Publications & Tools
In collaboration with the Center for Public Health and Human Rights of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
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November 2010
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Peace Brief
by Leonard S. Rubenstein
This Peace Brief, based on a panel discussion convened by the U.S. Institute of Peace Health and Peacebuilding Working Group on June 29, 2010, was written by Leonard Rubenstein, coordinator of the USIP Working Group and a Senior Scientist at the Center for Public Health and Human Rights at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. |
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October 2010
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Peace Brief
by Leonard S. Rubenstein
This Peace Brief uses the work of one NGO, the International Medical Corps, as a case study to understand the factors that are contributing to the diminution of humanitarian space and actions that could possibly expand it. Countries: Afghanistan, Pakistan
| Issue Areas: Health and Peacebuilding, Post-Conflict and Peacekeeping Activities
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September 2010
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Peace Brief
by Leonard Rubenstein and Anjalee Kohli
The need for mental health services as part of emergency and long-term health development responses in regions of armed conflict is widely recognized. To date, responses have too often been fragmented, lack comprehensiveness, and based on assumptions rather than on evidence of effectiveness. This Peace Brief reviews the challenges and how Inter-Agency Standing Committee guidelines can point a way forward. |
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June 2010
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Peace Brief
by Leonard S. Rubenstein
Globalization of infectious disease transmission has led to international and regional initiatives to improve surveillance and response. The World Health Organization’s revised International Health Regulations provide a more robust legal framework for outbreak investigations. New regional networks are strengthening collaborative approaches to prevention of pandemics even in parts of the world where political tensions usually run high. Issue Areas: Health and Peacebuilding
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April 2010
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Peace Brief
by Anjalee Kohli, Kathleen Kuehnast, Leonard Rubenstein
The challenges of effectively addressing sexual and gender-based violence in war torn communities are daunting. This Peace Brief describes the pivotal role the health sector can play, obstacles to its exercising these needed functions, and steps that can be taken to contribute to developing support for survivors as part of an integrated approach. Issue Areas: Gender and Peacebuilding, Health and Peacebuilding
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March 2010
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Peace Brief
by Leonard S. Rubenstein
An initiative by the Ministry of Public Health in Afghanistan to expand health services throughout the country, including rural communities, and supported by donors including USAID, has vastly expanded access to primary health care services, significantly reduced child mortality, and increased the capacity of the Afghan government to provide an essential service to its people. |
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January 2010
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Peace Brief
by Leonard Rubenstein and Anjalee Kohli
Initiatives to seek to build peace through health extend over decades, and have found an institutional home with the World Health Organization’s program called Health as a Bridge to Peace. They are premised on the idea that cooperation among health professionals and health interventions in conflict zones can contribute not only to improved outcomes for populations who suffer from the impact of war, but also to building a lasting peace. |
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September 2009
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Working Paper
by Leonard S. Rubenstein
A new USIP report examines how improving health systems in post-conflict countries can help promote peace and prevent renewed violence in those nations. In "Post-Conflict Health Reconstruction: New Foundations for a U.S. Policy," USIP fellow Leonard Rubenstein looks at health indicators in various hotspots around the world, and why addressing dire health situations can help advance peace and resolve conflicts, as well as boost the U.S's image abroad. Countries: United States
| Issue Areas: Health and Peacebuilding, Post-Conflict and Peacekeeping Activities
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