Ted Robert Gurr at USIP
Ted Robert Gurr speaking at the
Current Issues Briefing for
Peoples Versus States:
Minorities at Risk in the New Century
(USIP Photo)

In People Versus States (USIP Press, 2000), Ted Gurr contends that ethnic conflict is on the decline due to the employment by state and non-state actors of nonmilitary strategies [more]. At this Current Issues Briefing, panelists discussed this provocative study from the perspective of international organizations, the media, and the policy and scholarly communities, and analyzed of such issues as:

  • the sustainability of the decrease in ethnic conflict;

  • the level of real change in domestic governance in areas with large minority populations and the implications for U.S. policy;

  • the new international environment catalyzed by real-time news reporting;

  • "early warning" indicators that suggest how ethnic violence begins; and

  • ways in which preventive diplomacy might be employed to facilitate de-escalation of emerging conflicts.

The presentation was followed by questions from the audience and the Internet.

 

"Peoples Vs. States" CIB

Audience listens to Richard Ragan at podium during Current Issues Briefing.
Seated l to r : Patrick Cronin, Ted Robert Gurr, Roy Gutman, and Andrew Mack
.


Speakers:

  • Ted Robert Gurr
    Director, Minorities at Risk Project
    Center for International Development and Conflict Management
    University of Maryland

  • Roy Gutman
    Foreign Policy Correspondent,
    Newsday
    Co-author, Crimes of War: What the Public Should Know (WW Norton, 1999)

  • Andrew Mack
    Director of the Strategic Planning Unit
    Office of the Secretary General of the
    United Nations

  • Richard Ragan
    Deputy Assistant Administrator, Bureau of Humanitarian Response
    U.S. Agency for International Development

Moderator:

  • Patrick Cronin
    Director, Research & Studies Program
    United States Institute of Peace

 


USIP Library Resources
Minorities and Refugee Web Links

 


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