USIP staff provide conflict-management training to foster development, democracy, and social well-being in contested areas of Colombia.

Posted: November 16, 2011
by Rebecca Kullman

Although Colombia’s internal armed conflict began half a century ago, considerable progress has been made in recent years towards restoring stability. However, the country continues to be beleaguered by human rights violations and violations of international humanitarian law, insecurity and criminality, internal displacement, and violent land disputes.
 
The Colombian government’s Center for Coordination of Integrated Action (CCAI) reached out to USIP in 2009 for expertise in interagency coordination and conflict-management training. CCAI aims to reestablish legitimate governance and to foster development, democracy, and social well-being in areas that Colombian authorities have liberated from guerrillas, paramilitaries, or drug lords.
 
Jacqueline Wilson, Rebecca Kullman, and Jeff Helsing of USIP’s Academy for International Conflict Management and Peacebuilding led a working session for CCAI in Santa Marta, Colombia, on interagency coordination, consensus building, and conflict resolution in late July 2009. This one-day program was designed for Colombian officials who would be working with communities in formerly rebel-held areas to develop programs of reconstruction and reintegration into Colombian society.
 
USIP’s contribution complemented the U.S. government’s support of the CCAI model for integrated collaboration between security and development sectors. The CCAI program and the workshop were supported by the U.S. Embassy, USAID, and SOUTHCOM.
 
The program was part of a broader three-day workshop that included a speech by then-president Alvaro Uribe. CCAI program analyst Jessica Bryant said that the USIP workshop “was truly valuable for all participants. . . . The working groups provided a space for the application of new frameworks for analysis and, from the conversations I heard during these sessions, allowed participants to think about very familiar problems in new and interesting ways.”

Explore Further

 

Related Publications

Cartographie du chemin de la justice en Haïti : Leçons de la Colombie et du Guatemala

Cartographie du chemin de la justice en Haïti : Leçons de la Colombie et du Guatemala

Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Le nouveau gouvernement intérimaire d'Haïti fait face à des défis immenses, mais aucun n'est aussi urgent que de briser l'emprise des gangs sur la capitale du pays, Port-au-Prince. La force seule ne suffira pas à apporter la paix, même avec l'arrivée de la mission multinationale de soutien à la sécurité dirigée par le Kenya, de taille modeste. Le pays a plutôt besoin de mécanismes créatifs et globaux impliquant toute la société — et non seulement l'ensemble du gouvernement — pour détourner les membres des gangs du crime et de la violence dans le cadre d'une stratégie globale de lutte contre les gangs.

Type: Analysis

Justice, Security & Rule of LawReconciliation

Mapping Haiti’s Road Toward Justice: Lessons from Colombia and Guatemala

Mapping Haiti’s Road Toward Justice: Lessons from Colombia and Guatemala

Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Haiti’s new interim government faces immense challenges, but none are as urgent as breaking the stranglehold that gangs have over the country’s capital, Port au Prince. Force alone will not bring peace, even with the arrival of the modestly-sized and Kenyan-led multinational security support mission. The country instead requires creative, whole-of-society — not just whole-of-government — mechanisms to divert gang members from crime and violence as part of a comprehensive counter-gang strategy.

Type: Analysis

Justice, Security & Rule of LawReconciliation

China-Colombia Relations are Growing, if Slowly

China-Colombia Relations are Growing, if Slowly

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Colombian President Gustavo Petro’s visit to Beijing in October amounted to a notable — if quite small — step forward for China and Colombia, building on growing trade and other ties, while also laying the groundwork for cooperation on issues, such as media and security, which China has promoted across the region.

Type: Analysis

Global Policy

La guerra entre Israel y Hamas divide a América Latina a través de líneas partidistas

La guerra entre Israel y Hamas divide a América Latina a través de líneas partidistas

Wednesday, November 8, 2023

A medida que aumentan las bajas civiles en el conflicto entre Israel y Hamás, muchos líderes latinoamericanos están intensificando sus críticas al gobierno israelí. Bolivia recientemente se convirtió en el primer país en romper relaciones con Israel; Chile, Colombia y Honduras llamaron a sus embajadores para consultas; y diplomáticos de Argentina, Brasil y México han condenado a Israel por su violencia, exigiendo un cese inmediato de las hostilidades.

Type: Analysis

Global Policy

View All Publications