Publications
Articles, publications, books, tools and multimedia features from the U.S. Institute of Peace provide the latest news, analysis, research findings, practitioner guides and reports, all related to the conflict zones and issues that are at the center of the Institute’s work to prevent and reduce violent conflict.
!['U.S.-Light' in Iraq May Open Way for Russia, Iran](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2017-07/20170718-iraq_mosul_scene_8-ac.jpg?itok=SBz-4DLI)
'U.S.-Light' in Iraq May Open Way for Russia, Iran
A failure by the international community to help rebuild Iraq will leave a vacuum that Russia, Iran or some new extremist group will seek to fill, warned the co-chairman of a working group in the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS. In a recent discussion at the U.S. Institute of Peace, Ekkehard Brose agreed with the top U.S. State Department official on Iraq, Joseph Pennington, that Iraq must ultimately solve its own problems. But at this point, it can’t, Brose said.
![How Iraq’s Minorities Can Secure a Future After ISIS](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2017-07/20170801-isis_birth_control_5-event.jpg?itok=tGIZ9euj)
How Iraq’s Minorities Can Secure a Future After ISIS
As Iraqi and Kurdish forces recapture most territory from ISIS, the future of minorities in Iraq remains uncertain. To an even greater extent than Sunni and Shia areas destroyed by ISIS, minority communities face continuing security risks, humanitarian needs, a devastated economy and the imperative of reconciliation.
![Peaceful Elections in Kenya? Start Preparing Now for 2022](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2017-08/20170804-heinrich-boll-stiftung-susanne-raukamp-ac.jpg?itok=oI4ZnjTW)
Peaceful Elections in Kenya? Start Preparing Now for 2022
The people of Kenya go to the polls next week to select their next President as well as members of the national assembly and local-level officials. In a country vital to U.S. security and economic interests in East Africa, preparations for the elections have been rocky and tense. Many analysts have drawn parallels to past elections to predict whether peace or violence will prevail. But assessing the 2017 elections will require more than a snapshot review of election week or comparisons with past violence.
When Reforms, Meant to Ease Violence, Backfire Instead
For seven months in 2016, police in the northern Nigerian city of Jos refused to patrol the Anguwan Rukuba neighborhood, despite the need for action against rampant drug dealing. The boycott stemmed from an attack...
![Q&A: What’s Next for Kenya After Presidential Elections?](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/20170816-Kenya-Election-Rally-The-Commonwealth-Flickr-QA.jpg?itok=2smFjbMp)
Q&A: What’s Next for Kenya After Presidential Elections?
The world watched anxiously as Kenyans prepared for presidential elections last week, concerned that the country would be unable to produce a credible vote free of violence. While some fatalities were reported in sporadic clashes between police and protesters...
![How to Build Out President Trump’s Afghan Plan?](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2017-08/20170822-afghan_election_6-ac.jpg?itok=Qtn6bc4G)
How to Build Out President Trump’s Afghan Plan?
President Trump’s blueprint for the U.S. role in Afghanistan broadly resembles that of prior administrations, correcting some previous errors while appearing likely to repeat others, USIP experts told journalists today.
![Troops, Reforms, Regional Role Define Afghanistan Plan](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2017-08/20170823-afghan_farms_women_2-ac.jpg?itok=iWGul9GW)
Troops, Reforms, Regional Role Define Afghanistan Plan
Along with military pressure to coax the Taliban into a peace process, the new U.S. plan for Afghanistan will support government reforms such as tackling corruption, economic development...
![Surprise Election Ruling Raises Tension Over Kenya Vote](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2017-09/20170901-kenya_election_3-ac.jpg?itok=925CvuAx)
Surprise Election Ruling Raises Tension Over Kenya Vote
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta called for calm after the country’s Supreme Court annulled his re-election, citing “irregularities.” He said he would accept the court’s order for a new election, similarly to the decision last month by his opponent, Raila Odinga, to challenge the election results in court...
![No Quick Answers on Burma’s Rohingya, Mitchell Says](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2017-09/20170908-myanmar_violence_nobel_1-event.jpg?itok=5g6_vxMA)
No Quick Answers on Burma’s Rohingya, Mitchell Says
The crisis of Burma’s Rohingya minority, with an estimated 164,000 already having fled to neighboring Bangladesh, can’t be resolved with any quick strokes such as sanctions or diplomatic pressure, said Derek Mitchell, a former U.S. ambassador to Burma and a senior advisor at the U.S. Institute of Peace.
![Q&A: Sudan, South Sudan Wars--Special Envoy Needed?](https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/styles/summary_image/public/2017-09/20170914-un_ssudan_12-qa.jpg?itok=yvtPr9Gg)
Q&A: Sudan, South Sudan Wars--Special Envoy Needed?
As the war in South Sudan rages on, its dynamics are influenced by events across the border in Sudan and by the policies of neighboring countries, regional groups and the broader international community, notably the U.S. It’s just the kind of situation that cries out for an American diplomat with the stature and the ability to work across borders to help resolve the myriad conflicts underlying the fighting, according to former Special Envoy to Sudan and South Sudan Princeton Lyman and two other former diplomats.