference for the overlap between peace processes and constitution-making, including sequencing, participation, and the risk of one track constraining the other.
- Berghof Foundation, constitution-making and peace-mediation nexus project, and its 2025 constitution-making and peace-mediation nexus report. The project frames the silo problem directly: mediation and constitutional-design specialists often work on the same settlement without a shared operating model.
- Christina Murray and Dražen Pehar, “The Nexus of Peace Mediation and Constitution Making: The Case for Stronger Interaction and Collaboration,” in Rethinking Peace Mediation, Cambridge University Press, 2022. The chapter supplies the professional-collaboration argument behind treating the overlap as a coordination problem rather than a side issue.
- Interpeace, Constitution-Making for Peace. Interpeace’s program material anchors the peacebuilding view of constitution-making as a process that can prevent violence only when participation, legitimacy, and implementation are designed together.
- International IDEA, Sequencing Peace Agreements and Constitutions in the Political Settlement Process, 2016. The report gives the wider sequencing frame for deciding when constitutional issues belong inside a peace agreement and when they need a separate constitutional route.