Sort
Top Afghan Officials Appeal for Sustained Help Against Opium

Top Afghan Officials Appeal for Sustained Help Against Opium

Friday, June 14, 2013

Top Afghan ministers and the governors of Kandahar, Helmand and Farah provinces appealed for international support of projects to curb the country’s opium poppy trade over the long haul, amid the risk that cultivation will rise in the short term as most U.S.-led military forces withdraw and foreign aid declines.

Type: Analysis

EnvironmentEconomics

Questions and Answers with David J. Smith

David Smith answers questions about his new book, Peacebuilding in Community Colleges: A Teaching Resource. Smith discusses the relationship between community colleges and global education. He also highlights the benefits and challenges of developing peace and conflict resolution programs at two-year institutions.

Type: Analysis

Syria Leaves U.S., EU Uncertain How to Meet Pledge to Prevent Atrocities

Syria Leaves U.S., EU Uncertain How to Meet Pledge to Prevent Atrocities

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Despite pledges to carry out the principle of the responsibility to protect against mass killings, the U.S. and the EU have struggled how to respond to Syria, even as the scale of human loss eclipses that of Libya before the international community intervened. A USIP panel considers how to move forward.

Type: Analysis

Helping Somalia Move Forward

Helping Somalia Move Forward

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Congressman Keith Ellison this month met with USIP President Jim Marshall, USIP Vice Chairman Ambassador George Moose, former Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson, now a senior advisor at USIP, David Smock, senior vice president of USIP’s Centers of Innovation, and Jon Temin, director of USIP’s Horn of Africa program, to discuss the current situation in Somalia.

Type: Analysis

USIP-Supported Radio Drama Aims to Strengthen Justice, Young People in Afghanistan

USIP-Supported Radio Drama Aims to Strengthen Justice, Young People in Afghanistan

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Young Afghan villagers Zarlakhta and Jamil would like to marry. But there is a big problem: Zarlakhta’s father is deceased and her uncle Akram is dead-set against the union, fearing that his family will lose good farm land that, in a marriage, would transfer to Jamil’s family. Akram is so opposed to the marriage that he is trying to fix Zarlakhta up with his son Khudaidad to keep the land in his own family, and when that scheme doesn’t work he shoots Jamil. Jamil survives, and Akram flees the...

Type: Analysis

Mediation, Negotiation & Dialogue

Questions and Answers with the Robert M. Perito

Where Is the Lone Ranger? Questions and Answers with the Author Why is the figure of the Lone Ranger emblematic of the need for a U.S. stability force, and what does this tradition have to offer in the way of guidance? The Lone Ranger, “the most famous Ranger of them all,” stands against lawlessness and injustice. He never shoots to kill but disarms his opponents and restores peace. At the conclusion of his mission, the Lone Ranger and his companion ride off into the sunset and toward ...

Type: Analysis

USIP Meeting Examines Iran’s Post-Election Politics

USIP Meeting Examines Iran’s Post-Election Politics

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Iran’s June 14 presidential election, with its surprise, first-round win for the most moderate candidate in the officially approved field, demonstrates that Iranian politics and support for reform remain vibrant despite the right wing’s hold on power in recent years, a panel of experts said at a July 15 meeting at the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP).

Type: Analysis

Conflict Analysis & Prevention